The Scoliosis Quandary: Are Radiation Exposures From Repeated X-Rays Harmful?

X-rays have been the gold standard for diagnosis, evaluation, and management of spinal scoliosis for decades as other assessment methods are indirect, too expensive, or not practical in practice. The average scoliosis patient will receive 10 to 25 spinal X-rays over several years equating to a maxim...

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Main Authors: Paul A. Oakley DC, MSc, Niousha Navid Ehsani MD, Deed E. Harrison DC
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-06-01
Series:Dose-Response
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1559325819852810
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spelling doaj-43d949bb737f4bfd8bedee7266b018e02020-11-25T03:43:55ZengSAGE PublishingDose-Response1559-32582019-06-011710.1177/1559325819852810The Scoliosis Quandary: Are Radiation Exposures From Repeated X-Rays Harmful?Paul A. Oakley DC, MSc0Niousha Navid Ehsani MD1Deed E. Harrison DC2 Private Practice, Newmarket, Ontario, Canada Private Practice, Newmarket, Ontario, Canada CBP NonProfit, Inc, Eagle, ID, USAX-rays have been the gold standard for diagnosis, evaluation, and management of spinal scoliosis for decades as other assessment methods are indirect, too expensive, or not practical in practice. The average scoliosis patient will receive 10 to 25 spinal X-rays over several years equating to a maximum estimated dose of 10 to 25 mGy. Some patients, those getting diagnosed at a younger age and receiving early and ongoing treatments, may receive up to 40 to 50 X-rays, approaching at most 50 mGy. There are concerns that repeated radiographs given to patients are carcinogenic. Some studies have used the linear no-threshold model to derive cancer-risk estimates; however, it is invalid for low-dose irradiation (ie, X-rays); these estimates are untrue. Other studies have calculated cancer-risk ratios from long-term health data of historic scoliosis cohorts. Since data indicate reduced cancer rates in a cohort receiving a total radiation dose between 50 and 300 mGy, it is unlikely that scoliosis patients would get cancer from repeated X-rays. Moreover, since the threshold for leukemia is about 1100 mGy, scoliosis patients will not likely develop cancers from spinal X-rays. Scoliosis patients likely have long-term health consequences, including cancers, from the actual disease entity itself and not from protracted X-ray radiation exposures that are essential and indeed safe.https://doi.org/10.1177/1559325819852810
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul A. Oakley DC, MSc
Niousha Navid Ehsani MD
Deed E. Harrison DC
spellingShingle Paul A. Oakley DC, MSc
Niousha Navid Ehsani MD
Deed E. Harrison DC
The Scoliosis Quandary: Are Radiation Exposures From Repeated X-Rays Harmful?
Dose-Response
author_facet Paul A. Oakley DC, MSc
Niousha Navid Ehsani MD
Deed E. Harrison DC
author_sort Paul A. Oakley DC, MSc
title The Scoliosis Quandary: Are Radiation Exposures From Repeated X-Rays Harmful?
title_short The Scoliosis Quandary: Are Radiation Exposures From Repeated X-Rays Harmful?
title_full The Scoliosis Quandary: Are Radiation Exposures From Repeated X-Rays Harmful?
title_fullStr The Scoliosis Quandary: Are Radiation Exposures From Repeated X-Rays Harmful?
title_full_unstemmed The Scoliosis Quandary: Are Radiation Exposures From Repeated X-Rays Harmful?
title_sort scoliosis quandary: are radiation exposures from repeated x-rays harmful?
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Dose-Response
issn 1559-3258
publishDate 2019-06-01
description X-rays have been the gold standard for diagnosis, evaluation, and management of spinal scoliosis for decades as other assessment methods are indirect, too expensive, or not practical in practice. The average scoliosis patient will receive 10 to 25 spinal X-rays over several years equating to a maximum estimated dose of 10 to 25 mGy. Some patients, those getting diagnosed at a younger age and receiving early and ongoing treatments, may receive up to 40 to 50 X-rays, approaching at most 50 mGy. There are concerns that repeated radiographs given to patients are carcinogenic. Some studies have used the linear no-threshold model to derive cancer-risk estimates; however, it is invalid for low-dose irradiation (ie, X-rays); these estimates are untrue. Other studies have calculated cancer-risk ratios from long-term health data of historic scoliosis cohorts. Since data indicate reduced cancer rates in a cohort receiving a total radiation dose between 50 and 300 mGy, it is unlikely that scoliosis patients would get cancer from repeated X-rays. Moreover, since the threshold for leukemia is about 1100 mGy, scoliosis patients will not likely develop cancers from spinal X-rays. Scoliosis patients likely have long-term health consequences, including cancers, from the actual disease entity itself and not from protracted X-ray radiation exposures that are essential and indeed safe.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1559325819852810
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