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1.
Br J Radiol ; 91(1084): 20170863, 2018 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29293373

ABSTRACT

Radiotherapy is a safe treatment; nevertheless, national reporting of serious incidents allows investigation of potential harm to individuals and failing safety culture. UK guidance has previously been limited to overexposures, but underexposures will be included in the new legislation, and positioning errors have also been explicitly included in recent guidance. This commentary reviews current guidance and suggests practical approaches to the additional categories, including the definition of a local error margin.


Subject(s)
Diagnostic Imaging , Medical Errors , Radiation Dosage , Radiation Monitoring/methods , Radiotherapy , Humans , Patient Safety , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Risk Management , Safety Management , United Kingdom
2.
Nucl Med Biol ; 41(4): 309-16, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24607433

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The existing solid target production method of radiometals requires high capital and operational expenditures, which limit the production of radiometals to the small fraction of cyclotron facilities that are equipped with solid target systems. Our objective is to develop a robust solution target method, which can be applicable to a wide array of radiometals and would be simply and easily adopted by existing cyclotron facility for the routine production of radiometals. METHOD: We have developed a simplified, solution target approach for production of (89)Zr using a niobium target by 14 MeV energy proton bombardment of aqueous solutions of yttrium salts via the (89)Y(p,n)(89)Zr nuclear reaction. The production conditions were optimized, following a detailed mechanistic study of the gas evolution. RESULTS: Although the solution target approach avoided the expense and complication of solid target processing, rapid radiolytic formation of gases in the target represents a major impediment in the success of solution target. To address this challenge we performed a systematic mechanistic study of gas evolution. Gas evolution was found to be predominantly due to decomposition of water to molecular hydrogen and oxygen. The rate of gas evolutions varied >40-fold depending on solution composition even under the same irradiation condition. With chloride salts, the rate of gas evolution increased in the order rank Na

Subject(s)
Radiochemistry/methods , Radioisotopes/chemistry , Water/chemistry , Yttrium/chemistry , Zirconium/chemistry , Cyclotrons , Nitric Acid/chemistry , Protons , Radiochemistry/instrumentation , Solutions
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