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IAEA
International Atomic Energy Agency
RADIATION PROTECTION IN
DIAGNOSTIC AND
INTERVENTIONAL RADIOLOGY
L12: Shielding and X Ray room design
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 2
Introduction
• Subject matter: the theory of shielding
design and some related construction
aspects.
• The method used for shielding design and
the basic shielding calculation procedure
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 3
Topics
Equipment design and acceptable safety
standards
Use of dose constraints in X Ray room design
Barriers and protective devices
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 4
Overview
• To become familiar with the safety
requirements for the design of X Ray
systems and auxiliary equipment, shielding
of facilities, and relevant international safety
standards, e.g., IEC.
IAEA
International Atomic Energy Agency
Part 12: Shielding and X Ray room
design
Topic 1: Equipment design and acceptable
safety standards
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 6
Purpose of Shielding
• To protect:
• the patients (when not being examined)
• the X Ray department staff
• visitors and the public
• persons working adjacent to or near the X Ray
facility
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 7
Radiation Shielding - Design
Concepts
• Data required include consideration of:
• Type of X Ray equipment
• Usage (workload)
• Positioning
• Whether multiple tubes/receptors are being
used
• Primary beam access (vs. scatter only)
• Operator location
• Occupancy of Surrounding areas
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 8
Shielding Design (I)
Equipment
• What equipment is to be used?
• General radiography
• Fluoroscopy (with or without radiography)
• Dental (oral, cephalometric, or OPG)
• Mammography
• CT
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 9
Shielding Design (II)
The type of equipment is very important for
the following reasons:
• where the X Ray beam will be directed
• the number and type of procedures performed
• the location of the radiographer (operator)
• the energy (kVp) of the X Rays
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 10
Shielding Design (III)
Usage
• Different X Ray equipment have very
different usage.
• For example, a dental unit uses low mAs
and low (~70) kVp, and takes relatively few
X Rays each week
• A CT scanner uses high (~130) kVp, high
mAs, and takes very many scans each
week.
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 11
Shielding Design (IV)
• The total mAs used each week is an
indication of the total X Ray dose
administered
• The kVp used is also related to dose, but
also indicates the penetrating ability of the X
Rays
• High kVp and mAs means that more
shielding is required.
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 12
Shielding Design (V)
Positioning
• The location and orientation of the X Ray
unit is very important:
• distances are measured from the equipment
(inverse square law will affect dose)
• the directions the direct (primary) X Ray beam
will be used depend on the position and
orientation
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 13
Radiation Shielding - Typical Room
Layout
A to G are points
used to calculate
shielding
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 14
Shielding Design (VI)
Number of X Ray tubes
• Some X Ray equipment may be fitted with
more than one tube
• Sometimes two tubes may be used
simultaneously, and in different directions
• This naturally complicates shielding
calculation
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 15
Shielding Design (VII)
Surrounding areas
• The X Ray room must be designed with
knowledge of the location and use of all
rooms which adjoin the X Ray room
• Obviously a toilet will need less shielding
than an office
• Obtain a plan of the X Ray room and
surroundings (including level above and
below)
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 16
Radiation Shielding - Design Detail
Must consider:
• appropriate calculation points, covering all
critical locations
• design parameters such as workload,
occupancy, use factor, leakage, target dose
(see later)
• these must be either assumed or taken from
actual data
• use a reasonable, worst case scenario
(conservatively high estimates), since under-
shielding is worse than over-shielding
IAEA
International Atomic Energy Agency
Part 12: Shielding and X Ray room
design
Topic 2: Use of dose constraints in
X Ray room design
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 18
Radiation Shielding - Calculation
• Based on NCRP Report No 147, Structural
Shielding Design for Medical X-Ray Imaging
Facilities (2004)
• Assumptions used are conservative, so over-
shielding is common
• Software is available, giving shielding in thickness
of various materials
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 19
Radiation Shielding Parameters (I)
P - design dose per week
• usually based on 5 mSv per year for
occupationally exposed persons (25% of
dose limit), and 1 mSv for public
• occupational dose must only be used in
controlled areas, i.e., for radiographers,
radiologists, and other radiation workers
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 20
Radiation Shielding Parameters (II)
• Film storage areas (darkrooms) need
special consideration
• Long periods of exposure will affect film, but
much shorter periods (i.e., lower doses) will
fog film in cassettes
• A simple rule is to allow 0.1 mGy for the
period the film is in storage - if this is 1
month, the design dose is 0.025 mGy/week
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 21
Radiation Shielding Parameters (III)
• Remember we must shield against three
sources of radiation
• In decreasing importance, these are:
• scattered radiation (from the patient)
• primary radiation (the X Ray beam)
• leakage radiation (from the X Ray tube)
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 22
U - use factor
• fraction of time the primary beam is in a
particular direction i.e.: the chosen
calculation point
• must allow for realistic use
• for all points, sum may exceed 1
Radiation Shielding Parameters (IV)
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 23
Radiation Shielding Parameters (V)
• For some X Ray equipment, the X Ray
beam is always stopped by the image
receptor, thus the use factor is 0 in other
directions, e.g., CT, fluoroscopy,
mammography
• For general radiographic and fluoroscopic
equipment the primary beam is usually
intercepted by the image detector
• This reduces shielding requirements
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 24
Radiation Shielding Parameters (VI)
• For radiography, there will be certain
directions where the X Ray beam will be
pointed:
• towards the floor
• across the patient, usually only in one direction
• toward the chest Bucky stand
• The type of tube suspension will be
important, e.g.: ceiling mounted, floor
mounted, C-arm etc.
