yeah I thought this was an X ray question and not a contrast question
small
Generally, the amount of radiation you're exposed to during each scan is equivalent to between a few months and a few years of exposure to natural radiation from the environment.
( clearly not me writing: all sentences have main verbs and orthonormal spelling)
The typical CT radiation dose is 10 to 20 millisieverts (mSv), which is associated with a lifetime risk of fatal cancer of approximately one per 2,000 CT scans.
( one CXR: is 0.1 mSv - so a CAT scan is 100-1000 times one CXR which is about right)
the thing is that what they are looking for is far more dangerous than the risk from a CAT scan
[someone asked, miss, someone asked, honest]