Title of article
Dosimetry close to an 192Ir HDR source using N-vinylpyrrolidone based polymer gels and magnetic resonance imaging
Author/Authors
Karaiskos، P. نويسنده , , Papagiannis، P. نويسنده , , Angelopoulos، A. نويسنده , , Sakelliou، L. نويسنده , , Baltas، D. نويسنده , , Sandilos، P. نويسنده , , Pappas، E. نويسنده , , Kipouros، P. نويسنده , , Baras، P. نويسنده , , Seimenis، I. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
-1415
From page
1416
To page
0
Abstract
In this work, the utilization of polymer gel-MRI dosimetry for measurements at distances relevant to clinical brachytherapy and intravascular applications [i.e., in the mm range, where steep three-dimensional (3-D) dose gradients exist] is investigated using N-vinylpyrrolidone-based gels. Transverse axis radial dose distributions, dose distributions parallel to the source axis, and 2-D dose distributions around the commonly used microSelectron 192Ir HDR source are measured for single source dwell position irradiations. Experimental results are found in good agreement with verified Monte Carlo calculations, even for distances less than 3 mm from the source. The effect of various MRI parameters, such as slice thickness, slice mispositioning, and in-plane resolution, on the accuracy of the method is also investigated. Possible limitations of the method are discussed, and itsʹ overall potential in brachytherapy dosimetry is evaluated. Experimental 2-D dose distributions for an intravascular application following the Paris irradiation protocol are compared to corresponding commercial treatment planning system calculations. Results suggest that polymer gel-MRI dosimetry is capable of experimentally verifying dose distributions in relevant clinical intravascular applications.
Keywords
transient over voltage , short circuit current , power quality , Fault current limiter
Journal title
MEDICAL PHYSICS
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
MEDICAL PHYSICS
Record number
1656
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