- Discover Paris Tennessee - https://www.paristn.net/articles -

Consumer Reports Warns Against the Risks of Radiation Overexposure from Unnecessary CT Scans

Researchers Estimate at Least Two Percent of All Future Cancers in the U.S. Will Stem from CT Scans Alone – That’s Approximately 29,000 Cases and 15,000 Deaths Per Year

Consumer ReportsYonkers, NY – X-rays have been used for almost 120 years and computed tomography, or CT scans, were introduced in the 1970’s. These newer scans allow doctors to see with unprecedented precision the inner workings of the human body through the use of multiple X-ray images. Their use has grown from fewer than 3 million per year in 1980 to more than 80 million today.

CT scans emit a powerful dose of radiation, in some cases equivalent to about 200 chest X-rays, or the amount most people would be exposed to from natural sources over seven years. A dose like this can alter the makeup of human tissue and create free radicals, molecules that can wreak havoc on human cells. Human bodies can often repair that damage – but not always.

When they don’t, the damage can lead to cancer that can take from five to 60 years to develop, with risk that also depends on age and lifestyle.

Scientists have struggled to quantify the dangers of medical radiation and have often relied on evidence from the atomic bomb attacks in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But growing research now shows that today’s medical patients are being harmed, too.

The full story, titled “Radiation Risks – Overexposed” is featured in the March 2015 issue of Consumer Reports magazine and is available at www.ConsumerReports.org [1]. “No one says that you should avoid a CT scan or other imaging test if you really need it, and the risk posed by any single scan is very small,” says Marvin M. Lipman, M.D., Consumer Reports chief medical adviser. “But the effect of radiation is cumulative, and the more you’re exposed, the greater your cancer risk.” So it’s essential that consumers always ask doctors why they are ordering an imaging test and whether their health problem could be managed without one.

Doctors order millions of radiation-based imaging tests each year, but recent research shows that about one-third of these scans serve little if any medical purpose. Given the greater lifetime risk of cancer that comes with increased radiation, why is there so much overuse?

Young people are particularly vulnerable to radiation. New evidence comes from a 2013 Australian study that looked at more than 680,000 people who had CT scans before the age of 20 and compared them with some 10 million people younger than 20 who did not have a CT scan.

[320left]The researchers determined that for every 10,000 young people scanned, 45 would develop cancer over the next 10 years, compared with 39 cancers among 10,000 people not screened.

Overall, people scanned had a 24 percent increased cancer risk, and each additional scan boosted risk an additional 16 percent. Children who had one before the age of 5 faced a 35 percent spike in cancer risk.

Other researchers estimate that for every 1,000 children who have an abdominal CT scan, one will develop cancer as a result, and a 2012 study that looked at almost 180,000 British children linked CT scans to higher rates of leukemia and brain cancer.

Consumer Reports offers the following advice on what consumers can do before getting any radiation-based imaging tests done: