Verification of the Accuracy of the Delivered Dose in Brain Tumors by in Vivo Dosimetry Using Diode Detectors
Authors
Abstract:
Introduction: During radiotherapy, high accuracy in the dose delivery is required because there is a strong relationship between the absorbed dose, local tumor control and particularly the normal tissue damage. In many institutions, in vivo dosimetry using diodes is performed to check the actual dose delivered. In general, the uncertainty in the dose delivered should fall within ± 5% of the prescribed dose as recommended by the International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements (ICRU). Materials and Methods: The combined entrance and exit dose measurements have been performed for brain tumors by diode detectors. In vivo detectors used in this study were P-type semiconductor diodes used for determination of absorbed dose and exit transmission (T ex ). A Perspex water phantom (30×30 cm3 area and thickness ranging from 5 to 30 cm) and a farmer type ionization chamber (0.6 cm3) were used for the measurements. The calibration and correction factor are calculated and the relevant curves have been obtained. The SSD correction factor (SSD = 80 cm for all set-up), directional dependence and temperature dependence (0.1) was observed. Discussion and Conclusion: In vivo measurements have been shown to be very useful as a check of the dose delivered to a given patient.
similar resources
verification of the accuracy of the delivered dose in brain tumors by in vivo dosimetry using diode detectors
introduction: during radiotherapy, high accuracy in the dose delivery is required because there is a strong relationship between the absorbed dose, local tumor control and particularly the normal tissue damage. in many institutions, in vivo dosimetry using diodes is performed to check the actual dose delivered. in general, the uncertainty in the dose delivered should fall within ± 5% of the...
full textAchievable accuracy in brain tumors by in vivo dosimetry with diode detectors
ABSTRACT Background: In vivo measurements of applied dose during radiotherapy treatment, is important to ensure accurate dose delivery to patients. Uncertainty in dose delivery should fall within ±5% of the prescribed dose as recommended by ICRU. Assessment of dose for radiotherapy applications performed with various types of detectors. In this study, semiconductor diodes were used which have s...
full textVerification of the Accuracy of the Delivered Dose in Pelvic and Breast Cancer Radiotherapy by in-vivo Semi-Conductor Dosimetry
Introduction: Delivering maximum dose to tumor and minimum dose to normal tissues is the most important goal in radiotherapy. According to ICRU, the maximum acceptable uncertainty in the delivered dose compared to the prescribed dose should be lower than 5%, and this is because of the relationship between absorbed dose, tumor control and normal tissue damage. Absorbed dose accuracy is investiga...
full textachievable accuracy in brain tumors by in vivo dosimetry with diode detectors
abstract background: in vivo measurements of applied dose during radiotherapy treatment, is important to ensure accurate dose delivery to patients. uncertainty in dose delivery should fall within ±5% of the prescribed dose as recommended by icru. assessment of dose for radiotherapy applications performed with various types of detectors. in this study, semiconductor diodes were used which have s...
full textstudy of cohesive devices in the textbook of english for the students of apsychology by rastegarpour
this study investigates the cohesive devices used in the textbook of english for the students of psychology. the research questions and hypotheses in the present study are based on what frequency and distribution of grammatical and lexical cohesive devices are. then, to answer the questions all grammatical and lexical cohesive devices in reading comprehension passages from 6 units of 21units th...
verification of the accuracy of the delivered dose in pelvic and breast cancer radiotherapy by in-vivo semi-conductor dosimetry
introduction: delivering maximum dose to tumor and minimum dose to normal tissues is the most important goal in radiotherapy. according to icru, the maximum acceptable uncertainty in the delivered dose compared to the prescribed dose should be lower than 5%, and this is because of the relationship between absorbed dose, tumor control and normal tissue damage. absorbed dose accuracy is investiga...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 2 issue 2
pages 13- 25
publication date 2005-06-01
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023