ABSTRACT. The effective dose is designed to provide a single number proportional to the radiobiological ‘‘detriment’ ’ from a particular, often inhomogeneous, radiation exposure, with detriment representing a balance between carcinogenesis, life shortening and hereditary effects. It is commonly used to allow a comparison of the risks associated with different spatial dose distributions produced by different imaging techniques. The effective dose represents questionable science: two of the most important reasons for this are that the tissue-specific weighting factors used to calculate effective dose are a subjective mix of different endpoints, and that the marked and differing age dependencies for different endpoints are not taken into accou...
Medical uses of radiation have grown very rapidly over the past decade, and, as of 2007, medical use...
This review presents basic information on the dosimetric quantities used in medical imaging for repo...
At the relatively low dose levels encountered in diagnostic radiology, detrimental effects have not ...
Modern radiation protection is based on the principles of justification, limitation, and optimisatio...
Johnson et al1 have estimated cumulative radiation doses received by children treated for cardiac co...
International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) Publication 103 provided a detailed expla...
Purpose: The validity of effective dose (ED) in medical applications, which mostly involving partial...
Background: Effective dose represents the potential risk to a population of stochastic effects of io...
Graduation date: 2011The use of medical diagnostic imaging involving ionizing radiation has drastica...
Irradiation of the human body by external or internal sources leads mostly to a simultaneous exposur...
Absorbed dose D is shown to be a composite variable, the product of the fraction of cells hit (I/sub...
For years many have employed the concept of "total-body dose " or "whole-body dose, &...
This paper discusses the merits and disadvantages of a specific proposal for a numerical calculation...
Effective dose represents the potential risk to a population of stochastic effects of ionizing radia...
Graduation date: 2010Tissue weighting factors, w[subscript T], used to convert equivalent dose to ef...
Medical uses of radiation have grown very rapidly over the past decade, and, as of 2007, medical use...
This review presents basic information on the dosimetric quantities used in medical imaging for repo...
At the relatively low dose levels encountered in diagnostic radiology, detrimental effects have not ...
Modern radiation protection is based on the principles of justification, limitation, and optimisatio...
Johnson et al1 have estimated cumulative radiation doses received by children treated for cardiac co...
International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) Publication 103 provided a detailed expla...
Purpose: The validity of effective dose (ED) in medical applications, which mostly involving partial...
Background: Effective dose represents the potential risk to a population of stochastic effects of io...
Graduation date: 2011The use of medical diagnostic imaging involving ionizing radiation has drastica...
Irradiation of the human body by external or internal sources leads mostly to a simultaneous exposur...
Absorbed dose D is shown to be a composite variable, the product of the fraction of cells hit (I/sub...
For years many have employed the concept of "total-body dose " or "whole-body dose, &...
This paper discusses the merits and disadvantages of a specific proposal for a numerical calculation...
Effective dose represents the potential risk to a population of stochastic effects of ionizing radia...
Graduation date: 2010Tissue weighting factors, w[subscript T], used to convert equivalent dose to ef...
Medical uses of radiation have grown very rapidly over the past decade, and, as of 2007, medical use...
This review presents basic information on the dosimetric quantities used in medical imaging for repo...
At the relatively low dose levels encountered in diagnostic radiology, detrimental effects have not ...