How to Prevent Patient Burns During MR Imaging

In this article, we review eight ways you can use to prevent patient burns during MR imaging. Watch the full explanation below in our YouTube video provided by Eric from Olympic Health Physics.

Eight Tips For Preventing Burns on MRI Patients

Download your free copy of the FDA’s poster on MRI Burn Prevention: Tips For Keeping Patients Safe to follow along with us. 

1. Screen Your Patients

The first process to implement that can prevent burns during MR imaging is to screen your patients before entering Zone 4. This includes screening for anything metallic, such as implants or medical devices. It’s a good rule to assume that anything unknown in or on your patient is not MRI safe. 

2. Screen Any Objects Going Into Zone 4

In addition to screening your patients, you also want to screen anything going into the MRI scan room. All objects entering Zone 4 need to be MR Safe or MR Conditional. If any MR Conditional objects enter the scan room, match them to the MR Conditional devices with your scanner. Remember that all metals, even non-ferromagnetic metals, have the potential to cause burns during MR imaging. 

3. Have Patients Change Into Hospital or Medical Gowns

Whenever possible, have your patient change out of their street clothes into a medical or hospital gown before entering Zone 4. This can prevent any metallic items, such a metallic fabrics, buttons, zippers, or embellishments, from unknowingly being exposed to MRI equipment. In addition, it prevents a patient from accidentally having metallic objects in their pockets and bringing them into Zone 4.

4. Ensure The Patient Isn’t Creating Conductive Loops

Next, you want to ensure that your patients aren’t creating any conductive loops themselves. For example, when a patient needs to be scanned with their arms over their head, you want ensure they don’t have their hands clasped. Your patient also shouldn’t cross their arms or feet. This avoids creating magnetic loops, which helps with burn prevention.

5. Use The Manufacturer Provided Padding

You want to use the manufacturer provided padding to pad the sides of the bore or in between the patient to insulate the patient. While you can use sheets and pillows, they should only be used for patient comfort. All padding and insulation should use manufacturer-supplied padding. 

6. Cables Should Run In A Straight Line From The Scanner

Another way to prevent burning the patient is to run any cables to and from scanner in a straight line. Check that the cables running from the coil into the magnet are not forming loops.

7. Use The Lowest SAR In Normal Operating Mode

While operating in normal mode try to keep the lowest SAR possible. If you have an SA monitor, keep an eye on the SA level to ensure that you’re within limits. 

8. Stay In Communication With Your Patient

Remain in communication with your patient at all times. Stay in visual contact when possible and using an intercom for verbal communication is essential.

Ensure the patient has the squeeze ball and give them directions on how and when it’s appropriate to use before you start the scan. 

Some MRI suites don’t allow you to keep eyes on the patient the entire time based on the orientation of the control room. If that’s the case, have some other way that you can monitor the patient.

Stop the scan and investigate the possible cause if the patient does communicate with you and tell you that they feel burning or feel something heating up.

And that wraps up the eight different ways that we can try to prevent MRI burns in MRI departments. 

You can find the FDA’s MRI burn prevention poster by clicking here 

Don’t forget that we also provide a variety of courses, including MRI Safety for MRI Professionals.

If you have questions about MRI or MRI safety, feel free to drop us a note and we’ll be happy to take a look at your situation and see if there’s something that we can do to help you.

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We perform physics testing for all makes and models of MRI scanners.  For a complete description of our physics testing, check out our MRI Physics Tests.  In addition to our MRI Physics Testing, we also provide MRI Safety Audits for facilities wanting a comprehensive MRI safety assessment.

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An ACR MRI Safety Manual Overview

An ACR MRI Safety Manual Overview

In this post, we are providing an overview of the 2020 ACR MRI Safety Manual.

In 2013, the ACR published a white paper on MRI safety, and then in 2020 there was an update to that white paper that came in manual form. The intent of this manual was to be used directly by radiology technologists and imaging centers to have policies and procedures that would be more directly applicable to safety in the clinical environment.

Most of the manual is essentially unchanged from the 2013 white paper. There are sections that are identical and there are other sections that are largely the same. Then, there’s been some changes since the 2013 white paper into the 2020 manual.

Watch the video below on our YouTube channel as Eric walks you through an overview of the ACR Safety Manual for Magnetic Resonance Imaging procedures. 

What Are The Significant Changes in The 2020 Manual?

The most significant change is the designation and delegation of duties of:

  • the MR MD or the MR Medical Director
  • the MR SO or the MR Safety Officer, and
  • the MR SE or the MR Safety Expert

The manual does a really good job of outlining a good MRI safety program structure with these three positions. 

Is The Manual a Requirement for ACR Accreditation?

One thing to point out about the manual is that even though it uses words like shall, will and must, the manual itself is not a requirement of ACR accreditation.

Whenever you apply for ACR accreditation or are inspected by an ACR inspector, they’re not going to check to see if you’ve implemented this particular manual. They’re going to look to see that you have safety policies in place. Those safety policies can be the ones out of the manual, which is the intent of them providing the MR Safety Manual. However, they can also differ from what’s in the manual. You are not necessarily beholden to the exact verbiage that’s in the manual, but it’s a really good starting point for developing your own policies and procedures for your specific MRI department.

An Overview of the ACR Manual

The manual itself is 56 pages long. It’s quite a thorough manual and it provides excellent information on MRI safety. The idea behind it is that you use the manual and that you implement the policies and procedures in the manual, or at least some version of them in your own policies and procedures for your MRI department. You can find this MRI safety manual on the ACR website.

Table of Contents

The Table of Contents provides an overview of the manual’s general layout. You can see there are many different sections within the manual. Within these sections, there are specific policies or procedures that you’re going to need to be compliant with the ACR.

The Table of Contents from the ACR Manual on MR Safety
Example of MRI procedures and policies listed in the ACR Manual on MR Safety

Examples of Policies and Procedures

Within the safety manual, you can find policies or procedures on elements such as:

  • policies on personnel and non personnel
  • who MR technologists are
  • the differences between level one and level two trained staff
  • policy for screening right here staff as well as patient screening

We also have pediatric policy as well as policy for pregnancy. The manual cover things like sedation, as well as contrast policy. It covers implants, devices and objects and how we screen for them.

The manual discusses several things in the MRI environment, such as the different MRI zones, the MRI contrast agent safety and responding to codes. There is coverage on hearing protection as well as thermal heating. All of those topics are going to be found in the manual.

There’s also a new appendix. Appendix one talks about the organizational structure for the MRI safety program. Appendix two reviews facility safety designs. And Appendix three reviews emergency preparedness. 

And that’s a snapshot on the ACR MRI safety manual that came out in 2020. We’re sure there will be newer versions of this at some point in the future, but for now, this is a really good place to start and use as a resource for the development of your own policies and procedures in creating a safer MRI department for staff, patients and visitors.

If you have questions about the MRI safety manual or questions about MA safety in general, feel free to drop a comment or send us an email. We’ll be happy to take a look at your MRI department, talk about your policies and procedures and see how we might be able to help.

If you require assistance with your MRI safety program or MRI physics testing, please reach out or click here to learn more about our medical and health physics services. You can also always reach out to us if you have questions or want more information on why you should partner with us. 

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