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1.
Med Phys ; 39(7Part2): 4622, 2012 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28516557

ABSTRACT

Stereotactic body radiation therapy(SBRT), a technique that uses tightly conformed Megavoltage(MV) x-ray fields, improves local control of lung cancer. However, small MV x-ray fields can cause lateral electron disequilibrium(LED), which reduces the dose within lung. These effects are difficult to predict and are presently a cause of alarm for the radiotherapy community. Previously, we developed The Relative Depth Dose Factor(RDDF), which is an indicator of the extent of LED (RDDF < 1). We propose a positive application of LED for lung sparing in SBRT: LED can be exploited to irradiate a small tumor while greatly reducing the dose in surrounding lung tissue. The Monte Carlo code, DOSXYZnrc, was employed to calculate dose within a cylindrical lung phantom. The phantom's diameter and height were set to 25 cm, and consisted of water and lung (density = 0.25g/cm3 ) shells surrounding a small water tumor (volume = 0.8 cm3 ). Two 180° 6MV arcs were focused onto the tumor with field sizes of 1×1cm2 (RDDF∼0.5) and 3×3cm2 (RDDF∼1). Analyzing dose results, the 1×1cm2 arc reduced dose within lung and water tissues by 70% and 80% compared to the 3×3cm2 arc. Although, central tumor dose was also reduced by 15% using the 1×1cm2 arc, these reductions can be offset by escalating the prescription dose appropriately. Using the RDDF as a guideline, it's possible to design a SBRT treatment plan that reduces lung dose while maintaining relatively high tumor dose levels. Clinical application requires an accurate dose algorithm and may lower SBRT dose-induced toxicity levels in patients.

2.
Med Phys ; 35(7): 3180-93, 2008 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18697543

ABSTRACT

The practice of diagnostic x-ray imaging has been transformed with the emergence of digital detector technology. Although digital systems offer many practical advantages over conventional film-based systems, their spatial resolution performance can be a limitation. The authors present a Monte Carlo study to determine fundamental resolution limits caused by x-ray interactions in four converter materials: Amorphous silicon (a-Si), amorphous selenium, cesium iodide, and lead iodide. The "x-ray interaction" modulation transfer function (MTF) was determined for each material and compared in terms of the 50% MTF spatial frequency and Wagner's effective aperture for incident photon energies between 10 and 150 keV and various converter thicknesses. Several conclusions can be drawn from their Monte Carlo study. (i) In low-Z (a-Si) converters, reabsorption of Compton scatter x rays limits spatial resolution with a sharp MTF drop at very low spatial frequencies (< 0.3 cycles/mm), especially above 60 keV; while in high-Z materials, reabsorption of characteristic x rays plays a dominant role, resulting in a mid-frequency (1-5 cycles/mm) MTF drop. (ii) Coherent scatter plays a minor role in the x-ray interaction MTF. (iii) The spread of energy due to secondary electron (e.g., photoelectrons) transport is significant only at very high spatial frequencies. (iv) Unlike the spread of optical light in phosphors, the spread of absorbed energy from x-ray interactions does not significantly degrade spatial resolution as converter thickness is increased. (v) The effective aperture results reported here represent fundamental spatial resolution limits of the materials tested and serve as target benchmarks for the design and development of future digital x-ray detectors.


Subject(s)
Diagnostic Imaging/instrumentation , Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , X-Rays , Algorithms , Cesium/chemistry , Diagnostic Imaging/methods , Equipment Design , Humans , Iodides/chemistry , Lead/chemistry , Light , Monte Carlo Method , Phosphorus/chemistry , Photons , Scattering, Radiation , Selenium/chemistry , Silicon/chemistry
3.
Med Phys ; 35(7): 3194-204, 2008 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18697544

