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Radiographic Inspections

Radiographic Inspections. Procedures for Digital and Conventional Radiographic Imaging Systems Lee W. Goldman Hartford Hospital. Filling in the Gap. Reasons for Rad or R/F Inspection. State regulatory requirement 3rd party payer requirement Employer expectations (see following)

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Radiographic Inspections

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  1. Radiographic Inspections Procedures for Digital and Conventional Radiographic Imaging Systems Lee W. Goldman Hartford Hospital

  2. Filling in the Gap

  3. Reasons for Rad or R/F Inspection • State regulatory requirement • 3rd party payer requirement • Employer expectations (see following) • Standards of good practice (see above) It is not uncommon that “inspections” include the minimum set of tests and evaluations needed to fulfill the expectation or legal requirement(perhaps due to time constraints and priorities)

  4. Philosophy of Inspections The goal of radiographic and fluoroscopic (R/F) inspections should be to provide value by evaluating and (if necessary) improving: • radiation safety • image quality • image consistency This may entail going beyond commonly accepted standards to striving for stricter yet generally achievable performance levels

  5. Philosophy of Inspections Accomplishing this goal require thoroughness on the part of the inspecting physicist. Since “time is money”, emphasis must be placed on: • efficiency of inspection methodology • organization of work • attention to frequent problem areas

  6. Sources of Requirements/Guidelines

  7. Guidelines and Acceptance Limits • Many items commonly evaluated physicists have performance levels specified by the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) 21 Part 1020 • For other items, recommendations from various organizations (AAPM, etc)are fairly consistent • State law may impose stricter limits, require more frequent evaluations and include more test items • If not legally mandated, acceptance criteria may depend on environment, equipment used, etc. • Might recommend stricter criteria if reasonably achievable and provides appropriate benefits

  8. Efficiency of Methodology • Combination of tests where appropriate • Time saving tools • Minimizing cassette/film usage (trips to the darkroom)

  9. Organization of Work • Concise data forms: avoid multiple pages • Sensible order: verify detents before AEC tests • Effective reports:Clear summary, recommendations

  10. Frequency of Radiographic Findings

  11. Inspection Factors for Digital Systems • Many inspection components--no difference • kVp, mR/mAs, linearity, timer accuracy, HVL) • For beam measurements (kVp, mR/Mas, etc) • Move tube off of digital receptor if possibile • If not, use lead blocker • Some (may) require digital receptorto record • Collimation • Grid alignment • Focal spot size • SID Indication ---?

  12. Cardboard Cassettes or ReadyPack

  13. Radiographic Inspection Components • Visual Inspection • Beam Measurements (kVp, mR, HVL, etc) • Receptor Tests: Grids, PBL, Coverage • Tube Assembly Tests: Collim, Foc Spot, SID • AEC (table and upright) • Darkroom Tests (if applicable)

  14. Visual Inspection • Visually evident deficiencies often ignored/worked around by staff • Reporting deficiencies often leads to corrective actions • Include: • Lights/LEDs working • Proper technique indication • Locks and interlocks work • No broken/loose dials, knobs • Any obvious electrical or mechanical defects

  15. X-ray Beam Measurements • kVp accuracy AND reproducibility • Exposure rates (mR/mAs) • mA linearity • Adjacent station • Overall • Exposure control • Timer accuracy • Timer and/or mAs linearity • Reproducibility • Half-Value Layer

  16. kVp Evaluation: Significance • Among most common issue, even with HF generators • Poor kV calibration can: • Increase dose if kV’s too low • Cause poor mA linearity, leading to possible repeats • Image contrast: affected, but relatively minor effect for ranges of miscalibration usually encountered

  17. Causes of kV Miscalibration • Inadequate provisions for kV adjustments • May have only one overall kV adjustments to raise or lower all kVps and one to adjust kV ramp • Result: difficult to properly calibration all stations • Miscalibrated compensation circuits: • Initial sags or spikes as tube begins to energize • May significantly affect short exposure times • Important to evaluate kV accuracy at several mA/kV combinations, and possibly all mA’s.

  18. Causes of HF kVp Miscalibration • Pulse freq calibration: infrequent but seen on units invasively calibrated at generator rather than at tube • Power line limitations: more common if powered by 1-phase line with inadequate power • Units incorporating energy storage device helps

  19. Measuring kV: Yesterday

  20. Measuring kVp: Today

  21. kVp Measurements (Con’t) • Invasive measurement: • still standard for many service personnel) • Non-invasive kV meters (highly recommended): • Measurements at many settings practical--allows comprehensive eval of accuracy & reproducibility • Understand characteristicsof your kV meter • Minimum exposure time for accurate measurement • Accuracy ~2%: beware of imposing tight limits • Effect of mid- or HF (meters that sample waveform) • Selection of waveform type • Properly calibrated filtration range

  22. Effect of Filtration on kV Meters

  23. kVp Waveforms • Obtainable with meters having computer output • Very useful to recognize cause of calibration problems(ramps, spikes, dropped cycles or phases)

  24. kVp: Action Limits • CFR: refers only to manufacturer’s specifications • Manufacturer specs: often quite loose (eg, +/-7%) • Common recommendations: 5% or 4-5 kV • For consistency: differences between kV calibration at different mA stations may be more important than across-the-board errors: eg: 100 mA --> 80 kVp measured to be 84 200 mA --> 80 kVp measures to be 76 Both may yield similar intensities at receptor!!

