A retrospective comparison of intraoperative CT and fluoroscopy evaluating radiation exposure in posterior spinal fusions for scoliosis
Abstract Background Radiation exposure is a concern in the field of medicine. Deformity spine surgeons depend on modalities that have high exposure through scoliosis x-rays or computed tomography. The use of fluoroscopy has increased with the increased use of pedicle screws. Recently other 3-D imagi...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
BMC
2017-12-01
|
Series: | Patient Safety in Surgery |
Online Access: | http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13037-017-0142-0 |
id |
doaj-595ae569eec74162bd48267d71c74b90 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-595ae569eec74162bd48267d71c74b902020-11-24T22:49:17ZengBMCPatient Safety in Surgery1754-94932017-12-011111610.1186/s13037-017-0142-0A retrospective comparison of intraoperative CT and fluoroscopy evaluating radiation exposure in posterior spinal fusions for scoliosisJacob Riis0Rebecca R. Lehman1Robert A. Perera2John Ryan Quinn3Patricia Rinehart4Hans Robert Tuten5Victoria Kuester6Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Virginia Commonwealth UniversityDepartment of Biostatistics, Virginia Commonwealth UniversityDepartment of Biostatistics, Virginia Commonwealth UniversityDepartment of Orthopaedic Surgery, Virginia Commonwealth UniversityDepartment of Orthopaedic Surgery, Virginia Commonwealth UniversityTuckahoe Orthopaedic AssociatesDepartment of Orthopaedic Surgery, Virginia Commonwealth UniversityAbstract Background Radiation exposure is a concern in the field of medicine. Deformity spine surgeons depend on modalities that have high exposure through scoliosis x-rays or computed tomography. The use of fluoroscopy has increased with the increased use of pedicle screws. Recently other 3-D imaging devices with navigation have also been brought onto the market to improve accuracy of screw placement. There is concern that because of the use of CT, the radiation dose to the patient is increased, however there is little literature that directly compares the amount of radiation using the 3-D devices to traditional fluoroscopy. Although we know intraoperative CT decreases the amount of radiation to the surgeon and operating room staff, there is limited comparison data for exposure to patients. Our study focused on a comparison of radiation exposure data for pediatric scoliosis patients receiving posterior spinal fusions using traditional fluoroscopy and the Medtronic O-arm in an effort to determine the method most likely to decrease radiation exposure in the pediatric population. Methods Retrospective review of data in patient charts from two pediatric surgeons practicing in both a University and private hospital setting. Data collected included age, weight, height, diagnosis, Cobb angle, fusion levels, number of screws, and number of hooks, O-arm spins, fluoro doses and O-arm doses. Effective dose was calculated using output measures and radiation doses were compared along a continuum that took into account the amount of correction as indicated by Cobb angle. Results A total of 57 patients, 25 using the O-arm and 32 using traditional fluoroscopy, were analyzed. Effective dose was calculated and then compared as a factor correlated to curve severity. At lower angles of correction we found no statistically significant difference between methods in terms of effective radiation dose. There was no statistically significant divergence until a Cobb angle correction of greater than 74 degrees, where the Oarm dose was shown to be lower by comparison. Conclusion We found that regardless of the methods used there is still a significant radiation dose that is utilized in scoliosis procedures. The two methods analyzed did not display statistically significant differences in effective dose for the average case. Safely managing radiation exposure for pediatric patients is of the utmost priority. Healthcare professionals, however, face repeated exposure to radiation over the course of a long career. In our data set the O-Arm system does not increase overall exposure for patients and decreases radiation doses for providers and thereby provides a safe alternative to traditional fluoroscopy without compromising accuracy of implant placement or patient care. Level of Evidence: III.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13037-017-0142-0 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jacob Riis Rebecca R. Lehman Robert A. Perera John Ryan Quinn Patricia Rinehart Hans Robert Tuten Victoria Kuester |
spellingShingle |
Jacob Riis Rebecca R. Lehman Robert A. Perera John Ryan Quinn Patricia Rinehart Hans Robert Tuten Victoria Kuester A retrospective comparison of intraoperative CT and fluoroscopy evaluating radiation exposure in posterior spinal fusions for scoliosis Patient Safety in Surgery |
author_facet |
Jacob Riis Rebecca R. Lehman Robert A. Perera John Ryan Quinn Patricia Rinehart Hans Robert Tuten Victoria Kuester |
author_sort |
Jacob Riis |
title |