ABSTRACT

A frequency-dependent x-ray Swank factor based on the "x-ray interaction" modulation transfer function and normalized noise power spectrum is determined from a Monte Carlo analysis. This factor was calculated in four converter materials: amorphous silicon (a-Si), amorphous selenium (a-Se), cesium iodide (CsI), and lead iodide (PbI2) for incident photon energies between 10 and 150 keV and various converter thicknesses. When scaled by the quantum efficiency, the x-ray Swank factor describes the best possible detective quantum efficiency (DQE) a detector can have. As such, this x-ray interaction DQE provides a target performance benchmark. It is expressed as a function of (Fourier-based) spatial frequency and takes into consideration signal and noise correlations introduced by reabsorption of Compton scatter and photoelectric characteristic emissions. It is shown that the x-ray Swank factor is largely insensitive to converter thickness for quantum efficiency values greater than 0.5. Thus, while most of the tabulated values correspond to thick converters with a quantum efficiency of 0.99, they are appropriate to use for many detectors in current use. A simple expression for the x-ray interaction DQE of digital detectors (including noise aliasing) is derived in terms of the quantum efficiency, x-ray Swank factor, detector element size, and fill factor. Good agreement is shown with DQE curves published by other investigators for each converter material, and the conditions required to achieve this ideal performance are discussed. For high-resolution imaging applications, the x-ray Swank factor indicates: (i) a-Si should only be used at low-energy (e.g., mammography); (ii) a-Se has the most promise for any application below 100 keV; and (iii) while quantum efficiency may be increased at energies just above the K edge in CsI and PbI2, this benefit is offset by a substantial drop in the x-ray Swank factor, particularly at high spatial frequencies.


Subject(s)
Diagnostic Imaging/instrumentation , X-Rays , Cesium/chemistry , Diagnostic Imaging/methods , Electrons , Equipment Design , Fourier Analysis , Humans , Iodides/chemistry , Lead/chemistry , Monte Carlo Method , Quantum Theory , Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/instrumentation , Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Reproducibility of Results , Selenium/chemistry , Silicon/chemistry
4.
Med Phys ; 33(10): 3601-20, 2006 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17089826

ABSTRACT

Image quality in diagnostic x-ray imaging is ultimately limited by the statistical properties governing how, and where, x-ray energy is deposited in a detector. This in turn depends on the physics of the underlying x-ray interactions. In the diagnostic energy range (10-100 keV), most of the energy deposited in a detector is through photoelectric interactions. We present a theoretical model of the photoelectric effect that specifically addresses the statistical nature of energy absorption by photoelectrons, K and L characteristic x rays, and Auger electrons. A cascaded-systems approach is used that employs a complex structure of parallel cascades to describe signal and noise transfer through the photoelectric effect in terms of the modulation transfer function, Wiener noise power spectrum, and detective quantum efficiency (DQE). The model was evaluated by comparing results with Monte Carlo calculations for x-ray converters based on amorphous selenium (a-Se) and lead (Pb), representing both low and high-Z materials. When electron transport considerations can be neglected, excellent agreement (within 3%) is obtained for each metric over the entire diagnostic energy range in both a-Se and Pb detectors up to 30 cycles/mm, the highest frequency tested. The cascaded model overstates the DQE when the electron range cannot be ignored. This occurs at approximately two cycles/mm in a-Se at an incident photon energy of 80 keV, whereas in Pb, excellent agreement is obtained for the DQE over the entire diagnostic energy range. However, within the context of mammography (20 keV) and micro-computed tomography (40 keV), the effects of electron transport on the DQE are negligible compared to fluorescence reabsorption, which can lead to decreases of up to 30% and 20% in a-Se and Pb, respectively, at 20 keV; and 10% and 5%, respectively, at 40 keV. It is shown that when Swank noise is identified in a Fourier model, the Swank factor must be frequency dependent. This factor decreases quickly with frequency, and in the case of a-Se and Pb, decreases by up to a factor of 3 at five cycles/mm immediately above the K edge. The frequency-dependent Swank factor is also equivalent to what we call the "photoelectric DQE," which describes signal and noise transfer through photoelectric interactions.


Subject(s)
Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Electrons , Equipment Design , Fourier Analysis , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Lead/chemistry , Light , Mammography/methods , Models, Statistical , Monte Carlo Method , Radiometry , Scattering, Radiation , Selenium/chemistry , X-Rays
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