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Effectiveness of polymeric gloves in radioprotection against contamination in nuclear medicine

Authors :
Leonardo Pessoa da Silva
Josiane Bueno Salazar
Andréia Caroline Fischer da Silveira Fischer
Fernanda Ramos de Oliveira
Fernanda Chiarello Stedile
Source :
Brazilian Journal of Radiation Sciences, Vol 11, Iss 1A (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Brazilian Radiation Protection Society (Sociedade Brasileira de Proteção Radiológica, SBPR), 2023.

Abstract

When handling unsealed radioactive sources, radiological protection attention must be taken to avoid unnecessary exposure and radioactive contaminations, and an important and necessary practice to prevent such contaminations is the use of gloves when handling these sources. The present work aimed to determine the effectiveness of contamination protection provided by different types of disposable polymeric gloves used in Nuclear Medicine Service in Clinic Hospital of Porto Alegre, testing the main radiopharmaceuticals used at this site: [99mTc]sodium pertechnetate, [18F]FDG and [131I]sodium iodide. The analysis was performed using the wipe test inside gloves intentionally contaminated on the outside with these radiopharmaceuticals. The radiation detector used to measure the contamination was a NaI(Tl) scintillator well-type counter. The results indicate that three types of gloves analyzed protect the user from [99mTc]sodium pertechnetate and [18F]FDG contamination, for permanence times with the glove after contamination for up to 15 min (interval tested). For [131I]sodium iodide, gloves are completely effective in protection as long as they are used for a time interval after contamination of the external surface of up to: Latex – 5 min; Vinyl – 5 min; Nitrile – 10 min. Among them, the nitrile glove are the most effective, since contamination was not observed on the inner face for times equal to or less than 10 min; and, for an interval of 15 min, the percentage of permeation obtained was lower than the other two types: 3.3 times lower than vinyl glove permeation and 1.3 times lower of the latex glove permeation. It was also possible to estimate the skin dose rate due to contamination caused by iodine permeation for each glove case and time tested.

Details

Language :
English, Portuguese
ISSN :
23190612
Volume :
11
Issue :
1A
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Brazilian Journal of Radiation Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.716341d85954d718827e702679b8abf
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.15392/2319-0612.2023.2187