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 25
Radiation Shielding Parameters (VII)
T - Occupancy
• T = fraction of time a particular place is occupied
by staff, patients or public
• Has to be conservative
• Ranges from 1 for adjacent offices and work areas,
to 1/20 for public toilets and 1/40 for outdoor areas
with transient traffic
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 26
Occupancy (NCRP 147)
Area Occupancy
Work areas, offices,
staff rooms
1
Corridors 1/5
Toilets, unattended
waiting rooms
1/20
Outdoor areas with
transient traffic
1/40
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 27
Radiation Shielding Parameters (VIII)
W - Workload
• A measure of the radiation output in one
week
• Measured in mA-minutes
• Varies greatly with assumed maximum kVp
of X Ray unit
• Usually a gross overestimation
• Actual dose/mAs can be estimated
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 28
Workload (I)
• For example: a general radiography room
• The kVp used will be in the range 60-120 kVp
• The exposure for each film will be between 5 mAs
and 100 mAs
• There may be 50 patients per day, and the room
may be used 7 days a week
• Each patient may have between 1 and 5 films
SO HOW DO WE ESTIMATE W ?
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 29
Workload (II)
• Assume an average of 50 mAs per film,
3 films per patient
• Thus W = 50 mAs x 3 films x 50 patients
x 7 days
= 52,500 mAs per week
= 875 mA-min per week
• We could also assume that all this work
is performed at 100 kVp
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 30
Examples of Workloads
Weekly Workload (W) mA-min at:
100 kVp 125 kVp 150 kVp
General Radiography 1,000 400 200
Fluoroscopy (including spot films) 750 300 150
Chiropractic 1,200 500 250
Mammography 700 at 30 kVp (1,500 for breast
screening)
Dental
6 at 70 kVp (conventional intra-oral
films)
For more realistic values and CT see NCRP 147
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 31
Workload - CT
• CT workloads are best calculated from
NCRP 147
• Remember that new spiral CT units, or
multi-slice CT, could have higher workloads
• A typical CT workload is about 28,000 mA-
min per week
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 32
Tube Leakage
• All X Ray tubes have some radiation leakage -
there is only 2-3 mm lead in the housing
• Leakage is limited in most countries to 1 mGy hr-1
at 1 meter, so this can be used as the actual
leakage value for shielding calculations
• Leakage is specified at the maximum rated
continuous tube current, which is about 3-5 mA at
150 kVp for most radiographic X Ray tubes
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 33
Radiation Shielding Parameters
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 34
Room Shielding - Multiple X Ray
Tubes
• Some rooms will be fitted with more than
one X Ray tube (maybe a ceiling-mounted
tube, and a floor-mounted tube)
• Shielding calculations MUST consider the
TOTAL radiation dose from the two tubes
IAEA
International Atomic Energy Agency
Part 12: Shielding and X Ray room
design
Topic 3: Barriers and protective devices
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 36
Shielding - Construction I
Materials available:
• Lead sheet brick
• gypsum or high Z plasterboard
• concrete block
• leaded glass or acrylic
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 37
Shielding - Construction Problems
Some problems with shielding materials:
• Brick walls - mortar joints
• Use of lead sheets nailed to timber frame
• Lead inadequately bonded to backing
• Joints between sheets with no overlap
• Use of hollow core brick or block
• Use of plate glass where lead glass
specified
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 38
Problems in shielding - Brick Walls &
Mortar Joints
• Bricks should be solid and not hollow
• Bricks have very variable X Ray attenuation
• Mortar is less attenuating than brick
• Mortar is often not applied across the full
thickness of the brick
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 39
Problems in shielding - Lead
inadequately bonded to backing
• Lead must be fully glued (bonded) to a
backing such as wood or wallboard
• If the lead is not properly bonded, it may
peel off after a few years
• Not all glues are suitable for lead
(oxidization of the lead surface)
