18 research outputs found
Activation of dosimeters used in qa of medical linear accelerators
This paper presents the first results of a project intended to investigate γ-radiation activity
induced in dosimeters used in clinical practice during routine quality assurance
of high-energy photon beams emitted by electron linear accelerators. Two aspects of the activation
via photonuclear reactions (X,n) of therapeutic beam and subsequent capture
of secondary neutrons (n,γ) are under considerations: the influence of activation on intrinsic
background of the dosimeters and exposure of dosimetrists who operate this equipment. The
activation of several types of ionization chambers as well as the silicon diodes was studied
after long-time exposure (10 000 MUs) of the 15 MV photon beam (Elekta Synergy). Photon
fluxes obtained from spectra of γ-rays registered by HPGe spectrometer were subsequently
converted to equivalent doses using appropriate coefficients. The main contribution
to the induced activity comes from the neutron capture process on Al, Mn and Cu, therefore
it decays quite fast with the half-lives of the order of 15 minutes. Nevertheless, the activation
of chlorine was also observed. The estimated equivalent doses to skin and eye lens were
in the range 0.19 – 0.62 μSv/min. However, no influence on intrinsic background signal of all
studied dosimeters was observed. The preliminary results indicate that induced radioactivity
of dosimeters is strongly influenced by therapeutic beam quality and neutron source strength
of particular linac. This dependence will be studied deeper in order to quantify it more precisely
Effects of low-dose ionizing radiation on α,β-globulins solutions studied by DSC
An attempt has been made to detect the effect
of a small dose of ionizing radiation on the course of
a,b-globulin thermal denaturation in aqueous solutions.
Doses of 0.1 and 1.8 Gy have been delivered using c-rays
emitted by 60Co isotope while doses of 10 and 100 Gy have
been supplied by X-rays produced by linear accelerator.
The highest dose has visibly changed DSC curve of protein
solution while the changes due to lower doses are hardly
detectable. Although very weak, the irradiation effect found
has been dose dependent. The results suggest that the
influence of ionizing radiation on globulins solution is
bigger when the dose rate is lower at given dose. The
opposite direction of differences between irradiated and
control samples for fresh and stored protein solutions suggests
various characters of changes in initial and later period
of sample aging. This may be an important reason for difficulties
in an investigation of the effect of ionizing radiation
on protein solution, especially for low doses delivered very
slowly
Gamma Radiation in the Vicinity of the Entrance to Linac Radiotherapy Room
Radiotherapy using high-energy photon beams (10–20 MV) is accompanied by the production of secondary neutron radiation via (γ/X,n) reactions. These interactions as well as subsequent neutron capture are the source of induced gamma radioactivity. When studied with standard range of spectrometric systems, only decay gamma radiation is usually registered, whereas a significant part of radiation—prompt gammas—is omitted, what might result in a significant underestimation of occupational risk for therapists in the vicinity of the door to the treatment room during therapeutic beam emission. Presented study has shown the main components of gamma radiation field in this localization investigated with the use of high-purity germanium spectrometry. Among them, prompt gamma radiation in light elements of concrete and in metal construction of the door, as well as 477.6 and 2224.6 keV photons emitted by neutron absorbing layers, contributes the most. Effective dose values depend on thickness of the door as well as on neutron production by particular linac and are within the range of 1.8–56.2 μSv/h. Standard environmental radiometry could underestimate these values by about 60% due to low efficiency for high-energy photon counting
Characteristics of natural radioactivity at the Reiche Zeche mine, Germany
Determination of the natural radiation background in underground localizations
is necessary to describe them for possible use not only for physics
experiments. The characteristics of natural radioactivity at the Reiche
Zeche mine is presented and contains results from in-situ measurements,
radon concentration in air, and = laboratory analyses of water and rock
samples from the investigated localization. The measurements were performed
in the Research and Education Mine “Reiche Zeche”, Germany at
the depth of 150 m (410 m w.e.)
Measurements of doses from photon beam irradiation and scattered neutrons in an anthropomorphic phantom model of prostate cancer: A comparison between 3DCRT, IMRT and tomotherapy
Introduction. The rapid development of new radiotherapy technologies, such as intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) or tomotherapy, has resulted in the capacity to deliver a more homogenous dose in the target. However, the higher doses associated with these techniques are a reason for concern because they may increase the dose outside the target. In the present study, we compared 3DCRT, IMRT and tomotherapy to assess the doses to organs at risk (OARs) resulting from photon beam irradiation and scattered neutrons. Material and methods. The doses to OARs outside the target were measured in an anthropomorphic Alderson phantom using thermoluminescence detectors (TLD 100) 6Li (7.5%) and 7Li (92.5%). The neutron fluence rate [cm-2·s-1] at chosen points inside the phantom was measured with gold foils (0.5 cm diameter, mean surface density of 0.108 g/cm3). Results. The doses [Gy] delivered to the OARs for 3DCRT, IMRT and tomotherapy respectively, were as follows: thyroid gland (0.62 ± 0.001 vs. 2.88 ± 0.004 vs. 0.58 ± 0.003); lung (0.99 ± 0.003 vs. 4.78 ± 0.006 vs. 0.67 ± 0.003); bladder (80.61 ± 0.054 vs. 53.75 ± 0.070 vs. 34.71 ± 0.059); and testes (4.38 ± 0.017 vs. 6.48 ± 0.013 vs. 4.39 ± 0.020). The neutron dose from 20 MV X-ray beam accounted for 0.5% of the therapeutic dose prescribed in the PTV. The further from the field edge the higher the contribution of this secondary radiation dose (from 8% to ~45%). Conclusion. For tomotherapy, all OARs outside the therapeutic field are well-spared. In contrast, IMRT achieved better sparing than 3DCRT only in the bladder. The photoneutron dose from the use of high-energy X-ray beam constituted a notable portion (0.5%) of the therapeutic dose prescribed to the PTV
Lead shielding efficiency from the gamma background measurements in the salt cavern of the Polkowice–Sieroszowice copper mine
The studies of lead shielding efficiency from the gamma background measurements were performed in the salt cavern of the copper mine - a site considered for an underground laboratory. Within the energy range of 50–2700 keV, the measured gamma-ray count rates normalized to the mass of the high-purity detectors germanium crystal are 5.93 and 6.32 s−1kg−1 for the used low-background and portable spectrometers, respectively. The gamma-ray flux of 0.124 (2) cm−2s−1 connected with the natural radioisotopes was observed by the portable HPGe, including 0.026 (1) cm−2s−1 contribution of radon decay products, whereas the photon flux at the spectrum continuum was 0.18 (5) cm−2s−1
Characteristics of natural background radiation in the Polkowice-Sieroszowice mine, Poland
Natural radioactivity in underground locations is the main parameter for the safety of
work (occupational hazards) and for the success of experiments in physics or biology requiring
unique conditions. The characterization of natural prominence was carried out in the Conceptual
Lab development in one of KGHM deep copper mines co‐ordinated by KGHM Cuprum R&D.
