| Literature DB >> 27507213 |
Rongxiao Zhang1, Adam K Glaser2, Jacqueline Andreozzi2, Shudong Jiang2, Lesley A Jarvis3, David J Gladstone2,3,4, Brian W Pogue1,2,5.
Abstract
This study's goal was to determine how Cherenkov radiation emission observed in radiotherapy is affected by predictable factors expected in patient imaging. Factors such as tissue optical properties, radiation beam properties, thickness of tissues, entrance/exit geometry, curved surface effects, curvature and imaging angles were investigated through Monte Carlo simulations. The largest physical cause of variation of the correlation ratio between of Cherenkov emission and dose was the entrance/exit geometry (˜50%). The largest human tissue effect was from different optical properties (˜45%). Beyond these, clinical beam energy varies the correlation ratio significantly (˜20% for X-ray beams), followed by curved surfaces (˜15% for X-ray beams and ˜8% for electron beams), and finally, the effect of field size (˜5% for X-ray beams). Other investigated factors which caused variations less than 5% were tissue thicknesses and source to surface distance. The effect of non-Lambertian emission was negligible for imaging angles smaller than 60 degrees. The spectrum of Cherenkov emission tends to blue-shift along the curved surface. A simple normalization approach based on the reflectance image was experimentally validated by imaging a range of tissue phantoms, as a first order correction for different tissue optical properties.Entities:
Keywords: Cherenkov imaging; Monte Carlo; optical calibration; radiation dose; radiation therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27507213 PMCID: PMC5529250 DOI: 10.1002/jbio.201500344
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biophotonics ISSN: 1864-063X Impact factor: 3.207