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 40
Problems in shielding - Joins between
sheets with no overlap
• There must be 10 - 15 mm overlap between
adjoining sheets of lead
• Without an overlap, there may be relatively
large gaps for the radiation to pass through
• Corners are a particular problem
• Penetrations for electrical boxes and ducts
are of concern
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 41
Problems in shielding - Use of plate
glass
• Leaded glass or acrylic should be used for
windows
• Laminated layers of plate glass can be used
where radiation levels are low, e.g., for the
wall at the foot of a CT scanner
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 42
Radiation Shielding - Construction II
• Continuity and integrity of shielding very
important
• Problem areas:
• joints
• penetrations in walls and floor
• window frames
• doors and frames
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 43
Penetrations
• “Penetrations” means any hole cut into the
lead for cables, electrical connectors, pipes
etc.
• Unless the penetration is small (~2-3 mm),
there must be additional lead over the hole,
Nails and screws used to fix bonded lead
sheet to a wall do not require covering
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 44
Window frames
• The lead sheet fixed to a wall must overlap
any lead glass window fitted
• It is common to find a gap of up to 5 cm,
which is unacceptable
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 45
Shielding of Doors and Frames
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 46
Shielding - Verification I
• Verification of appropriate thickness and proper installation
is mandatory
• Two choices - visual or measurement
• Visual check (preferred) must be performed before
shielding covered - the actual lead thickness can be
measured easily
• Radiation measurement necessary for window and door
frames etc.
• Isotope source simplifies measurements
• Measurement for walls very slow
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 47
Shielding Testing
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 48
Records
• It is very important to keep records of shielding calculations,
as well as details of inspections and corrective action taken
to fix faults in the shielding
• In 5 years, it might not be possible to find anyone who
remembers what was done!
• Shielding records should become a permanent part of the
facility engineering records; a copy should be stored in the
room (consider a permanent plaque on the wall in the room
specifying the amount of shielding in each wall); and a copy
should be retained by the medical physicist doing the
calculations
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 49
Summary
• The design of shielding for an X Ray room is
a relatively complex task, but can be
simplified by the use of some standard
assumptions
• Record keeping is essential to ensure
traceability and constant improvement of
shielding according to both practice and
equipment modification
IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 50
Where to Get More Information (I)
• Radiation shielding for diagnostic X Rays.
BIR report (2000) Ed. D.G. Sutton & J.R.
Williams
• National Council on Radiation Protection
and Measurements, Report No. 147,
“Structural Shielding Design for Medical X-
Ray Imaging Facilities” Bethesda, MD 2004.

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Rpdir l12 shielding-web

  • 1. IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency RADIATION PROTECTION IN DIAGNOSTIC AND INTERVENTIONAL RADIOLOGY L12: Shielding and X Ray room design IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
  • 2. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 2 Introduction • Subject matter: the theory of shielding design and some related construction aspects. • The method used for shielding design and the basic shielding calculation procedure
  • 3. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 3 Topics Equipment design and acceptable safety standards Use of dose constraints in X Ray room design Barriers and protective devices
  • 4. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 4 Overview • To become familiar with the safety requirements for the design of X Ray systems and auxiliary equipment, shielding of facilities, and relevant international safety standards, e.g., IEC.