Natural radioactivity studies were performed and included in situ gamma spectrometry, neutron
flux measurements, radon concentration, and alpha and gamma laboratory spectrometry
measurements of rock samples. At a depth of 1014.4 m (2941.8 m w.e.) within the anhydrite layer, a
neutron flux of 2.0 ± 0.2 × 10−6 cm−2 s−1, a gamma‐ray dose of 0.008 ± 0.001 μSv/h, a photon flux density
of 0.64 ± 0.20 cm−2 s−1, and a radon concentration of 6.6 Bq/m3 were determined. Laboratory analyses
of 226,228Ra, 40K, and 238,234U concentrations in collected rock samples showed low values. The
exceptionally low level of natural radioactivity in the Polkowice‐Sieroszowice mine makes this
location a unique place for scientific research
Activation of Dosimeters Used in qa of Medical Linear Accelerators
This paper presents the first results of a project intended to investigate γ-radiation activity induced in dosimeters used in clinical practice during routine quality assurance of high-energy photon beams emitted by electron linear accelerators. Two aspects of the activation via photonuclear reactions (X, n) of therapeutic beam and subsequent capture of secondary neutrons (n,γ) are under considerations: the influence of activation on intrinsic background of the dosimeters and exposure of dosimetrists who operate this equipment. The activation of several types of ionization chambers as well as the silicon diodes was studied after long-time exposure (10 000 MUs) of the 15 MV photon beam (Elekta Synergy). Photon fluxes obtained from spectra of γ-rays registered by HPGe spectrometer were subsequently converted to equivalent doses using appropriate coefficients. The main contribution to the induced activity comes from the neutron capture process on Al, Mn and Cu, therefore it decays quite fast with the half-lives of the order of 15 minutes. Nevertheless, the activation of chlorine was also observed. The estimated equivalent doses to skin and eye lens were in the range 0.19 – 0.62 μSv/min. However, no influence on intrinsic background signal of all studied dosimeters was observed. The preliminary results indicate that induced radioactivity of dosimeters is strongly influenced by therapeutic beam quality and neutron source strength of particular linac. This dependence will be studied deeper in order to quantify it more precisely
The role of external audits in ensuring the quality of high-precision radiotherapy
Artykuł ma na celu przybliżenie roli audytów zewnętrznych na
przykładzie procesu weryfikacji ścieżki terapeutycznej w ośrodku
radioterapii. W artykule prezentujemy wykonanie testu end-to-
-end pozwalającego na uzyskanie akredytacji przez MD Anderson
Cancer Center w zakresie procesu radioterapii. W styczniu 2019 r.
Uniwersyteckie Centrum Kliniczne im. prof. K. Gibińskiego Śląskiego
Uniwersytetu Medycznego w Katowicach przeszło pomyślnie przez
tego typu proces akredytacji i otrzymało certyfikat jakości.
Opis poszczególnych etapów tego audytu zewnętrznego być
może przekona czytelników, że testy takie są istotne dla całościowego
sprawdzenia procesu radioterapii oraz umożliwiają
udział w międzynarodowych badaniach klinicznych.
Ośrodek audytujący IROC Houston Quality Assurance Center
należący do University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
oferuje całościową usługę dostarczenia dedykowanych fantomów
wraz z instrukcjami przeprowadzenia testów, a także opracowuje
ich wyniki w postaci skonsolidowanego raportu.The scope of this article is the discussion of the role of external
audits in the verification process of therapeutic chain, in
a radiotherapy department. In this article an end-to-end test is
presented, which allows for the accreditation by MD Anderson
Cancer Center in the field of radiotherapy. In January 2019 Uniwersyteckie
Centrum Kliniczne im. prof. K. Gibińskiego Śląskiego
Uniwersytetu Medycznego w Katowicach passed successfully
the accreditation process and received a quality certificate.
The description of particular stages of this external audit may
convince the readers that such tests are essential for a comprehensive
control of the radiotherapy process and enable the participation
in international clinical trials.
The IROC Houston Quality Assurance Center of the University
of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center provides a comprehensive
service of delivering dedicated phantoms with test instructions,
and also compiles the results in the form of a consolidated report