I had 3 CT scans this year. I asked the doctors and nurses and the radiologists that they know it's a massive amount of radiation to give you, and that's why they don't do them for no reason. They need a serious reason for it, and something so serious where an MRI won't suffice. One was a brain scan 2 weeks after I had a decent concussion and I was just getting worse and worse. Well, they found nothing, no bleeding or anything. Well, the concussion ended up being just an unfortunate coincidence because the real reason I was getting worse was a serious case of sepsis (blood poisoning) and bacterial endocarditis (a bacterial heart valve infection) which got me hospitalized a few weeks afterwards. They did a chest CT because my lungs were filling up with fluid, and I can't really remember what the third one was about, being completely delirious with high fever, midazolam, and ketamine.. I think it was a full torso one to check if the infection had spread to my spine or organs. Luckily it hadn't. Now I'm kinda worried because I had such a massive dose in such a short timespan, they were all within like 2 months. But they still had a _serious_ reason to do them, and I really won't blame them if I get some type of cancer down the line for something that ended up saving my life in the first place. I already feel like I'm on borrowed time after the open heart valve replacement surgery. I'm so thankful that science has come so far ❤
CTs can also exposure patients to ionizing radiation, correct? The information from a CT scan versus the risk of radiation exposure. MRIs are noisy, but there is no radiation exposure.
I had 3 CT scans this year. I asked the doctors and nurses and the radiologists that they know it's a massive amount of radiation to give you, and that's why they don't do them for no reason. They need a serious reason for it, and something so serious where an MRI won't suffice.
One was a brain scan 2 weeks after I had a decent concussion and I was just getting worse and worse. Well, they found nothing, no bleeding or anything.
Well, the concussion ended up being just an unfortunate coincidence because the real reason I was getting worse was a serious case of sepsis (blood poisoning) and bacterial endocarditis (a bacterial heart valve infection) which got me hospitalized a few weeks afterwards. They did a chest CT because my lungs were filling up with fluid, and I can't really remember what the third one was about, being completely delirious with high fever, midazolam, and ketamine.. I think it was a full torso one to check if the infection had spread to my spine or organs. Luckily it hadn't.
Now I'm kinda worried because I had such a massive dose in such a short timespan, they were all within like 2 months.
But they still had a _serious_ reason to do them, and I really won't blame them if I get some type of cancer down the line for something that ended up saving my life in the first place. I already feel like I'm on borrowed time after the open heart valve replacement surgery.
I'm so thankful that science has come so far ❤
CTs can also exposure patients to ionizing radiation, correct?
The information from a CT scan versus the risk of radiation exposure.
MRIs are noisy, but there is no radiation exposure.
Good job.
My friend takes a dose of about 4100 msv. Please will you advise me what I should do now.
How you calculate it?
@@sparkyland8911 it's shown on CT scan monitoring room screen they actually doing CT guided biopsy and they screened him like more than 35 times
The drawing is distracting and annoying but thanks gif the info
The drawing really helps, thanks