  • 5. IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Part 12: Shielding and X Ray room design Topic 1: Equipment design and acceptable safety standards IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
  • 6. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 6 Purpose of Shielding • To protect: • the patients (when not being examined) • the X Ray department staff • visitors and the public • persons working adjacent to or near the X Ray facility
  • 7. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 7 Radiation Shielding - Design Concepts • Data required include consideration of: • Type of X Ray equipment • Usage (workload) • Positioning • Whether multiple tubes/receptors are being used • Primary beam access (vs. scatter only) • Operator location • Occupancy of Surrounding areas
  • 8. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 8 Shielding Design (I) Equipment • What equipment is to be used? • General radiography • Fluoroscopy (with or without radiography) • Dental (oral, cephalometric, or OPG) • Mammography • CT
  • 9. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 9 Shielding Design (II) The type of equipment is very important for the following reasons: • where the X Ray beam will be directed • the number and type of procedures performed • the location of the radiographer (operator) • the energy (kVp) of the X Rays
  • 10. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 10 Shielding Design (III) Usage • Different X Ray equipment have very different usage. • For example, a dental unit uses low mAs and low (~70) kVp, and takes relatively few X Rays each week • A CT scanner uses high (~130) kVp, high mAs, and takes very many scans each week.
  • 11. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 11 Shielding Design (IV) • The total mAs used each week is an indication of the total X Ray dose administered • The kVp used is also related to dose, but also indicates the penetrating ability of the X Rays • High kVp and mAs means that more shielding is required.
  • 12. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 12 Shielding Design (V) Positioning • The location and orientation of the X Ray unit is very important: • distances are measured from the equipment (inverse square law will affect dose) • the directions the direct (primary) X Ray beam will be used depend on the position and orientation
  • 13. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 13 Radiation Shielding - Typical Room Layout A to G are points used to calculate shielding
  • 14. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 14 Shielding Design (VI) Number of X Ray tubes • Some X Ray equipment may be fitted with more than one tube • Sometimes two tubes may be used simultaneously, and in different directions • This naturally complicates shielding calculation
  • 15. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 15 Shielding Design (VII) Surrounding areas • The X Ray room must be designed with knowledge of the location and use of all rooms which adjoin the X Ray room • Obviously a toilet will need less shielding than an office • Obtain a plan of the X Ray room and surroundings (including level above and below)
  • 16. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 16 Radiation Shielding - Design Detail Must consider: • appropriate calculation points, covering all critical locations • design parameters such as workload, occupancy, use factor, leakage, target dose (see later) • these must be either assumed or taken from actual data • use a reasonable, worst case scenario (conservatively high estimates), since under- shielding is worse than over-shielding
  • 17. IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Part 12: Shielding and X Ray room design Topic 2: Use of dose constraints in X Ray room design IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
  • 18. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 18 Radiation Shielding - Calculation • Based on NCRP Report No 147, Structural Shielding Design for Medical X-Ray Imaging Facilities (2004) • Assumptions used are conservative, so over- shielding is common • Software is available, giving shielding in thickness of various materials
  • 19. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 19 Radiation Shielding Parameters (I) P - design dose per week • usually based on 5 mSv per year for occupationally exposed persons (25% of dose limit), and 1 mSv for public • occupational dose must only be used in controlled areas, i.e., for radiographers, radiologists, and other radiation workers
  • 20. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 20 Radiation Shielding Parameters (II) • Film storage areas (darkrooms) need special consideration • Long periods of exposure will affect film, but much shorter periods (i.e., lower doses) will fog film in cassettes • A simple rule is to allow 0.1 mGy for the period the film is in storage - if this is 1 month, the design dose is 0.025 mGy/week
  • 21. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 21 Radiation Shielding Parameters (III) • Remember we must shield against three sources of radiation • In decreasing importance, these are: • scattered radiation (from the patient) • primary radiation (the X Ray beam) • leakage radiation (from the X Ray tube)
  • 22. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 22 U - use factor • fraction of time the primary beam is in a particular direction i.e.: the chosen calculation point • must allow for realistic use • for all points, sum may exceed 1 Radiation Shielding Parameters (IV)
  • 23. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 23 Radiation Shielding Parameters (V) • For some X Ray equipment, the X Ray beam is always stopped by the image receptor, thus the use factor is 0 in other directions, e.g., CT, fluoroscopy, mammography • For general radiographic and fluoroscopic equipment the primary beam is usually intercepted by the image detector • This reduces shielding requirements
  • 24. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 24 Radiation Shielding Parameters (VI) • For radiography, there will be certain directions where the X Ray beam will be pointed: • towards the floor • across the patient, usually only in one direction • toward the chest Bucky stand • The type of tube suspension will be important, e.g.: ceiling mounted, floor mounted, C-arm etc.
