21 October 2024
ASMIRT recently produced a new position paper, MRI Scanning and MR-Conditional Pacemakers. This comes as some medical device companies suggest radiographers can independently set patients’ pacemakers to MRI mode, prior to an MRI scan.
Around 200,000 Australians have a pacemaker or other type of cardiac implantable electronic device (CIED).1 CIEDs may or may not be MRI-conditional, that is, safe for use in the MRI environment under strict conditions.
At this point in time, altering a patient’s CIED is outside the scope of practice for medical radiation practitioners (MRPs).
Usually, when someone with a CIED needs an MRI scan, a cardiologist or cardiologist’s trained delegate would:
Without proper training, this could be very dangerous – a patient whose CIED malfunctions is at increased risk of heart failure. As standard MRP education omits training in this area, interrogating and programming a CIED is outside of MRP scope of practice – it isn’t appropriate for an MRP to undertake this responsibility.
New responsibilities can enter into an MRP’s scope of practice only after completing appropriate theoretical and practical learning and credentialling.
ASMIRT recommends MRPs consult with their workplace regarding training and credentialling, organisation or departmental processes, consent processes, and stakeholder agreement (radiologists, cardiologists, nursing staff, etc) prior to undertaking CIED-related duties.
Read the ASMIRT Position Paper on MRI Scanning and MR-Conditional Pacemakers here:
Regardless of which qualified professional interrogates and programs the CIED, MRI departments should follow safety procedures including:
1 https://www1.racgp.org.au/ajgp/2018/may/cardiac-rhythm-management-devices