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Prenatal Radiation Exposure
In early pregnancy the cells of the unborn child are dividing rapidly,
and large doses of radiation can be hazardous. Therefore pregnant
women should avoid exposure to x-rays if at all possible. If you've
had x-rays then later discovered that you were pregnant, it's understandable
you would be concerned. The good news is that according to the American
Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM), an unborn child exposed
to 1 rem of radiation has less than one chance in a thousand of
suffering birth defects as a result of the exposure, even if exposed
during the most critical stages of development (3 to 8 weeks of
pregnancy). The "natural" risk of congenital defect is
much greater than any potential added risk from the x-rays.
The risk to the baby is practically nil for the following exposures:
• dental x-rays, even without a lead apron
• diagnostic x-rays of the head, spine, chest or abdomen
• barium enema
• IVP
• living near a nuclear power plant
• working as an x-ray technologist (following good radiation
safety guidelines)
• x-rays to the fathers testicles just prior to conception
According to AAPM, "...both the American College of Radiology
and the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology have adopted
a policy that rarely if ever is termination of pregnancy advisable
because of the radiation risk arising from diagnostic x-ray examinations."
For more information on Pregnancy and Radiation, visit the Health
Physics Society.
| Source of Technical Information:
"A Primer on Low-Level Ionizing Radiation and Its Biological
Effects," Published for the American Association of Physicists
in Medicine by the American Institute of Physics, AAPM Report
No. 18, 335 E. 45th Street, NY, NY 10017, 1986. |
| Source:
Reprinted from Epigee Pregnancy Resource. Copyright Terwilliger Web Development Services, 2005. Used with permission. |
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