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1.
Radiat Prot Dosimetry ; 200(2): 120-129, 2024 Feb 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37939724

ABSTRACT

Projection radiography is the most common radiological modality, and radiation safety of it concerns both radiation workers and the public. We measured and generated a series of scattered radiation maps for projection radiography and estimated effective doses of the supporting person during exposure. Measured adult patient protocols included chest posterior-anterior, chest lateral, pelvis anterior-posterior (AP), abdomen AP and bedside chest AP. Maps concretise spatial distribution and the scattered radiation dose rates in different imaging protocols. Highest and lowest rates were measured in abdomen AP and bedside chest AP protocols, respectively. The effective dose of supporting person in abdomen AP examination at distance of 0.5 m was 300 nSv and in bedside supine chest AP examination at distance of 0.7 m was 0.5 nSv. The estimated annual effective dose of emergency unit radiographer was 0.11 mSv. The obtained effective dose values are small compared to annual dose limits of radiation workers and the public.


Subject(s)
Pelvis , Physical Examination , Adult , Humans , X-Rays , Radiation Dosage , Radiography , Pelvis/diagnostic imaging , Radiography, Thoracic
2.
Anal Chem ; 89(14): 7447-7454, 2017 07 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28640594

ABSTRACT

Organic and printed electronics integration has the potential to revolutionize many technologies, including biomedical diagnostics. This work demonstrates the successful integration of multiple printed electronic functionalities into a single device capable of the measurement of hydrogen peroxide and total cholesterol. The single-use device employed printed electrochemical sensors for hydrogen peroxide electroreduction integrated with printed electrochromic display and battery. The system was driven by a conventional electronic circuit designed to illustrate the complete integration of silicon integrated circuits via pick and place or using organic electronic circuits. The device was capable of measuring 8 µL samples of both hydrogen peroxide (0-5 mM, 2.72 × 10-6 A·mM-1) and total cholesterol in serum from 0 to 9 mM (1.34 × 10-8 A·mM-1, r2 = 0.99, RSD < 10%, n = 3), and the result was output on a semiquantitative linear bar display. The device could operate for 10 min via a printed battery, and display the result for many hours or days. A mobile phone "app" was also capable of reading the test result and transmitting this to a remote health care provider. Such a technology could allow improved management of conditions such as hypercholesterolemia.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Technology , Electrochemical Techniques , Electronics , Printing , Cholesterol/blood , Electric Power Supplies , Electrodes , Humans , Hydrogen Peroxide/analysis
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