A retrospective comparison of intraoperative CT and fluoroscopy evaluating radiation exposure in posterior spinal fusions for scoliosis |
title_short |
A retrospective comparison of intraoperative CT and fluoroscopy evaluating radiation exposure in posterior spinal fusions for scoliosis |
title_full |
A retrospective comparison of intraoperative CT and fluoroscopy evaluating radiation exposure in posterior spinal fusions for scoliosis |
title_fullStr |
A retrospective comparison of intraoperative CT and fluoroscopy evaluating radiation exposure in posterior spinal fusions for scoliosis |
title_full_unstemmed |
A retrospective comparison of intraoperative CT and fluoroscopy evaluating radiation exposure in posterior spinal fusions for scoliosis |
title_sort |
retrospective comparison of intraoperative ct and fluoroscopy evaluating radiation exposure in posterior spinal fusions for scoliosis |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
Patient Safety in Surgery |
issn |
1754-9493 |
publishDate |
2017-12-01 |
description |
Abstract Background Radiation exposure is a concern in the field of medicine. Deformity spine surgeons depend on modalities that have high exposure through scoliosis x-rays or computed tomography. The use of fluoroscopy has increased with the increased use of pedicle screws. Recently other 3-D imaging devices with navigation have also been brought onto the market to improve accuracy of screw placement. There is concern that because of the use of CT, the radiation dose to the patient is increased, however there is little literature that directly compares the amount of radiation using the 3-D devices to traditional fluoroscopy. Although we know intraoperative CT decreases the amount of radiation to the surgeon and operating room staff, there is limited comparison data for exposure to patients. Our study focused on a comparison of radiation exposure data for pediatric scoliosis patients receiving posterior spinal fusions using traditional fluoroscopy and the Medtronic O-arm in an effort to determine the method most likely to decrease radiation exposure in the pediatric population. Methods Retrospective review of data in patient charts from two pediatric surgeons practicing in both a University and private hospital setting. Data collected included age, weight, height, diagnosis, Cobb angle, fusion levels, number of screws, and number of hooks, O-arm spins, fluoro doses and O-arm doses. Effective dose was calculated using output measures and radiation doses were compared along a continuum that took into account the amount of correction as indicated by Cobb angle. Results A total of 57 patients, 25 using the O-arm and 32 using traditional fluoroscopy, were analyzed. Effective dose was calculated and then compared as a factor correlated to curve severity. At lower angles of correction we found no statistically significant difference between methods in terms of effective radiation dose. There was no statistically significant divergence until a Cobb angle correction of greater than 74 degrees, where the Oarm dose was shown to be lower by comparison. Conclusion We found that regardless of the methods used there is still a significant radiation dose that is utilized in scoliosis procedures. The two methods analyzed did not display statistically significant differences in effective dose for the average case. Safely managing radiation exposure for pediatric patients is of the utmost priority. Healthcare professionals, however, face repeated exposure to radiation over the course of a long career. In our data set the O-Arm system does not increase overall exposure for patients and decreases radiation doses for providers and thereby provides a safe alternative to traditional fluoroscopy without compromising accuracy of implant placement or patient care. Level of Evidence: III. |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13037-017-0142-0 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT jacobriis aretrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT rebeccarlehman aretrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT robertaperera aretrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT johnryanquinn aretrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT patriciarinehart aretrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT hansroberttuten aretrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT victoriakuester aretrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT jacobriis retrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT rebeccarlehman retrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT robertaperera retrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT johnryanquinn retrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT patriciarinehart retrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT hansroberttuten retrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis AT victoriakuester retrospectivecomparisonofintraoperativectandfluoroscopyevaluatingradiationexposureinposteriorspinalfusionsforscoliosis |
_version_ |
1725676521261105152 |