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Radiation injury is a potentially serious complication to fluoroscopically-guided complex interventions
Author(s) -
LK Wagner
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
biomedical imaging and intervention journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1823-5530
DOI - 10.2349/biij.3.2.e22
Subject(s) - medicine , seriousness , buttocks , complication , psychological intervention , surgery , radiology , psychiatry , political science , law
Radiation-induced injury to skin is an infrequent but potentially serious complication to complex fluoroscopically-guided interventional procedures. Due to a lack of experience with such injuries, the medical community has found fluoroscopically-induced injuries difficult to diagnose. Injuries have occurred globally in many countries. Serious injuries most frequently occur on the back but have also occurred on the neck, buttocks and anterior of the chest. Severities of injuries range from skin rashes and epilation to necrosis of the skin and its underlying structures. This article reviews the characteristics of these injuries and some actions that can be taken to reduce their likelihood or seriousness.

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