  • 25. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 25 Radiation Shielding Parameters (VII) T - Occupancy • T = fraction of time a particular place is occupied by staff, patients or public • Has to be conservative • Ranges from 1 for adjacent offices and work areas, to 1/20 for public toilets and 1/40 for outdoor areas with transient traffic
  • 26. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 26 Occupancy (NCRP 147) Area Occupancy Work areas, offices, staff rooms 1 Corridors 1/5 Toilets, unattended waiting rooms 1/20 Outdoor areas with transient traffic 1/40
  • 27. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 27 Radiation Shielding Parameters (VIII) W - Workload • A measure of the radiation output in one week • Measured in mA-minutes • Varies greatly with assumed maximum kVp of X Ray unit • Usually a gross overestimation • Actual dose/mAs can be estimated
  • 28. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 28 Workload (I) • For example: a general radiography room • The kVp used will be in the range 60-120 kVp • The exposure for each film will be between 5 mAs and 100 mAs • There may be 50 patients per day, and the room may be used 7 days a week • Each patient may have between 1 and 5 films SO HOW DO WE ESTIMATE W ?
  • 29. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 29 Workload (II) • Assume an average of 50 mAs per film, 3 films per patient • Thus W = 50 mAs x 3 films x 50 patients x 7 days = 52,500 mAs per week = 875 mA-min per week • We could also assume that all this work is performed at 100 kVp
  • 30. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 30 Examples of Workloads Weekly Workload (W) mA-min at: 100 kVp 125 kVp 150 kVp General Radiography 1,000 400 200 Fluoroscopy (including spot films) 750 300 150 Chiropractic 1,200 500 250 Mammography 700 at 30 kVp (1,500 for breast screening) Dental 6 at 70 kVp (conventional intra-oral films) For more realistic values and CT see NCRP 147
  • 31. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 31 Workload - CT • CT workloads are best calculated from NCRP 147 • Remember that new spiral CT units, or multi-slice CT, could have higher workloads • A typical CT workload is about 28,000 mA- min per week
  • 32. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 32 Tube Leakage • All X Ray tubes have some radiation leakage - there is only 2-3 mm lead in the housing • Leakage is limited in most countries to 1 mGy hr-1 at 1 meter, so this can be used as the actual leakage value for shielding calculations • Leakage is specified at the maximum rated continuous tube current, which is about 3-5 mA at 150 kVp for most radiographic X Ray tubes
  • 33. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 33 Radiation Shielding Parameters
  • 34. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 34 Room Shielding - Multiple X Ray Tubes • Some rooms will be fitted with more than one X Ray tube (maybe a ceiling-mounted tube, and a floor-mounted tube) • Shielding calculations MUST consider the TOTAL radiation dose from the two tubes
  • 35. IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Part 12: Shielding and X Ray room design Topic 3: Barriers and protective devices IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
  • 36. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 36 Shielding - Construction I Materials available: • Lead sheet brick • gypsum or high Z plasterboard • concrete block • leaded glass or acrylic
  • 37. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 37 Shielding - Construction Problems Some problems with shielding materials: • Brick walls - mortar joints • Use of lead sheets nailed to timber frame • Lead inadequately bonded to backing • Joints between sheets with no overlap • Use of hollow core brick or block • Use of plate glass where lead glass specified
  • 38. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 38 Problems in shielding - Brick Walls & Mortar Joints • Bricks should be solid and not hollow • Bricks have very variable X Ray attenuation • Mortar is less attenuating than brick • Mortar is often not applied across the full thickness of the brick
  • 39. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 39 Problems in shielding - Lead inadequately bonded to backing • Lead must be fully glued (bonded) to a backing such as wood or wallboard • If the lead is not properly bonded, it may peel off after a few years • Not all glues are suitable for lead (oxidization of the lead surface)
  • 40. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 40 Problems in shielding - Joins between sheets with no overlap • There must be 10 - 15 mm overlap between adjoining sheets of lead • Without an overlap, there may be relatively large gaps for the radiation to pass through • Corners are a particular problem • Penetrations for electrical boxes and ducts are of concern
  • 41. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 41 Problems in shielding - Use of plate glass • Leaded glass or acrylic should be used for windows • Laminated layers of plate glass can be used where radiation levels are low, e.g., for the wall at the foot of a CT scanner
  • 42. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 42 Radiation Shielding - Construction II • Continuity and integrity of shielding very important • Problem areas: • joints • penetrations in walls and floor • window frames • doors and frames
  • 43. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 43 Penetrations • “Penetrations” means any hole cut into the lead for cables, electrical connectors, pipes etc. • Unless the penetration is small (~2-3 mm), there must be additional lead over the hole, Nails and screws used to fix bonded lead sheet to a wall do not require covering
  • 44. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 44 Window frames • The lead sheet fixed to a wall must overlap any lead glass window fitted • It is common to find a gap of up to 5 cm, which is unacceptable
  • 45. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 45 Shielding of Doors and Frames
