miércoles, 1 de octubre de 2014

Too Many Heart Scans May Pose Radiation Risks, Cardiologists Say: MedlinePlus

Too Many Heart Scans May Pose Radiation Risks, Cardiologists Say: MedlinePlus

A service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine
From the National Institutes of HealthNational Institutes of Health




Too Many Heart Scans May Pose Radiation Risks, Cardiologists Say

American Heart Association urges doctors to make sure patient understands dangers, test is appropriate
By Robert Preidt
Monday, September 29, 2014
HealthDay news image
MONDAY, Sept. 29, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Doctors need to make sure patients understand the radiation-related risks of heart imaging tests before sending them for such procedures, a new American Heart Association scientific statement says.
"With technological improvements, medical imaging has become an increasingly vital tool in diagnosing and treating patients with heart disease, but the rising use of the tests has led to increasing radiation exposure over the past two decades," Dr. Reza Fazel, chair of the statement writing committee and a cardiologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, said in an association news release.
"Heart imaging procedures account for almost 40 percent of the radiation exposure from medical imaging," Fazel said.
Before referring a patient for a heart imaging test, the cardiologists say, doctors need to address questions such as:
  • How will the test help diagnose or treat the heart problem?
  • Are there alternatives that don't use radiation?
  • What are the levels of radiation exposure, how will it affect the risk of cancer later in life and how does that compare to the risk from other common activities?
"In general, the radiation-related risk of any imaging test to an individual patient is very small and, when the test is clinically appropriate, the benefits of the test typically far outweigh any potential risks," Fazel said.
Doctors who order heart imaging tests need to understand when each type of test is appropriate, the typical average radiation dose and the potential risks, according to the statement published Sept. 29 in the journal Circulation.
"Radiation-related risk is one of the factors that should be considered in the decision to use cardiovascular imaging with ionizing radiation, particularly in younger patients in whom the potential risk of radiation exposure is thought to be higher," Fazel added.
When deciding on a heart imaging test, doctors also need to consider the test's diagnostic accuracy, availability, cost, convenience and other potential risks.
Widely used types of heart imaging tests that use radiation include nuclear stress tests, cardiac CT scans, and fluoroscopy. Fluoroscopy is a technique that uses X-rays to create "real-time" or moving images of the body. Ultrasound and MRI tests do not expose patients to radiation.
SOURCE: American Heart Association, news release, Sept. 29, 2014
HealthDay
More Health News on:
Diagnostic Imaging
Heart Diseases

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario