Literature DB >> 11720351

Techniques for precision irradiation of the lateral half of the rat cervical spinal cord using 150 MeV protons [corrected].

P van Luijk1, H P Bijl, R P Coppes, A J van der Kogel, A W Konings, J A Pikkemaat, J M Schippers.   

Abstract

Techniques for high precision irradiation experiments with protons, to investigate the volume dependence of the tolerance dose of the rat cervical spinal cord are described. In the present study, 50% of the lateral cross section of the spinal cord was irradiated. The diameter of the cross section of this part of the rat spinal cord is at maximum 3.5 mm. Therefore, a dedicated procedure was developed to comply with the needs for a very high positioning accuracy and high spatial resolution dosimetry. By using 150 MeV protons a steep dose gradient (20-80% = 1 mm) in the centre of the spinal cord was achieved. This yields a good dose contrast between the left and right halves of the cord. A home-made digital x-ray imager with a pixel resolution of 0.18 mm/pixel was used for position verification of the spinal cord. A positioning accuracy of 0.09 mm was obtained by using information of multiple pixels. The average position stability during the irradiation was found to be 0.08 mm (1 SD) without significant systematic deviations. Profiles of the dose distribution were measured with a 2D dosimetry system consisting of a scintillating screen and a CCD camera. Dose volume histograms of the whole spinal cord as well as separately of the white and grey matters were calculated using MRI imaging of the cross section of the rat cervical spinal cord. From the irradiation of 20 animals a dose-response curve has been established. MRI showed radiation-induced damage at the high dose side of the spinal cord. Analysis of the preliminary dose-response data shows a significant dose-volume effect. With the described procedure and equipment it is possible to perform high precision irradiations on selected parts of the spinal cord.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11720351     DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/46/11/307

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Med Biol        ISSN: 0031-9155            Impact factor:   3.609


  7 in total

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2.  Sparing the region of the salivary gland containing stem cells preserves saliva production after radiotherapy for head and neck cancer.

Authors:  Peter van Luijk; Sarah Pringle; Joseph O Deasy; Vitali V Moiseenko; Hette Faber; Allan Hovan; Mirjam Baanstra; Hans P van der Laan; Roel G J Kierkels; Arjen van der Schaaf; Max J Witjes; Jacobus M Schippers; Sytze Brandenburg; Johannes A Langendijk; Jonn Wu; Robert P Coppes
Journal:  Sci Transl Med       Date:  2015-09-16       Impact factor: 17.956

3.  Spinal cord tolerance to single-fraction partial-volume irradiation: a swine model.

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4.  Spinal cord tolerance to single-session uniform irradiation in pigs: implications for a dose-volume effect.

Authors:  Paul M Medin; Ryan D Foster; Albert J van der Kogel; James W Sayre; William H McBride; Timothy D Solberg
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6.  Paralysis following stereotactic spinal irradiation in pigs suggests a tolerance constraint for single-session irradiation of the spinal nerve.

Authors:  Paul M Medin; Ryan D Foster; Albert J van der Kogel; Jeffrey Meyer; James W Sayre; Hao Huang; Orhan K Öz
Journal:  Radiother Oncol       Date:  2013-09-20       Impact factor: 6.280

7.  Biomedical Research Programs at Present and Future High-Energy Particle Accelerators.

Authors:  Vincenzo Patera; Yolanda Prezado; Faical Azaiez; Giuseppe Battistoni; Diego Bettoni; Sytze Brandenburg; Aleksandr Bugay; Giacomo Cuttone; Denis Dauvergne; Gilles de France; Christian Graeff; Thomas Haberer; Taku Inaniwa; Sebastien Incerti; Elena Nasonova; Alahari Navin; Marco Pullia; Sandro Rossi; Charlot Vandevoorde; Marco Durante
Journal:  Front Phys       Date:  2020-10-16
  7 in total

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