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Be Alert to Radiation Risk From Medical Tests

by Barbara Kram, Editor | March 30, 2009
Medical imaging can be
a life saver but it
comes with risks
BOSTON - With a little help from radiation, doctors can examine the heart and even clear clogged arteries without ever opening the chest. But there can be a price to pay for these advances, reports the April 2009 issue of the Harvard Heart Letter. Exposure to radiation can damage DNA and lead to uncontrolled cell division, the hallmark of cancer. The delicate balance between benefit and risk demands the judicious use of radiation for diagnosing and treating disease.

The amount of radiation delivered by medical tests or procedures varies widely. A chest x-ray delivers a tiny fraction of the amount of natural background radiation we receive each year. By comparison, computed tomography (CT) scans and some nuclear stress tests deliver up to 10 times the annual background dose.

In general, the cancer risk from a single medical test or procedure is low. For every 1,000 people exposed to the amount of radiation delivered by a cardiac CT scan, the radiation would add one extra case of cancer to the 420 cases that would normally occur. Still, it is estimated that radiation from CT scans now accounts for 1.5% of all cancers in the United States.

So how do you protect yourself? Some tests may not be worth the radiation received. The Harvard Heart Letter notes that you shouldn't agree to medical testing that involves radiation, or ask for it, unless it will give you and your doctor important information about your health. And even then, ask if you can get the lowest radiation dose possible.

Read Full-length Article: "Radiation in medicine: A double-edged sword," here:
https://www.health.harvard.edu/newsletters/Harvard_Heart_Letter/2009/April/Radiation-in-medicine-A-double-edged-sword?utm_source=heart&utm_medium=pressrelease&utm_campaign=heart0409

Also in this issue:

-Heart disease diagnosis and treatment lags in women
(In conjunction with this article, the editors of the Harvard Heart Letter have compiled a list of medical centers that specialize in women's heart health. See it at health.harvard.edu/146.)
-Balancing potassium and sodium
-Binge drinking and stroke
-Osteoporosis drugs and atrial fibrillation
-St. John's wort and statins
-Does taking arginine protect the arteries?

The Harvard Heart Letter is available from Harvard Health Publications, the publishing division of Harvard Medical School, for $29 per year. Subscribe at www.health.harvard.edu/heart or by calling 877-649-9457 (toll-free).

Source: Harvard Heart Letter