21 research outputs found

    Biological impact of geometric uncertainties: what margin is needed for intra-hepatic tumors?

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>To evaluate and compare the biological impact on different proposed margin recipes for the same geometric uncertainties for intra-hepatic tumors with different tumor cell types or clinical stages.</p> <p>Method</p> <p>Three different margin recipes based on tumor motion were applied to sixteen IMRT plans with a total of twenty two intra-hepatic tumors. One recipe used the full amplitude of motion measured from patients to generate margins. A second used 70% of the full amplitude of motion, while the third had no margin for motion. The biological effects of geometric uncertainty in these three situations were evaluated with Equivalent Uniform Doses (EUD) for various survival fractions at 2 Gy (SF<sub>2</sub>).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>There was no significant difference in the biological impact between the full motion margin and the 70% motion margin. Also, there was no significant difference between different tumor cell types. When the margin for motion was eliminated, the difference of the biological impact was significant among different cell types due to geometric uncertainties. Elimination of the motion margin requires dose escalation to compensate for the biological dose reduction due to the geometric misses during treatment.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Both patient-based margins of full motion and of 70% motion are sufficient to prevent serious dosimetric error. Clinical implementation of margin reduction should consider the tumor sensitivity to radiation.</p

    Drop Formation under Pulsed Conditions

    No full text
    Drop formation from single nozzles under pulsed flow conditions has been investigated. A model, starting from the unified theory of bubble and drop formation, has been developed to predict drop sizes under flow conditions which correspond to the mixer-settler type of operation in pulsed sieve-pIate extraction columns. The influence of the parameters frequency and amplitude of the pulse, interfacial tension, viscosity of the continuous phase and diameter of the orifice on the average drop size has been studied.The mean drop size increases with increased interfacial tension, continuous phase viscosity and orifice diameter. Further, at low pulse intensities, the mean drop size is influenced individually by both pulse amplitude and frequency. The model has been tested against experimental dataand has been found to predict drop sizes satisfactorily

    Drop formation in non-newtonian liquids under pulsed conditions

    No full text
    Drop formation from single nozzles under pulsed flow conditions in non-Newtonian fluids following the power law model has been studied. An existing model has been modified to explain the experimental data. The flow conditions employed correspond to the mixer—settler type of operation in pulsed sieve-plate extraction columns. The modified model predicts the drop sizes satisfactorily. It has been found that consideration of non-Newtonian behaviour is important at low pulse intensities and its significance decreases with increasing intensity of pulsation. Further, the proposed model for single orifices has been tested to predict the sizes of drops formed from a sieve-plate distributor having four holes, and has been found to predict the sizes fairly well in the absence of coalescence
    corecore