  25. kVp Action Limits-Considerations • Inconsistencies may be more important than across-the-board errors • More important for multi-unit sites(technique consistency matters more) • Older Generators: • Often difficult to accurately calibrate all mA/kV • Recalibrations may shift error to other ranges • More important to accurately calibrate limited but clinically important limited range • May attempt improvements during next service or during servicing for other corrective actions

  26. X-ray Beam Measurements • kVp accuracy AND reproducibility • Exposure rates (mR/mAs) • mA linearity • Exposure control • reproducibility • Half-Value Layer

  27. Beam Exposure Measurements PROBLEM FREQUENCIES • Poor linearity (adjacent or a common problem • Timer and Reproducibility issues occur less frequently • Problems may appear only: • with certain mA settings • Under certain conditions • At certain kV ranges Important to evaluate many kV/mA settings!!

  28. Efficient Beam Measurements • Valuable to make both kV and exposure measurements at many kV/mA settings. • Appropriate to measure kV and exposure measurements simultaneously. • May accomplish this via: • Appropriate (multipe) tools and test geometry • Multifunction meters

  29. Efficient Beam Measurements Multiple Meters

  30. Geometry with Multiple Detectors • Scatter from kV meter (or other material) can significantly affect exposure measurement • Procedures: • Tight collimation • Block scatter from dosimeter (air gap, foam spacer, lead blocker

  31. Efficient Beam Measurements Multifunction Meters

  32. X-ray Beam Measurements • kVp accuracy AND reproducibility • Exposure rates (mR/mAs) • mA linearity • Exposure control • reproducibility • Half-Value Layer

  33. Exposure Rates (mR/mAs) • Measure at several mA/kV settingscovering the commonly used clinical ranges • Can measure along with kVp (no add’l exposures) • Measure at relevant distance (eg, 30”) • Normal ranges very broad: • Affected by filtration, age, kV and mA calibration • Common range (30”): 12 +/- 50% (3-phase, HF) • Narrow limits which have been published (6 mR/mAs +/- 1 at 100 cm) are not realistic • Greatest value is for patient dose estimates

  34. X-ray Beam Measurements • kVp accuracy AND reproducibility • Exposure rates (mR/mAs) • mA linearity • Exposure control • reproducibility • Half-Value Layer

  35. Evaluating Linearity Both adjacent-station linearity as well as overall linearity (between any two mA stations) are important

  36. mA Linearity (con’t) • Definition: L = (RmA-1 - RmA-2)/(RmA-1 + RmA-2) where R is mR/mAs at mA-1 and mA-2 • Usual Requirement:L < 0.1 for any pair of adjacent mA stations • Exposure rates may differ by ~20% yet pass • Prob signif contributor to technique errors • We recommend: L < 0.1 for any pair of mA L < 0.05 for adjacent pairs

  37. mA Linearity (con’t) For some HF and Falling Load Generators: • Don’t allow selection of mA • May allow selection of load: • 60%/80%/100% • Low/Half/Full, etc) • May evaluate linearity for different load Note:For these (and some other HF) units, linearity of mAs rather than mA may be more pertinent

  38. X-ray Beam Measurements • kVp accuracy AND reproducibility • Exposure rates (mR/mAs) • mA linearity • Exposure control • Timer accuracy • Timer or mAs linearity • reproducibility • Half-Value Layer

  39. Timer Accuracy

  40. Exposure Control & Timer Accuracy • Measure as part of linearity tests • Also at longer and shorter times if necessary • For HF generators: • exposures terminated at desired mAs, not time. • More meaningful to evaluate exposure control via linearity of exposure versus mAs

  41. Timer Accuracy: Action Limits • Recommend: • Greater attention to mAs and timer exposure linearity • Attention to accuracy of short exposure times • Awareness of non-invasive timer characteristics

  42. X-ray Beam Measurements • kVp accuracy AND reproducibility • Exposure rates (mR/mAs) • mA linearity • Exposure control • reproducibility • Half-Value Layer

  43. Reproducibility • Usual Criteria: coeff of variaton < 0.05 • Our experience: Rarely a problem per se • Causes when found: • Abnormally terminated exposures (errors) • Tripped circuit breaker • Often occur only at certain technique settings • CFR test: 10 exposures within 1 hour, checking line voltage prior to each exposure • We recommend: limited test (3 exposures) at several settings, with followup if necessary

  44. X-ray Beam Measurements • kVp accuracy AND reproducibility • Exposure rates (mR/mAs) • mA linearity • Exposure control • Half-Value Layer

  45. HVL Measurement • Failures do occur • Should test new tubes prior to clinical use • Test procedure should allow easy setup, proper geometry (adequate space between dosimeter and aluminum sheets • Measure at desired measured kVp • Criteria from CFR

  46. Collimation • X-ray/light field congruence and alignment • Light field Illumination • Anode cutoff • Damaged off-focus radiation limiters • Positive Beam Limitation

  47. Collimation: Congruence

  48. Collimation: Congruence • Simple toolscan suffice • Relatively frequentissue, particularly for portables • Some uncertaintyin marking light field edges • CFR Criteria:2% of SID for L/X congruence and indicator accuracy (1.5” at 72” SID !!) • Can usually do better:try for 1% of SID congruence

  49. Light Field Illumination/Contrast • CFR Specifications: • Illum: >160 lux at 100 cm • Contrast: I1/I2 > 4 (I1,I2 are illuminations 3 mm in and out from light edge, respectively) • Often never inspected • Common problem onsome collim designs • Recommend: test if visually dim or edge definition is poor

  50. Anode Cutoff and Off-focus Limiters • Evaluated from full-field exposures: • both lengthwise and crosswise orientations • May combine with PBL or grid alignment tests • Anode Cutoff: failure to reach anode edge of film with adequate intensity • Off-focus limiters: • Can become bent inward, blocking primary x-ray • Poorly delineated edge of x-ray field occuring before reaching each of image receptor

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