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1. Beam And Scatter Radiation Restricting Devices DMI 50B
Kyle Thornton
3. Factors Affecting Scatter Radiation kVp
Field size
Patient or part thickness
4. kVp Compton interaction increases with increasing kVp
Scatter radiation increases
Scatter radiation is reduced by using collimators and grids
Decreasing kVp is not always desirable
Increases patient dose
5. Beam Field Size As field size is increased, scatter radiation increases
Restriction of field size improves image quality
Even more important during fluoroscopy
6. Patient Or Part Thickness Scatter increases with patient or part thickness
A chest x-ray will result in more scatter than an arm x-ray
Compression devices reduce patient thickness and improve quality
7. Beam-Restricting Devices Two types of devices to reduce scatter
Beam restricting devices
Grids
Restricted for two reasons
Reduce patient dose
Improve image contrast
Three types of beam-restricting devices
Aperture diaphragm
Extension cones and cylinders
Variable aperture collimator
Positive beam limitation
8. Aperture Diaphragm Simplest of all beam-restricting devices
Lead or lead-lined plate with an opening
Used with older head units
Cannot see a light
9. Extension Cones And Cylinders Modifications of aperture diaphragms
Primarily used for headwork, L5-S1
Fixed openings
Generally not light localizing
10. Variable-Aperture Collimator Light localizing
Most commonly used
A series of shutters and mirrors used
Light field must coincide with x-ray beam
11. Positive Beam Limitation Devices Automatically collimates to the size of film used
Does not relieve of technologist of having to collimate to anatomy
12. Collimator Filtration Some collimator housing units come with interchangeable filtration
Generally, different millimeter thicknesses of aluminum is used