| Literature DB >> 24357908 |
Vijay Rana1, Kamaljit Gill1, Stephen Rudin1, Daniel R Bednarek1.
Abstract
The current version of the real-time skin-dose-tracking system (DTS) we have developed assumes the exposure is contained within the collimated beam and is uniform except for inverse-square variation. This study investigates the significance of factors that contribute to beam non-uniformity such as the heel effect and backscatter from the patient to areas of the skin inside and outside the collimated beam. Dose-calibrated Gafchromic film (XR-RV3, ISP) was placed in the beam in the plane of the patient table at a position 15 cm tube-side of isocenter on a Toshiba Infinix C-Arm system. Separate exposures were made with the film in contact with a block of 20-cm solid water providing backscatter and with the film suspended in air without backscatter, both with and without the table in the beam. The film was scanned to obtain dose profiles and comparison of the profiles for the various conditions allowed a determination of field non-uniformity and backscatter contribution. With the solid-water phantom and with the collimator opened completely for the 20-cm mode, the dose profile decreased by about 40% on the anode side of the field. Backscatter falloff at the beam edge was about 10% from the center and extra-beam backscatter decreased slowly with distance from the field, being about 3% of the beam maximum at 6 cm from the edge. Determination of the magnitude of these factors will allow them to be included in the skin-dose-distribution calculation and should provide a more accurate determination of peak-skin dose for the DTS.Entities:
Keywords: Backscatter; Dose tracking system; Gafchromic film (XR-RV3; Heel effect; ISP); Interventional fluoroscopic procedures; Skin dose
Year: 2012 PMID: 24357908 PMCID: PMC3865277 DOI: 10.1117/12.911528
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc SPIE Int Soc Opt Eng ISSN: 0277-786X