  • 46. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 46 Shielding - Verification I • Verification of appropriate thickness and proper installation is mandatory • Two choices - visual or measurement • Visual check (preferred) must be performed before shielding covered - the actual lead thickness can be measured easily • Radiation measurement necessary for window and door frames etc. • Isotope source simplifies measurements • Measurement for walls very slow
  • 47. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 47 Shielding Testing
  • 48. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 48 Records • It is very important to keep records of shielding calculations, as well as details of inspections and corrective action taken to fix faults in the shielding • In 5 years, it might not be possible to find anyone who remembers what was done! • Shielding records should become a permanent part of the facility engineering records; a copy should be stored in the room (consider a permanent plaque on the wall in the room specifying the amount of shielding in each wall); and a copy should be retained by the medical physicist doing the calculations
  • 49. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 49 Summary • The design of shielding for an X Ray room is a relatively complex task, but can be simplified by the use of some standard assumptions • Record keeping is essential to ensure traceability and constant improvement of shielding according to both practice and equipment modification
  • 50. IAEA 12: Shielding and X Ray room design 50 Where to Get More Information (I) • Radiation shielding for diagnostic X Rays. BIR report (2000) Ed. D.G. Sutton & J.R. Williams • National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, Report No. 147, “Structural Shielding Design for Medical X- Ray Imaging Facilities” Bethesda, MD 2004.

Notas do Editor

  1. Part …: (Add part number and title) Module…: (Add module number and title) Lesson …: (Add session number and title) Learning objectives: Upon completion of this lesson, the students will be able to: … . (Add a list of what the students are expected to learn or be able to do upon completion of the session) Activity: (Add the method used for presenting or conducting the lesson – lecture, demonstration, exercise, laboratory exercise, case study, simulation, etc.) Duration: (Add presentation time or duration of the session – hrs) Materials and equipment needed: (List materials and equipment needed to conduct the session, if appropriate) References: (List the references for the session)
  2. Explanation or/and additional information Instructions for the lecturer/trainer
  3. Explanation or/and additional information Instructions for the lecturer/trainer
  4. Lecture notes: ( about 100 words) Instructions for the lecturer/trainer
  5. Part …: (Add part number and title) Module…: (Add module number and title) Lesson …: (Add session number and title) Learning objectives: Upon completion of this lesson, the students will be able to: … . (Add a list of what the students are expected to learn or be able to do upon completion of the session) Activity: (Add the method used for presenting or conducting the lesson – lecture, demonstration, exercise, laboratory exercise, case study, simulation, etc.) Duration: (Add presentation time or duration of the session – hrs) Materials and equipment needed: (List materials and equipment needed to conduct the session, if appropriate) References: (List the references for the session)
  6. A floor plan to a known scale, including not only the x-ray room, but also surrounding areas (including their function e.g. office, toilet, waiting room etc). The location of the x-ray table and the type and orientation of the equipment. The location of any upright bucky or chest stand (used to take X Rays of standing patients). Details of what lies above, below and adjacent to the X Ray room, and the nature of the floor, wall and ceiling construction. The distances from the X Ray tube and patient to points which are to be used in the calculations. Distance is denoted as d. The target, or design, weekly radiation dose at each calculation point. This is called P.
  7. Part …: (Add part number and title) Module…: (Add module number and title) Lesson …: (Add session number and title) Learning objectives: Upon completion of this lesson, the students will be able to: … . (Add a list of what the students are expected to learn or be able to do upon completion of the session) Activity: (Add the method used for presenting or conducting the lesson – lecture, demonstration, exercise, laboratory exercise, case study, simulation, etc.) Duration: (Add presentation time or duration of the session – hrs) Materials and equipment needed: (List materials and equipment needed to conduct the session, if appropriate) References: (List the references for the session)
  8. For many years, the method used for shielding design has been that described in the (American) National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP) Report 49. The data used in this report has usually resulted in overshielding, and the report is currently undergoing review. However, this document is currently the best reference available and for this reason, this module is based on NCRP 49
  9. Each country has its own dose limits, but we will assume here that the values given in ICRP Report 60 (which are very widely used) apply. For occupationally exposed persons, the effective dose limit is 20 mSv per year. This averages to 0.4 mSv per week. In addition, many countries are now applying an additional constraint in accordance with the ICRP 60 principle of optimisation of protection, on the basis that any one person could be exposed to more than one source of radiation
  10. Anything which separates one area from another is called a barrier. Any barrier which may be in the direct X Ray beam is called a primary barrier. If the X Ray beam will never be directed towards a barrier, it is called a secondary barrier. In practice, some barriers will have the primary beam directed at them part of the time only, and the rest of the time they will be a secondary barrier. This must be taken into account in the calculations.
