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1.
Dentomaxillofac Radiol ; 44(9): 20150073, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26119213

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: This article investigates the combination of three-dimensional (3D) digital volume tomography data with two-dimensional (2D) cephalograms in dentomaxillofacial imaging. METHODS: An automatic hierarchical method to adjust the geometrical relations of these two modalities is presented. The approach is tested on phantom and patient case data, where the feasibility, usability and potential possibilities of the presented innovative method are highlighted. Digitally reconstructed radiographs are computed by casting rays through the 3D volume to get a 2D projection of the volume to produce realistic simulated cephalograms. Different similarity measures are considered based on variations of statistical and deterministic optimization procedures. Stability, precision and accuracy of the method are investigated. RESULTS: The presented algorithm demonstrates a reasonable solution of the corresponding 2D/3D registration problem. Exemplary results from phantom and patient case data are presented. Tooth movement could be determined, in contrast to the 2D lateral cephalogram, separated for each side in all three spatial directions. CONCLUSIONS: Achieved results are highlighted from a clinical point of view and demonstrate the clinical benefit in daily praxis.


Subject(s)
Cephalometry/methods , Cone-Beam Computed Tomography/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Algorithms , Computer Simulation , Data Display , Facial Bones/diagnostic imaging , Feasibility Studies , Humans , Phantoms, Imaging , Skull/diagnostic imaging , Tooth Movement Techniques/methods , User-Computer Interface
2.
J Appl Clin Med Phys ; 15(2): 4454, 2014 Mar 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24710432

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study is to characterize dosimetric properties of thin film photovoltaic sensors as a platform for development of prototype dose verification equipment in radiotherapy. Towards this goal, flexible thin-film sensors of dose with embedded data acquisition electronics and wireless data transmission are prototyped and tested in kV and MV photon beams. Fundamental dosimetric properties are determined in view of a specific application to dose verification in multiple planes or curved surfaces inside a phantom. Uniqueness of the new thin-film sensors consists in their mechanical properties, low-power operation, and low-cost. They are thinner and more flexible than dosimetric films. In principle, each thin-film sensor can be fabricated in any size (mm² - cm² areas) and shape. Individual sensors can be put together in an array of sensors spreading over large areas and yet being light. Photovoltaic mode of charge collection (of electrons and holes) does not require external electric field applied to the sensor, and this implies simplicity of data acquisition electronics and low power operation. The prototype device used for testing consists of several thin film dose sensors, each of about 1.5 cm × 5 cm area, connected to simple readout electronics. Sensitivity of the sensors is determined per unit area and compared to EPID sensitivity, as well as other standard photodiodes. Each sensor independently measures dose and is based on commercially available flexible thin-film aSi photodiodes. Readout electronics consists of an ultra low-power microcontroller, radio frequency transmitter, and a low-noise amplification circuit implemented on a flexible printed circuit board. Detector output is digitized and transmitted wirelessly to an external host computer where it is integrated and processed. A megavoltage medical linear accelerator (Varian Tx) equipped with kilovoltage online imaging system and a Cobalt source are used to irradiate different thin-film detector sensors in a Solid Water phantom under various irradiation conditions. Different factors are considered in characterization of the device attributes: energies (80 kVp, 130 kVp, 6 MV, 15 MV), dose rates (different ms × mA, 100-600 MU/min), total doses (0.1 cGy-500 cGy), depths (0.5 cm-20 cm), irradiation angles with respect to the detector surface (0°-180°), and IMRT tests (closed MLC, sweeping gap). The detector response to MV radiation is both linear with total dose (~1-400 cGy) and independent of dose rate (100-600 Mu/min). The sensitivity per unit area of thin-film sensors is lower than for aSi flat-panel detectors, but sufficient to acquire stable and accurate signals during irradiations. The proposed thin-film photodiode system has properties which make it promising for clinical dosimetry. Due to the mechanical flexibility of each sensor and readout electronics, low-cost, and wireless data acquisition, it could be considered for quality assurance (e.g., IMRT, mechanical linac QA), as well as real-time dose monitoring in challenging setup configurations, including large area and 3D detection (multiple planes or curved surfaces).


Subject(s)
Film Dosimetry/economics , Film Dosimetry/instrumentation , Radiotherapy Dosage , Calibration , Electronics , Humans , Particle Accelerators/instrumentation , Phantoms, Imaging , Radiation, Ionizing , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , X-Rays
3.
Med Phys ; 39(6Part12): 3740, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28517827

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To characterize dosimetric properties of low-cost thin film organic-based photovoltaic (OPV) cells to kV and MV x-ray beams for their usage as large area dosimeter for QA and patient safety monitoring device. METHODS: A series of thin film OPV cells of various areas and thicknesses were irradiated with MV beams to evaluate the stability and reproducibility of their response, linearity and sensitivity to absorbed dose. The OPV response to x-rays of various linac energies were also characterized. Furthermore the practical (clinical) sensitivity of the cells was determined using IMRT sweeping gap test generated with various gap sizes. To evaluate their potential usage in the development of low cost kV imaging device, the OPV cells were irradiated with kV beam (60-120 kVp) from a fluoroscopy unit. Photocell response to the absorbed dose was characterized as a function of the organic thin film thickness and size, beam energy and exposure for kV beams as well. In addition, photocell response was determined with and without thin plastic scintillator. RESULTS: Response of the OPV cells to the absorbed dose from kV and MV beams are stable and reproducible. The photocell response was linearly proportional to the size and about slightly decreasing with the thickness of the organic thin film, which agrees with the general performance of the photocells in visible light. The photocell response increases as a linear function of absorbed dose and x-ray energy. The sweeping gap tests performed showed that OPV cells have sufficient practical sensitivity to measured MV x-ray delivery with gap size as small as 1 mm. CONCLUSIONS: With proper calibration, the OPV cells could be used for online radiation dose measurement for quality assurance and patient safety purposes. Their response to kV beam show promising potential in development of low cost kV radiation detection devices.

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