Research Article

Effect of urinary excretion on radiation dose in patients having PET/CT scans

Volume: 5 Number: 5 September 4, 2019
EN

Effect of urinary excretion on radiation dose in patients having PET/CT scans

Abstract

Objectives: 18Fluorine-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) positron emission tomography/ computed tomography (PET/CT) is commonly used for diagnosis, staging and re-staging of cancers and for determining the effectiveness of treatment. Because of renal, ureteral and urinary involvement of 18F-FDG radiopharmaceutical after its injection, patients subject to radioactivity during its effective half-life. The aim of the present study was to determine the degree of association between effective dose levels of patients and bladder emptying of patients having PET/CT scans.

Methods: The present retrospective study included 108 patients (43 females and 65 males, average age: 60.9 ± 12.7 years). Effective dose level as mSv/h was determined from a distance of 1 m in all patients before and after bladder emptying at the first hour following 18F-FDG injection. Radioactivity excretion amounts were compared based on gender, age, body mass index, fasting blood sugar level and clinical diagnosis.

Results: Amount of radioactivity decreased by 22.75% ± 14.77% after bladder emptying. No association was found between urinary excretion level and age, gender, fasting blood sugar and body mass index (p > 0.05).

Conclusions: Active emptying of bladder in patients having PET/CT scans where 18F-FDG radiopharmaceutical is involved is an effective method for the radiation safety of both health workers and patients. 

Keywords

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Emergency Medicine , Radiology and Organ Imaging

Journal Section

Research Article

Publication Date

September 4, 2019

Submission Date

March 27, 2018

Acceptance Date

February 19, 2019

Published in Issue

Year 1970 Volume: 5 Number: 5

AMA
1.Gül SS, Esen M. Effect of urinary excretion on radiation dose in patients having PET/CT scans. Eur Res J. 2019;5(5):722-728. doi:10.18621/eurj.410072

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