by Sylvia Anderson IH Editor October 25, 2010 from InsidersHealth Website
There is no doubt that the use of computed tomography (CT or CAT) scans has many benefits.
They help doctors detect everything from
kidney stones to tumors. That’s partly because CT scans yield much
higher resolution images than conventional medical x-rays. The
downside is that they also expose the patient to sometimes thousands
of times the amount of radiation of a medical regular x-ray.
The extremely large doses of radiation from these scans are not innocuous. Many patients are prescribed multiple, unnecessary CT scans which often stems from a lack of communication between physicians. Having the same scan done twice simply because one doctor “didn’t get the memo” is simply ridiculous.
Actually, it’s tragic when you consider
it’s a mistake that could double the chance of developing cancer
from the procedure.
While the risk of an adult developing
cancer from a CT scan is about 1 in 2000, for a child the risk goes
up to 1 in 500.
But that doesn't make the fact that
nearly 30,000 people in the US alone get cancer every year from CT
scans any less alarming.
But always ask your doctor if an MRI or an ultrasound can be performed instead. They have fewer harmful side effects and many times can do the job just as well.
Don’t put you or your child at risk for the perceived benefit of high tech scanning.
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