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Scanning risk: whole-body CT exams may increase cancer.


In recent years, computerized tomography computerized tomography
n. Abbr. CT
Computerized axial tomography.

Noun 1. computerized tomography - a method of examining body organs by scanning them with X rays and using a computer to construct a series of
 (CT) scanning has gone commercial, as healthy people pay to have their bodies scanned for general-health screening.

They may be doing themselves more harm than good. Reporting in the September Radiology, David J David J. Haskins (b. April 24, 1957, in Northampton, England) is a British alternative rock musician. He was the bassist for the seminal gothic rock band Bauhaus. Life and work . Brenner and Carl D. Elliston of Columbia University Columbia University, mainly in New York City; founded 1754 as King's College by grant of King George II; first college in New York City, fifth oldest in the United States; one of the eight Ivy League institutions.  say that people who routinely get CT body scans without medical cause are exposing themselves to low-dose radiation in amounts that may increase their risk of dying from cancer.

Despite its name, a typical whole-body scan targets just the torso. The procedure, which delivers the same amount of radiation as 30 chest X rays, usually costs hundreds of dollars. Increasing numbers of adults--usually affluent consumers dubbed the "worried well"--are repeatedly undergoing whole-body CT screening as part of routine medical checkups (SN: 9/20/03, p. 184).

On the basis of estimates of radiation doses received by different tissues in each scan, the Columbia researchers projected the incidence rate of cancer among healthy 45-year-old adults who have whole-body CT scans CT scan: see CAT scan.


See CAT scan.
 every year until age 75. The calculations suggest that such a practice would increase a person's lifetime risk of dying from cancer by 1.9 percent. Right now, an individual's chance of dying from cancer is between 1 in 4 and 1 in 5, Brenner notes. For every 50 people who have annual CT scanning CT scanning
Computer tomography scanning is a diagnostic imaging tool that uses x rays sent through the body at different angles.

Mentioned in: Apraxia
 for 30 years beginning at age 45, therefore, 1 would die of cancer induced by the accumulated radiation from the scans, the scientists say.

Any cancers that might stem from radiation in whole-body CT scanning aren't likely to appear for years or decades. So, the researchers turned to actual cancer-mortality data for survivors of the atomic bomb atomic bomb or A-bomb, weapon deriving its explosive force from the release of atomic energy through the fission (splitting) of heavy nuclei (see nuclear energy). The first atomic bomb was produced at the Los Alamos, N.Mex.  blasts in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. "Those survivors ... around 1.5 miles from the explosions received whole-body doses quite similar to those from a single [whole-body] CT scan," Brenner notes. Reports have shown that these bomb survivors have slightly higher odds of dying from cancer than do people in the overall population.

The study focused on cancer risk only for healthy adults who seek the high-tech procedure on their own. "The risk-benefit equation changes dramatically for those who are referred for [whole-body] CT exams for medical diagnosis," says Brenner. In such cases, he notes, "the diagnostic benefits far outweigh the risks."

Currently, there are no uniform operating guidelines for profit-oriented centers that offer whole-body CT screening, says Richard Morin of the Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic: see Mayo, Charles Horace.

Mayo Clinic

voluntary association of more than 500 physicians in Rochester, Minnesota. [Am. Hist.: EB, 11: 723]

See : Medicine
 in Jacksonville, Fla., who chairs the commission on medical physics of the American College of Radiology The American College of Radiology (ACR), founded in 1923, is a non-profit professional medical organization composed of diagnostic radiologists, radiation oncologists, interventional radiologists, nuclear medicine physicians, and medical physicists. . That association has not accredited accredited

recognition by an appropriate authority that the performance of a particular institution has satisfied a prestated set of criteria.


accredited herds
cattle herds which have achieved a low level of reactors to, e.g.
 the procedure, he notes, and the Food and Drug Administration regulates levels of medical-radiation exposure for only mammograms.

Morin says that the new study by Brenner and Elliston is the best effort so far to determine potential cancer risks from radiation exposure in whole-body CT scans. "If a person is healthy, then there is an attendant risk of doing the procedure," he says, "and we know it's not zero."
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Title Annotation:This Week; computerized tomography
Author:Parsell, D.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 4, 2004
Words:490
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