Calibração de Gama Câmara para Utilização em Programa de Monitoração Interna de IOEs Expostos a I-131 em um Serviço de Medicina Nuclear
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.29384/rbfm.2021.v15.19849001639Keywords:
proteção radiológica; medicina nuclear; monitoração interna; iodo 131Abstract
131I is one of the most used radionuclides in the practice of nuclear medicine, it is used for both diagnostic and therapy proposes, a practice that represents a risk of incorporation by this radionuclide. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) recommends the implementation of an internal monitoring program on workers potentially exposed to annual effective doses higher than 1 mSv, as for example, those who handle 131I for therapy. The Brazilian Nuclear Energy Commission (CNEN) establishes that workers potentially exposed to annual doses greater than 1 mSv due to the incorporation of 131I must be submitted to a routine internal monitoring program. In Brazil there are available only five laboratories qualified to provide internal monitoring services. This scenario turns impossible to attend all possible demand of internal monitoring if such regulation were applied by CNEN, besides that it would generate a high cost for the Nuclear Medicine Services (NMS). This work used a simple and low cost methodology for calibration of a gamma camera to be used in an in vivo routine internal monitoring program of 131I. The calibration techniques carried out in this work proved to be easy and quick to be performed, in addition to providing the possibility of carrying out a routine internal monitoring program in the SMN itself, which allows complying the internal monitoring requirement of 131I required by CNEN without significant additional costs.
Downloads
References
2. Comissão Nacional de Energia Nuclear. Diretrizes Básicas de Proteção Radiológica. Norma CNEN-NE-3.01. Rio de Janeiro; 2014.
3. International Atomic Energy Agency. Occupational radiation protection. Safety Standards Series no. GSG-7. Vienna; Austria, 2018.
4. Comissão Nacional de Energia Nuclear. Requisitos de Segurança e Proteção Radiológica para Serviços de Medicina Nuclear. Norma CNEN NN 3.05. Rio de Janeiro; 2013.
5. Miller KL, Bott SM, Velkley DE. Review of contamination and exposure hazards associated with therapeutic uses of radioiodine. J. Nucl. Med. Technology. 1979; vol. 7, p. 163-166.
6. International Commission on Radiological Protection. Compendium of Dose Coefficients based on ICRP Publication 60. ICRP Publication 119. Ann. ICRP 41(Suppl.). 2012.
7. Comissão Nacional de Energia Nuclear. Critérios para Cálculo de Dose Efetiva, a partir da Monitoração Individual. Posição Regulatória 3.01/005. Rio de Janeiro; 2011.
8. International Atomic Energy Agency. Assessment of Occupational Exposure due to Intakes of Radionuclides. Safety Guide No. RS-G-1.2; 1999.
9. Dantas BM, Lucena EA, Dantas ALA. Internal Exposure in Nuclear Medicine: Application of IAEA Criteria to Determine the Need for Internal Monitoring. BABT. 2008; vol. 51, p.103-107.
10. Dantas BM, Cardoso JS, Dantas ALA, Lucena EA, Ramos MAP, Sá MS, et al. Intercomparação Nacional de Medição In Vivo de Iodo-131 na Tireoide – Projeto TC IAEA BRA 9055. Scientia Plena. 2013; vol. 9.
11. Dantas BM, Dantas ALA, Acar MED, Cardoso JCS, Julião LMQC, Lima MF, et al. Accreditation and Training on Internal Dosimetry in a Laboratory Network in Brazil: An Increasing Demand. Radiation Protection Dosimetry. 2010; vol. 114, p. 124-129.
12. Dantas BM, Lucena EA, Dantas ALA, Araújo F, Rebelo AMO, Terán M, et al. A Protocol for the Calibration of Gamma Cameras to Estimate Internal Contamination in Emergency Situations. Radiation Protection Dosimetry. 2007; vol. 127, p. 253–257.
13. Lucena EA, Rebelo AMO, Araújo F, Sousa WO, Dantas ALA, Dantas BM, et al. Evaluation of Internal Exposure of Nuclear Medicine Staff Through in Vivo and in Vitro Bioassay Techniques. Radiation Protection Dosimetry. 2007; vol. 127, p. 465-468.
14. Vidal MVS, Dantas ALA, Dantas BM. A Methodology for Auto-Monitoring of Internal Contamination by 131I in Nuclear Medicine Workers. Radiation Protection Dosimetry. 2007;, vol. 125, p. 483-487.
15. Oliveira SM, Dantas ALA, Dantas BM. Avaliação da sensibilidade de monitores de contaminação para aplicação em monitoração da exposição interna de trabalhadores em medicina nuclear. Brazilian Journal of Radiation Sciences. 2015; 03-1A, p. 01-12.
16. SAR, 2021, Sistema de Avaliação Radiológica. Disponível em: <http://www.ird.gov.br/ear>. Último acesso: 5 Abr.
17. Health Physics Society. Performance Criteria for Radiobioassay. N13.30. 2011.
18. Bertelli L, Melo DR, Lipsztein J, Cruz-Suarez R. AIDE – Internal Dosimetry Software. Radiation Protection Dosimetry. 2008; 130(3), p. 358-367.
19. International Commission on Radiological Protection. Human Respiratory Tract Model for Radiological Protection. ICRP Publication 66. 1994; Ann. ICRP 24 (1-3).
20. International Commission on Radiological Protection. Compendium of Dose Coefficients based on ICRP Publication 60. ICRP Publication 119. 2012; Ann. ICRP 41(Suppl.).
21. International Commission on Radiological Protection. Recommendations of the International Commission on Radiological Protection. ICRP Publication 60. 1991; Ann. ICRP 21 (1-3).
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2021 Salomão Marques de Oliveira, Cassio Miri Oliveira, Melissa Furlaneto Lellis Leite, Bianca Maciel dos Santos, Ana Letícia Almeida Dantas, Bernardo Maranhão Dantas
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The submission of original articles to the Brazilian Journal of Medical Physics implies the transfer, by the authors, of the rights of print and digital publication. Copyright for published articles remains with the author, with journal rights on first publication. Authors may only use the same results in other publications by clearly indicating this journal as the original publisher. As we are an open access journal, free use of articles in educational, scientific, non-commercial applications is allowed, as long as the source is cited.
The Brazilian Journal of Medical Physics is under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0).