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MRI magnet explosions go unreported

Posted Oct 17 2008 1:08pm

Wlad Sobol, PhD,a medical physicist and professor of radiology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Health System, said at least fiveMRI magnets have exploded in U.S. healthcare facilities over the last 10 years, but the incidents have gone mostly unreported.

 

Sobol began investigating the incidents after a magnet at one of UAB's partner institutions exploded in the middle of the night in January 2007. No one was hurt, but the force of the explosion demolished the MRI suite and damaged the building's exterior walls and roof. 

sobol_aapm_337840431.jpg  

Wlad Sobol, Ph.D., (right) a medical physicist and professor of radiology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Health System, presented his research of exploding MRIs at the AAPM meeting in Houston. Photo: K Stone  

 

Through follow-up research, Sobol learned about several other similar incidents: On December 7, 2006, a magnet exploded at an outpatient imaging facility in Kennesaw, GA, injuring two workers who were moving the machine, and in 2006 a magnet exploded in a Mobile, AL, hospital. Also in 2006, a TV station in Salisbury, MD,captured on film an MRI explosionat the Peninsula Regional Medical Center. The local news report stated that the magnet was being "vented" and was in the process of being replaced by a new magnet.

 

After investigating the scene of an explosion, inspecting current installations, and visiting two MRI magnet manufacturing sites, Sobol said the most plausible reasons for explosions are the mishandling of hardware during installation, removal, or servicing, as well as environmental or operational missteps that affect operating conditions.

 

He advises medical physicists overseeing installations and day-to-day maintenance to become very familiar with the operational characteristics of magnet cryosystems composed of thermal and mechanical stresses and superefficient insulation.

 

"Those involved with installations need to be aware of cryogenic venting arrangements and ensure the pipes are not clogged," Sobol said. During his inspections, Sobol used a camera to view pipes and said he observed "ice blocking" within the plenum, or frozen water blockage in the adaptor vent adjacent to the burst disk.

 

Under normal conditions, the cryostat is pressurized to a few psig (pound-force per square inch gauge) to prevent ice block formation. In rare cases, ice blockage may clog the pressure monitoring line, leading to increased pressure in the cryostat that would cause the burst disk to shatter and the magnet to quench and vent helium gas into the atmosphere. What makes the situation potentially catastrophic is when a room vent pathway is also blocked by a different ice plug. This would cause an explosive quench, Sobol said.

 

Other ways to mitigate risk from explosions lie in the site planning design, frequent inspections of pipe and venting systems during installs, and ongoing monitoring of the cryoventing system's performance, he said.

 

It is reasonable to suspect that there may have been other incidents besides those half dozen that occurred in the southeast, Sobol said. Publicizing mishaps is not an avenue for drawing national attention that facilities or manufacturers would choose. Reporting is strictly voluntary, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) does not track MRI magnet explosions, he added.

 

"Available anecdotal information suggests that a surprising number of existing MRI installations, especially the older ones located in rural areas, may suffer from subpar, shoddy cryovent implementations. These might create risks nobody is prepared to accept," Sobol said.  

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