Blood flow and blood distribution were investigated in 40 patients with normal small intestine and the relation between blood flow and the morphological features of Crohn's disease was examined in 11 patients with Crohn's disease by laser Doppler flowmetry from the serosal side during surgery. In normal small intestine, blood flow was measured at six points: upper, middle, and lower small intestine, each of the mesenteric borders, and the antimesenteric surface. In Crohn's disease, macroscopically normal tissue and affected lesions were observed in detail by intraoperative endoscopy after blood flow measurement. The blood flow values in the normal small intestine gradually decreased from the upper to the lower small intestine. As the level of inflammation progressed in Crohn's disease the blood flow values gradually decreased; the exudative stage of Crohn's disease (aphthoid ulcer) showed blood flow values that were slightly below those in macroscopically normal tissue. These results are the first to demonstrate decreased blood flow in affected lesions in Crohn's disease and changes in blood flow according to the degree of inflammation in vivo.
SummaryMedical staffs like radiological technologists, doctors, and nurses are at an increased risk of exposure to radiation while assisting the patient in a position or monitor contrast medium injection during computed tomography (CT). However, methods to protect medical staff from radiation exposure and protocols for using radiological protection equipment have not been standardized and differ among hospitals. In this study, the distribution of scattered X-rays in a CT room was measured by placing electronic personal dosimeters in locations where medical staff stands beside the CT scanner gantry while assisting the patient and the exposure dose was measured. Moreover, we evaluated non-uniform exposure and revealed effective techniques to reduce the exposure dose to medical staff during CT. The dose of the scattered X-rays was the lowest at the gantry and at the examination table during both head and abdominal CT. The dose was the highest at the trunk of the upper body of the operator corresponding to a height of 130 cm during head CT and at the head corresponding to a height of 150 cm during abdominal CT. The maximum dose to the crystalline lens was approximately 600 Sv during head CT. We found that the use of volumetric CT scanning and X-ray protective goggles, and face direction toward the gantry reduced the exposure dose, particularly to the crystalline lens, for which lower equivalent dose during CT scan has been recently recommended in the International Commission on Radiological Protection Publication 118.
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