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Radiation Levels from Toilets Used By Patients Injected with 99mTc-based Radiopharmaceuticals in Ibadan

Objective: The use of radionuclides in patients undergoing nuclear medicine procedures presents a special concern on the safety of not only the patients but also of those who come in contact with such patients either at the nuclear medicine centre or at home after discharge from the facility. This h...

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Autores principales: Ejeh, John Enyi, Abiodun, Tolulope Hadrat, Adedapo, Kayode Solomon, Onimode, Yetunde Ajoke, Ayeni, Olusegun Akinwale
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Galenos Publishing 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4067878/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24963447
http://dx.doi.org/10.4274/mirt.82905
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author Ejeh, John Enyi
Abiodun, Tolulope Hadrat
Adedapo, Kayode Solomon
Onimode, Yetunde Ajoke
Ayeni, Olusegun Akinwale
author_facet Ejeh, John Enyi
Abiodun, Tolulope Hadrat
Adedapo, Kayode Solomon
Onimode, Yetunde Ajoke
Ayeni, Olusegun Akinwale
author_sort Ejeh, John Enyi
collection PubMed
description Objective: The use of radionuclides in patients undergoing nuclear medicine procedures presents a special concern on the safety of not only the patients but also of those who come in contact with such patients either at the nuclear medicine centre or at home after discharge from the facility. This has heightened the public concern about nuclear medicine especially in Nigeria where the practice is new. When patients are injected with radioactivity for nuclear medicine procedures they excrete most of the radioactivity via urine even before leaving the nuclear medicine facility. Therefore, we set out to survey the toilets used by these patients in the hospital for radiation levels to know the radiation risk posed by the ‘radioactive urine’ of the patients to the general public and radiation workers respectively. Methods: A portable digital radiation survey meter was used for measurement of radioactivity in toilets used by a total number of 202 patients injected with 99mTc-based radiopharmaceuticals over a period of 60 days for the level of radioactivity. Results: The minimum background radiation level measured was 0.18 µSv/h while the maximum was 0.44 µSv/h and the mean background reading was 0.28 µSv/h. The readings recorded for the male toilets were: 0.1 µSv/h minimum, 5.62 µSv/h maximum with a mean of 0.52 µSv/h while those for the female patients were 0.19 µSv/h minimum, 21.73 µSv/h maximum and a mean of 3.3 µSv/h. Conclusions: In conclusion, the radiation levels from toilets used by patients injected with 99mTc-based radiopharmaceuticals were within reasonable and acceptable limits and do not pose significant radiation risk to others.
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spelling pubmed-40678782014-06-24 Radiation Levels from Toilets Used By Patients Injected with 99mTc-based Radiopharmaceuticals in Ibadan Ejeh, John Enyi Abiodun, Tolulope Hadrat Adedapo, Kayode Solomon Onimode, Yetunde Ajoke Ayeni, Olusegun Akinwale Mol Imaging Radionucl Ther Original Article Objective: The use of radionuclides in patients undergoing nuclear medicine procedures presents a special concern on the safety of not only the patients but also of those who come in contact with such patients either at the nuclear medicine centre or at home after discharge from the facility. This has heightened the public concern about nuclear medicine especially in Nigeria where the practice is new. When patients are injected with radioactivity for nuclear medicine procedures they excrete most of the radioactivity via urine even before leaving the nuclear medicine facility. Therefore, we set out to survey the toilets used by these patients in the hospital for radiation levels to know the radiation risk posed by the ‘radioactive urine’ of the patients to the general public and radiation workers respectively. Methods: A portable digital radiation survey meter was used for measurement of radioactivity in toilets used by a total number of 202 patients injected with 99mTc-based radiopharmaceuticals over a period of 60 days for the level of radioactivity. Results: The minimum background radiation level measured was 0.18 µSv/h while the maximum was 0.44 µSv/h and the mean background reading was 0.28 µSv/h. The readings recorded for the male toilets were: 0.1 µSv/h minimum, 5.62 µSv/h maximum with a mean of 0.52 µSv/h while those for the female patients were 0.19 µSv/h minimum, 21.73 µSv/h maximum and a mean of 3.3 µSv/h. Conclusions: In conclusion, the radiation levels from toilets used by patients injected with 99mTc-based radiopharmaceuticals were within reasonable and acceptable limits and do not pose significant radiation risk to others. Galenos Publishing 2014-06 2014-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4067878/ /pubmed/24963447 http://dx.doi.org/10.4274/mirt.82905 Text en © Molecular Imaging and Radionuclide Therapy, Published by Galenos Publishing. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Ejeh, John Enyi
Abiodun, Tolulope Hadrat
Adedapo, Kayode Solomon
Onimode, Yetunde Ajoke
Ayeni, Olusegun Akinwale
Radiation Levels from Toilets Used By Patients Injected with 99mTc-based Radiopharmaceuticals in Ibadan
title Radiation Levels from Toilets Used By Patients Injected with 99mTc-based Radiopharmaceuticals in Ibadan
title_full Radiation Levels from Toilets Used By Patients Injected with 99mTc-based Radiopharmaceuticals in Ibadan
title_fullStr Radiation Levels from Toilets Used By Patients Injected with 99mTc-based Radiopharmaceuticals in Ibadan
title_full_unstemmed Radiation Levels from Toilets Used By Patients Injected with 99mTc-based Radiopharmaceuticals in Ibadan
title_short Radiation Levels from Toilets Used By Patients Injected with 99mTc-based Radiopharmaceuticals in Ibadan
title_sort radiation levels from toilets used by patients injected with 99mtc-based radiopharmaceuticals in ibadan
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4067878/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24963447
http://dx.doi.org/10.4274/mirt.82905
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