1 / 31

Chapter 9 Dose Distribution and Scatter Analysis

Chapter 9 Dose Distribution and Scatter Analysis. Phantoms Depth Dose Distribution Percentage Depth Dose Tissue-Air Ratio Scatter-Air Ratio. Phantoms(1).

wreagan
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 9 Dose Distribution and Scatter Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 9 Dose Distribution and Scatter Analysis • Phantoms • Depth Dose Distribution • Percentage Depth Dose • Tissue-Air Ratio • Scatter-Air Ratio

  2. Phantoms(1) • Water phantom: closely approximates the radiation absorption and scattering properties of muscle and other soft tissues; universally available with reproducible • Solid dry phantoms: same effective atomic number, number of electrons per gram and mass density

  3. Phantoms(2) • Alderson Rando Phantom: incorporates materials to simulate various body tissues---muscle, bone, lung, and air cavities • Solid water: epoxy resin--based solid substitute for water

  4. Depth Dose Distribution • The absorbed dose in the patient varies with depth • The variation depends on depth, field size, distance from source, beam energy and beam collimation • Percentage depth dose, tissue-air ratios, tissue-phantom ratios and tissue-maximum ratios---measurements made in water phantoms using small ionization chambers

  5. collimator surface d0 D d0 d D d phantom Percentage Depth Dose(1) • Absorbed dose at any depth: d • Absorbed dose at a fixed reference depth: d0

  6. collimator surface dm D max d D d phantom Percentage Depth Dose(2) • For higher energies, the reference depth is at the peak absorbed dose ( d 0= d m) • D max : maximumdose, the dose maximum,the given dose

  7. Percentage Depth Dose(3) • (a)Dependence on beam quality and depth • (b)Effect of field size and shape • (c)Dependence on SSD

  8. Percentage Depth Dose(3)--(a)Dependence on beam quality and depth • Kerma--(1) kinetic energy released in the medium; (2) the energy transferred from photons to directly ionizing electron; (3) maximum at the surface and decreases with depth due to decreased in the photon energy fluence; (4) the production of electrons also decreases with depth

  9. Percentage Depth Dose(3)--(a)Dependence on beam quality and depth • Absorbed dose: (1) depends on the electron fluence;(2) high-speed electrons are ejected from the surface and subsequent layers;(3) theses electrons deposit their energy a significant distance away from their site of origin

  10. Fig. 9.3 central axis depth dose distribution for different quality photon beams

  11. Percentage Depth Dose(3)--(b)Effect of field size and shape • Geometrical field size: the projection, on a plane perpendicular to the beam axis, of the distal end of the collimator as seen from the front center of the source • Dosimetric ( Physical ) field size: the distance intercepted by a given isodose curve (usually 50% isodose ) on a plane perpendicular to the beam axis

  12. Scatter dose Dmax Dd Percentage Depth Dose(3)--(b)Effect of field size and shape • As the field size is increased, the contribution of the scattered radiation to the absorbed dose increases • This increase in scattered dose is greater at larger depths than at the depth of D max , the percent depth dose increases with increasing field size

  13. Percentage Depth Dose(3)--(b)Effect of field size and shape • Depends on beam quality • The scattering probability or cross-section decreases with energy increase and the higher-energy photons are scattered more predominantly in the forward direction, the field size dependence of PDD is less pronounced for the higher-energy than for the lower-energy beams

  14. Percentage Depth Dose(3)--(b)Effect of field size and shape • PDD data for radiotherapy beams are usually tabulated for square fields • In clinical practice require rectangular and irregularly shaped fields • A system of equating square fields to different field shapes is required: equivalent square • Quick calculation of the equivalent

  15. a b Percentage Depth Dose(3)--(b)Effect of field size and shape • Quick calculation of the equivalent field parameters: for rectangular fields • For square fields, since a = b, • the side of an equivalent square of a rectangular field is

  16. a b Percentage Depth Dose(3)--(b)Effect of field size and shape • Equivalent circle has the same area as the equivalent square r

  17. Percentage Depth Dose(3) -- (c) dependence on SSD • Photon fluence emitted by a point source of radiation varies inversely as a square of the distance from the source • The actual dose rate at a point decreases with increase in distance from the source, the percent depth dose, which is a relative dose, increases with SSD • Mayneord F factor

  18. f1 r dm d dm d f2 r Mayneord F factor(for small fields since the scattering is minimal)

  19. Percentage Depth Dose(3) --(c) dependence on SSD F1+dm F2+dm F1+d F2+d F1+d F2+d Fig. 9.5 Plot of relative dose rate as inverse square law function of distance from a point source. Reference distance = 80 cm

  20. Percentage Depth Dose(3) --(c) dependence on SSD • Under extreme conditions such as lower energy, large field (the proportion of scattered radiation is relatively greater), large depth, and large SSD, the Mayneord F factor is significant errors • In general, the Mayneord F factor overestimates the increase in PDD with increase in SSD

  21. Tissue-Air ratio • The ratio of the dose ( D d) at a given point in the phantom to the dose in free space ( D f s ) • TAR depends on depth d and field size rd at the depth: (BSF) Equilibrium mass phantom d rd rd Dd D f s

  22. Tissue-Air ratio-- ( a ) Effect of Distance • Independent of the distance from the source • The TAR represents modification of the dose at a point owing only to attenuation and scattering of the beam in the phantom compared with the dose at the same point in the miniphantom ( or equilibrium phantom ) placed in free air

  23. Tissue-Air ratio--( b ) Variation with energy, depth, and field size • For the megavoltage beams, the TAR builds up to a maximum at the d m and then decreases with depth • As the field size is increased, the scattered component of the dose increases and the variation of TAR with depth becomes more complex

  24. Tissue-Air ratio--( b ) Variation with energy, depth, and field size: BSF • Backscatter factor (BSF) depends only on the beam quality and field size • Above 8 MV, the scatter at the depth of Dmax becomes negligibly small and the BSF approaches its minimum value of unity

  25. Fig. 9.8 Variation of backscatter factors with beam quality

  26. The meaning of Backscatter factor • For example, BSF for a 10x10 cm field for 60Co is 1.036 means that D max will be 3.6% higher than the dose in free space • This increase in dose is the result of radiation scatter reaching the point of D max from the overlying and underlying tissues

  27. Tissue-Air ratio-- ( c ) relationship between TAR and PDD

  28. Tissue-Air ratio-- ( c ) relationship between TAR and PDD-- Conversion of PDD from one SSD to another : The TAR method Burns’s equation:

  29. Tissue-Air ratio--( d ) calculation of dose in rotation therapy d=16.6

  30. Equilibrium mass phantom d rd rd Dd D f s Scatter-Air Ratio • Calculating scattered dose in the medium • The ratio of the scattered dose at a given point in the phantom to the dose in free space at the same point • TAR(d,0): the primary component of the beam

  31. Average tissue-air ratio Average scatter-air ratio TAR ( 0 ) = tissue-air ratio for 0 x 0 field Scatter-Air Ratio--Dose calculation in irregular fields: Clarkson’s Method Based on the principle that the scattered component of the depth dose can be calculated separately from the primary component

More Related