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Comment by lostlogin

9 days ago

> You'd have to be massively overexposed to CT or PET scanning to cause cancer

The mean effective dose for all patients from a single PET/CT scan was 20.6 mSv. For males aged 40 y, a single PET/CT scan is associated with a LAR of cancer incidence of 0.169%. This risk increased to 0.85% if an annual surveillance protocol for 5 y was performed. For female patients aged 40 y, the LAR of cancer mortality increased from 0.126 to 0.63% if an annual surveillance protocol for 5 y was performed.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36856709/

> 0.126 to 0.63%

So, a just-about-measurable increase, if you pick and choose your values carefully?

You are not going to die from cancer caused by getting a PET scan. This will not happen.

You're going to die of heart disease or as a not-too-distant second in a car accident.

  • That data is for one scan, ever.

    Continuous scanning for months would give a dose many orders of magnitude higher.