  11. Once the type of barrier has been decided, the next factor to be determined is the use factor (U) (i.e. the proportion of time the beam may be pointed at that barrier). Use factors are usually assumed, but may be calculated for a particular case, based on actual operational information.
  12. The occupancy factor (T) is an indication of how long a particular place or room may be occupied by an individual person. Thus an occupancy of 1 implies that the same person will spend all their working week in that place. Occupancy factors vary greatly, depending on the category of the area.
  13. This table shows the standard NCRP 49 area categories and occupancy values.
  14. To calculate correct shielding, we need to know the amount of work an X Ray unit does in a week. This is known as the workload (W) of the unit.
  15. When considering workload, it is also important to know what kVp is used for the exposures. This is for two reasons: firstly, the mAs per exposure is lower for higher kVp, and secondly because the radiation is more penetrating as the kVp is increased. NCRP 49 and many regulatory bodies have used quite high guidance values for usual workloads. This table shows some of these values and the relevant kVp.It is now generally considered that these values are grossly inflated, particularly with modern radiographic film-screen systems which use very much less radiation than systems of 1976 when NCRP 49 was written. We also know, from recording actual workloads, that the kVp used is only occasionally greater than 100 kVp, and mostly around 90 kVp for a general radiography room. This concept of ‘workload spectrum’ will eventually be used in shielding calculations, but is not used here.
  16. The distance from the X Ray tube to the scatterer (patient) is called dsca, the distance from the X Ray tube to a primary barrier is called dpri, and the distance from the scatterer to a secondary barrier is called dsec.
  17. Part …: (Add part number and title) Module…: (Add module number and title) Lesson …: (Add session number and title) Learning objectives: Upon completion of this lesson, the students will be able to: … . (Add a list of what the students are expected to learn or be able to do upon completion of the session) Activity: (Add the method used for presenting or conducting the lesson – lecture, demonstration, exercise, laboratory exercise, case study, simulation, etc.) Duration: (Add presentation time or duration of the session – hrs) Materials and equipment needed: (List materials and equipment needed to conduct the session, if appropriate) References: (List the references for the session)
  18. The building materials available for shielding will vary according to the country. Some possibilities are: Lead sheet bonded onto a solid backing such as plywood, compressed cement fibre board, particle board or similar. Cement blocks - where used, they should preferably be solid, and care must be taken to ensure that the mortar joins carry through the full thickness of the blocks. As a rule of thumb, you can assume that a cement block is equivalent to at least 2/3 of its thickness in solid concrete. Bricks may be used provided that they will give sufficient attenuation. Mortar joints must carry through the full thickness of the brick. Bricks vary greatly in their attenuation, therefore you must be careful when using this type of shielding. Lead glass or lead acrylic for windows. When advising on shielding materials it is often useful to know the comparative densities and lead equivalence of various materials, so that options can be considered.
  19. The installation of the shielding should be supervised by someone with the appropriate knowledge. Even a weekly visit to the building site, and good communications with the builder can avoid problems, delays, and expensive alterations. You have two options when it comes to being satisfied that the shielding has been correctly constructed - you verify it as it is being built or you verify it after it has been built. You should never just assume that shielding is correct. It must always be checked. Of these two options, verification during construction is by far the easiest. All that is required is a visit to the site at each stage before the shielding material is covered up. That way, you can easily see that the shielding is free of holes, is the correct height and the correct thickness, with sufficient overlap of materials. Windows should be checked before the join to wall shielding is covered. A very common fault is that a gap in the shielding is left around the window, sometimes as wide as 3 cm. Verification after completion is laborious, inexact, and difficult.
  20. Let’s summarize the main subjects we did cover in this session. (List the main subjects covered and stress again the important features of the session)