Over 18 million diagnostic and therapeutic procedures involving radioisotopes are carried out each year. Radioisotopes in scans such as those involving the thyroid gland, bone, and blood flow to the heart muscle, as well as radioactive iodine therapy, render patients temporarily radioactive. As a result, patients are at risk of setting off radiation alarms at airports.
Professor Underwood comments: "Stricter measure, and more sensitive radiation detection systems, are being deployed at airports worldwide. It is important to warn patients having had a thallium scan that they may trigger radiation detectors for up to 30 days. It should be standard practice to issue patients with an information card after diagnostic or therapeutic procedures involving radioisotopes. The card should state the date and place of the procedure, the radioisotope used and its half-life, potential duration of radioactive emissions from the patient, and details on who to contact for verification if necessary…Patient information cards could lessen the impact of such false alarms and avoid unnecessary interrogations by airport security personnel."
Contact: Professor SR Underwood, Royal Brompton Hospital, Sydney Street, LONDON SW3 6NP, UK. T) 44-207-351-8811 r.underwood@ic.ac.uk
Journal
The Lancet