• Title of article

    Reducing loss in lateral charged-particle equilibrium due to air cavities present in x-ray irradiated media by using longitudinal magnetic fields

  • Author/Authors

    Li، X. Allen نويسنده , , Naqvi، Shahid A. نويسنده , , Ramahi، Shada W. نويسنده , , Chu، James C. نويسنده , , Ye، Sung-Joon نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوفصلنامه با شماره پیاپی F1 سال 2015
  • Pages
    -602
  • From page
    603
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    The underdosing of lesions distal to air cavities, such as those found in upper respiratory passages, occurs due to the loss in lateral charged-particle equilibrium (CPE). The degree of underdosing worsens for smaller field sizes, resulting in more frequent recurrence of the cancer treated. Higher photon energies further aggravate the outcome by producing longer second build-up regions beyond the cavity. Besides underdosing, the larger lateral spread of secondary electron fluence in the air cavity produces diffuse dose distributions at the tissue-air interface for shaped or intensity modulated fields. These disequilibrium effects create undesirable deviations from the intended treatment. The clinical concern is further intensified by the failure of traditional treatment planning systems to even account for such defects. In this work, the use of longitudinal magnetic fields on the order of 0.5 T is proposed for alleviating lateral electronic disequilibrium due to the presence of air cavities in the irradiated volume. The magnetic field enforces lateral CPE by restricting the lateral range of electrons in the air cavity. The problem is studied in a simple water-air-water slab geometry using EGS4 Monte Carlo simulations for 6 MV photons. Electronic disequilibrium is evaluated for beams of various sizes, shapes and intensity distributions constructed by linear superposition of the dose distributions for 0.5×0.5 cm2 beamlets. Comparison is also made with 60Co irradiation.
  • Keywords
    transient over voltage , short circuit current , Fault current limiter , power quality
  • Journal title
    MEDICAL PHYSICS
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    MEDICAL PHYSICS
  • Record number

    1556