Unintentional exposure and incidental findings during conventional chest radiography in the pediatric intensive care unit

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Abstract

Radiation overexposure is common in chest X-ray (CXRs) of pediatric patients. However, overexposure may reveal incidental findings that can help to guide patient management or warrant quality improvement.To assess the prevalence of overexposure in CXRs in pediatric intensive care unit (PICU); and identify the incidental findings within overexposed areas, we conducted a retrospective cohort study of children who were admitted to PICU. Two independent evaluators reviewed patient's charts and digital CXRs according to the American College of Radiology standards; to evaluate overexposure of the anatomical parameters and incidental findings.A total of 400 CXRs of 85 patients were reviewed. The mean number of CXRs per patient was 4.7. Almost all (99.75%) CXRs met the criteria for overexposure, with the most common being upper abdomen (99.2%), upper limbs (97%) and neck (95.7%). In addition, 43% of these X-rays were cropped by the radiology technician to appear within the requested perimeter. There was a significant association between field cropping and overexposure (t-test: t=9.8, P

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Temsah, M. H., Al-Eyadhy, A., Alsohime, F., Nassar, S. M., Alhoshan, T. N., Alebdi, H. A., … Zhang, Z. (2021). Unintentional exposure and incidental findings during conventional chest radiography in the pediatric intensive care unit. Medicine (United States), 100(9), E24760. https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000024760

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