| Literature DB >> 15468943 |
Tatsuya Fujisaki1, Kyoko Kikuchi, Hidetoshi Saitoh, Naoki Tohyama, Atsushi Myojoyama, Atsushi Osawa, Akio Kuramoto, Shinji Abe, Tesuo Inada, Takatsugu Kawase, Etsuo Kunieda.
Abstract
To experimentally and theoretically evaluate dose distribution during lung stereotactic radiotherapy, we investigated the relative electron densities in lung and tumor tissues using X-ray computed tomography images obtained from 30 patients in three breathing states: free breathing, inspiration breath-hold, and expiration breath-hold. We also calculated dose distribution using Monte Carlo simulation for lung tissue with two relative electron densities. The effect of changes in relative electron density on dose distribution in lung tissue was evaluated using calculated differential and integral dose volume histograms. The relative electron density of lung tissue was 0.22 in free breathing, 0.23 in shallow expiration, and 0.17 in shallow inspiration, and there was a tendency for relative electron density to decrease with age. The relative electron density of tumor tissue was approximately 0.9, with little variation due to differences in breathing state. As the relative electron density of lung tissue decreases, the low-dose region expands and leads to changes in the marginal dose.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15468943
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Med ISSN: 0288-2043