
Pulse Fluoroscopy Radiation Reduction in a Pediatric Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory
Author(s) -
Covi Stuart H.,
Whiteside Wendy,
Yu Sunkyung,
Zampi Jeffrey D.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
congenital heart disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.828
H-Index - 42
eISSN - 1747-0803
pISSN - 1747-079X
DOI - 10.1111/chd.12197
Subject(s) - medicine , fluoroscopy , cardiac catheterization , radiation exposure , radiology , reduction (mathematics) , pulse (music) , cardiology , nuclear medicine , optics , physics , geometry , mathematics , detector
Objective To determine if lower starting pulse fluoroscopy rates lead to lower overall radiation exposure without increasing complication rates or perceived procedure length or difficulty. Setting The pediatric cardiac catheterization laboratory at University of Michigan Mott Children's Hospital. Patients Pediatric patients with congenital heart disease. Design/Interventions We performed a single‐center quality improvement study where the baseline pulse fluoroscopy rate was varied between cases during pediatric cardiac catheterization procedures. Outcome Measures Indirect and direct radiation exposure data were collected, and the perceived impact of the fluoroscopy rate and procedural complications was recorded. These outcomes were then compared among the different set pulse fluoroscopy rates. Results Comparing pulse fluoroscopy rates of 15, 7.5, and 5 frames per second from 61 cases, there was a significant reduction in radiation exposure between 15 and 7.5 frames per second. There was no difference in perceived case difficulty, procedural length, or procedural complications regardless of starting pulse fluoroscopy rate. Conclusions For pediatric cardiac catheterizations, a starting pulse fluoroscopy rate of 7.5 frames per second exposes physicians and their patients to significantly less radiation with no impact on procedural difficulty or outcomes. This quality improvement study has resulted in a significant practice change in our pediatric cardiac catheterization laboratory, and 7.5 frames per second is now the default fluoroscopy rate.