The study, co-authored by Le Bonheur Children's Hospital cardiologist Jason Johnson, is the first in which researchers quantified cumulative radiation doses in paediatric heart patients and predicted lifetime cancer risks based on the types of exposures.
In the study, Johnson and fellow researchers found that radiation from standard X-rays don't significantly raise cancer risks for young children, in general, but children undergoing more complex procedures with higher radiation - like cardiac catheterisations and computed tomography (CT) scans have higher risks.
"Cancer risk overall is relatively low, but we hope that this awareness will encourage providers to limit radiation exposure in children, when alternative procedures can offer the same benefit with less radiation," Johnson said.
They then used a National Academy of Sciences report to analyse lifetime cancer risks based on the amounts of each procedure's exposure.
Lifetime cancer risk increases ranged from 0.002 per cent for chest X-rays to 0.4 per cent for complex CT scans and cardiac catheterisations.
The research was published in the American Heart Association's journal Circulation.