10 results match your criteria: "Saint-Petersburg Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene after Professor P.V. Ramzaev[Affiliation]"

Practical guidance on the assessment of radiation risks for diagnostic radiological examinations.

J Radiol Prot

September 2024

Saint-Petersburg Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene after Professor P.V. Ramzaev, Federal Service for Surveillance on Consumer Rights Protection and Human Wellbeing, 8 Mira Str., 197101 Saint-Petersburg, Russia.

Patient doses cannot be limited; instead, radiological examinations should be justified and optimised to ensure the necessary diagnostic or therapeutic effect with the lowest patient dose achievable. Assessment of the radiation risks from patient exposure is important part of the justification process. Hence, medical staff within the framework of their professional activities should possess necessary information on the data on radiation risk from different types of radiological procedures.

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In situ gamma-spectrometric measurements were performed at grasslands (45 plots) and forests (6 plots) in the vicinity of the Belarusian nuclear power plant in September-October 2019. The aim of the study was to evaluate the baseline level of ambient dose equivalent rates of gamma radiation from natural radionuclides and 137Cs in the period preceding the commissioning of the NPP. The study revealed more than a 2-fold variability in values of the total ambient dose equivalent rate: from 29 to 72 nSv/h.

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Air kerma rate from radionuclides distributed in forest ecosystem.

J Environ Radioact

December 2023

Saint-Petersburg Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene after Professor P.V. Ramzaev, 8 Mira Str., 197101, Saint-Petersburg, Russian Federation. Electronic address:

This study evaluates the air kerma rate in radioactively contaminated forests. The air kerma rates created by plane sources of monoenergetic photons in the energy range 0.02-3 MeV located at different depths in soil up to 50 g cm and at different heights in the forest medium from 0.

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ESTIMATION OF THE EFFECTIVE DOSES FROM TYPICAL FLUOROSCOPIC EXAMINATIONS WITH BARIUM CONTRAST.

Radiat Prot Dosimetry

October 2021

Medical Radiation Physics, Department of Translational Medicine, Lund University, Skåne University Hospital Malmö, Inga-Marie Nilssons gata 49, Malmö 205 02, Sweden.

The current study aimed to estimate the effective doses and conversion coefficients (CCs) for typical barium swallow (BS), barium meal (BM) and barium enema (BE) protocols and to evaluate the impact of different examination parameters on the resulting CCs. Data were collected in surgical and therapy departments in St. Petersburg Urban Mariinsky Hospital.

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In situ determination of Cs inventory in soil using a field-portable scintillation gamma spectrometer-dosimeter.

J Environ Radioact

May 2021

Medical Radiation Physics, Department of Translational Medicine, Lund University, Carl Bertil Laurells gata 9, Malmö, Sweden.

A new empirical method for in situ determination of the inventory of Cs in soil (A, kBq m) at grasslands and forests using a field-portable NaI(Tl) scintillation spectrometer-dosimeter was developed. The method is based on evaluation of the ambient dose equivalent build-up factor. The practical implementation of the new method with the spectrometer-dosimeter does not require a priori knowledge of the vertical distribution of Cs in soil.

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The aim of this study was to perform a preliminary assessment of the expected effective dose rate from external exposure to an adult individual staying at that part of the radioactively contaminated territory of the Vetka district of the Gomel region of the Republic of Belarus, from where residents had been resettled after the Chernobyl accident. For this assessment, in summer 2016 and 2018 soil samples were taken from 19 sites located in forests (7 plots), virgin meadows (4 plots), cultivated meadows (6 plots) and vegetable gardens (2 plots), with the subsequent estimation of the inventory and vertical distribution of Cs in the soil. The values of Cs inventory in the soil ranged from 452 to 1620 kBq m (mean = 904 kBq m, median = 964 kBq m).

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Activity of biota is one of the factors influencing vertical migration of radionuclides deposited from the atmosphere onto the ground surface. The goal of this work was to study the vertical distribution of Cs in grassland soils disturbed by moles (Talpa europaea L.) in comparison with undisturbed grassland soils.

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MANAGEMENT OF PATIENT DOSES FROM DIGITAL X-RAY CHEST SCREENING EXAMINATIONS.

Radiat Prot Dosimetry

June 2016

Medical Radiation Physics, Department of Translational Medicine, Lund University, Skåne University Hospital, Inga-Marie Nilssons gata 49, 205 02 Malmö, Sweden.

An anthropomorphic phantom study was carried out in 2013-14 in two hospitals, one located in Russia (Mariinsky Hospital, Saint Petersburg) and the other in Sweden (Skåne University Hospital, Malmö). The aim of the study was to investigate the possibilities to reduce the patient dose from digital X-ray chest screening examinations. The existing chest imaging protocols were adjusted by changing the tube voltage, total filtration and grid in order to determine the most dose-effective combination of the examination parameters.

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In 2011-2013, sampling of epiphytic fruticose lichens of the genera Usnea, Bryoria and Alectoria was carried out on Sakhalin and Kuril Islands (the Sakhalin region, Russia) to investigate contamination of these organisms with the Fukushima-derived (134)Cs and (137)Cs. Activities of the radionuclides were determined in all 56 samples of lichens taken for the analysis. After correction for radioactive decay (on 15 March 2011), the activity concentrations ranged from 2.

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A total of 88 seawater samples were collected during two Russian research expeditions (April-May 2011 and August-September 2012) to the Sea of Japan, the Oyashio Current region near Kuril Islands and the Kuroshio-Oyashio transition area in the western North Pacific Ocean. The observations were made aboard the R/V Pavel Gordienko and Akademik Shokalsky in order to study the impact of the Fukushima accident on radioactive contamination of the marine environment. On the board of a ship, the water samples were passed through filters to retain particles with the size of >1 micron.

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