Login: Image Maker

Dose Management for Cardiovascular Procedures

June 28, 2010


With renewed attention on cumulative radiation dose as a patient-safety issue, reducing dose wherever possible is increasingly a priority for clinicians and their facilities. Toshiba’s Infinix-i line of radiography laboratories addresses the issue of dose in four ways: by reducing exam time, by minimizing skin dose during long cases, by shielding clinicians from excess radiation, and by offering a host of dose-management tools, including grid-pulsed fluoroscopy/fluorography and virtual collimation.

“If you can make access to the patient easier and get the C-arm into the position you want faster, you can shorten the overall exam time and save dose,” Allan Berthe, senior cardiology product manager at Toshiba, explains. The 270-degree access of the Infinix-i C-arm gives the user an unprecedented degree of patient, equipment, and clinician access, increasing the odds of acquiring the best possible image, on the first try, with minimal difficulty. “Clinicians can see better and are more confident, and when you’re seeing better, you’re spending less time scouting around, emitting radiation ,” Berthe says.

The Infinix-i systems’ C-arm and flat-panel design also enable clinicians to position the detector as close to the patient as possible, while the systems’ flexibility permits positioning the X-ray tube on either side of the patient. “When you can position the x-ray tube closer to the panel, that reduces the radiation scatter and overall dose emission to the patient and staff” Berthe notes.

Toshiba’s table-mounted radiation shield, which includes table scatter-radiation protection, is complemented by a transparent ceiling-suspended shield with flexible positioning, both of which protect clinicians from radiation exposure. The company’s proprietary dose-management tools, including grid-pulsed fluoroscopy/fluorography and virtual collimation, help reduce patient exposure by enhancing clinician efficiency and overall image quality.

Berthe explains that grid-pulsed fluoroscopy/fluorography makes more efficient use of the x-ray signal, minimizing leading- and trailing-edge dose. “We provide, standard, the most comprehensive number of pulse–frame-rate selections in the industry,” he says. “At times the clinician may determine that superior visualization is not critical. The system operator can lower the pulse fluoro frames in these instances and then quickly increase to higher frame rates when more in-depth imaging is necessary.”

Virtual collimation, he explains, permits clinicians to position collimator blades without expending any additional dose.

“Today, dose management is critical and the Infinix-i systems provide a host of dose lowering tools that the clinicians can control right at the tableside ,” Berthe says. “The efficiency, flexibility and technology included in the Infinix-i systems are interrelated in their contribution to lowering dose to patient and staff members”