The appropriate and justified use of medical radiation in cardiovascular imaging: a position document of the ESC Associations of Cardiovascular Imaging, Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions and Electrophysiology
European Heart Journal

Abstract
The benefits of cardiac imaging are immense, and modern medicine requires the extensive and versatile use of a variety of cardiac imaging techniques. Cardiologists are responsible for a large part of the radiation exposures every person gets per year from all medical sources. Therefore, they have a particular responsibility to avoid unjustified and non-optimized use of radiation, but sometimes are imperfectly aware of the radiological dose of the examination they prescribe or practice. This position paper aims to summarize the current knowledge on radiation effective doses (and risks) related to cardiac imaging procedures. We have reviewed the literature on radiation doses, which can range from the equivalent of 1–60 milliSievert (mSv) around a reference dose average of 15 mSv (corresponding to 750 chest X-rays) for a percutaneous coronary intervention, a cardiac radiofrequency ablation, a multidetector coronary angiography, or a myocardial perfusion imaging scintigraphy. We provide a European perspective on the best way to play an active role in implementing into clinical practice the key principle of radiation protection that: ‘each patient should get the right imaging exam, at the right time, with the right radiation dose’.
Contributors

Eugenio Picano
Author

Eliseo Vañó
Author

Madan M. Rehani
Author

Alberto Cuocolo
Author

Lluis Mont
Author

Vicente Bodi
Author

Olivier Bar
Author

Carlo Maccia
Author

Luc Pierard
Author

Rosa Sicari
Author

Sven Plein
Author

Heiko Mahrholdt
Author

Patrizio Lancellotti
Author

Juhani Knuuti
Author

Hein Heidbuchel
Author

Carlo Di Mario
Author

