130 research outputs found
Heavy Quarkonium Spectroscopy
This paper reviews the experimental status of the Heavy Quarkonium
Spectroscopy and highlights the measurements that hint at the existence of a
new form of quark and gluon aggregation beyond the mesons and the baryons.Comment: 7 pages, 9 postscript figures, contributed to the Proceedings of
Lepton-Photon 200
Exotic Heavy Quarkonium Spectroscopy: A Mini-review
Since nine years experiments have been observing a host of exotic states
decaying into heavy quarkonia. The interpretation of most of them still remains
uncertain and, in some cases, controversial, notwithstanding a considerable
progress has been made on the quality of the experimental information available
and a number of ideas and models have been put forward to explain the
observations. In this mini-review we will summarize the measurements, with the
most recent updates, and list the useful ones yet to be done. We will discuss
the problem of the spin of the X, which could hide some major surprise on its
interpretation, and review some more phenomenological issues debated in the
field.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, 5 tables. To appear in Mod. Phys. Lett.
Intraoperative β-Detecting probe for radio-guided surgery in tumour resection
The development of the β− based radio-guided surgery aims to extend the technique to those tumours where surgery is the only possible treatment and the assessment of the resection would most profit from the low background around the lesion, as for brain tumours. Feasibility studies on meningioma and gliomas already estimated the potentiality of this new treatment. To validate the technique, a prototype of the intraoperative probe detecting β− decays and specific phantoms simulating tumour remnant patterns embedded in healthy tissue have been realized. The response of the probe in this simulated environment is tested with dedicated procedures. This document discusses the innovative aspects of the method, the status of the developed intraoperative β− detecting probe and the results of the preclinical tests
An Intraoperative Detecting Probe For Radio-Guided Surgery in Tumour Resection
The development of the based radio-guided surgery aims to extend
the technique to those tumours where surgery is the only possible treatment and
the assessment of the resection would most profit from the low background
around the lesion, as for brain tumours. Feasibility studies on meningioma,
glioma, and neuroendocrine tumors already estimated the potentiality of this
new treatment. To validate the technique, prototypes of the intraoperative
probe required by the technique to detect radiation have been
developed. This paper discusses the design details of the device and the tests
performed in laboratory. In such tests particular care has to be taken to
reproduce the surgical field conditions. The innovative technique to produce
specific phantoms and the dedicated testing protocols is described in detail.Comment: 7 pages, 15 figure
Monitoring of hadrontherapy treatments by means of charged particle detection
The interaction of the incoming beam radiation with the patient body in hadrontherapy
treatments produces secondary charged and neutral particles, whose detection can be
used for monitoring purposes and to perform an on-line check of beam particle range. In
the context of ion-therapy with active scanning, charged particles are potentially attractive
since they can be easily tracked with a high efficiency, in presence of a relatively low
background contamination. In order to verify the possibility of exploiting this approach
for in-beam monitoring in ion-therapy, and to guide the design of specific detectors, both
simulations and experimental tests are being performed with ion beams impinging on
simple homogeneous tissue-like targets (PMMA). From these studies, a resolution of the
order of few millimeters on the single track has been proven to be sufficient to exploit
charged particle tracking for monitoring purposes, preserving the precision achievable
on longitudinal shape. The results obtained so far show that the measurement of charged
particles can be successfully implemented in a technology capable of monitoring both
the dose profile and the position of the Bragg peak inside the target and finally lead to
the design of a novel profile detector. Crucial aspects to be considered are the detector
positioning, to be optimized in order to maximize the available statistics, and the capability
of accounting for the multiple scattering interactions undergone by the charged
fragments along their exit path from the patient body. The experimental results collected
up to now are also valuable for the validation of Monte Carlo simulation software tools
and their implementation in Treatment Planning Software packages
Radioguided surgery with β decay: A feasibility study in cervical cancer
Purpose: Radioguided surgery (RGS) is a technique that helps the surgeon to achieve a tumour resection as complete as possible, by means of the intraoperative detection of particles emitted by a radiotracer that bounds to tumoural cells. This study aimed to investigate the applicability of β-RGS for tumour resection and margin assessment in cervical cancer patients preoperatively injected with [18F]FDG, by means of Monte Carlo simulations. Methods: Patients were retrospectively included if they had a recurrent or persistent cervical cancer, underwent preoperative PET/CT to exclude distant metastases and received radical surgery. All PET/CT images were analysed extracting tumour SUVmax, background SUVmean and tumour-to-non-tumour ratio. These values were used to obtain the expected count rate in a realistic surgical scenario by means of a Monte Carlo simulation of the β probe, assuming the injection of 2 MBq/kg of [18F]FDG 60 min before surgery. Results: Thirty-eight patients were included. A measuring time of ∼2-3 s is expected to be sufficient for discriminating the tumour from background in a given lesion, being this the time the probe has to be over the sample in order to be able to discriminate tumour from healthy tissue with a sensitivity of ∼99% and a specificity of at least 95%. Conclusion: This study presents the first step towards a possible application of our β-RGS technique in cervical cancer. Results suggest that this approach to β-RGS could help surgeons distinguish tumour margins from surrounding healthy tissue, even in a setting of high radiotracer background activity
Towards a Radio-guided Surgery with Decays: Uptake of a somatostatin analogue (DOTATOC) in Meningioma and High Grade Glioma
A novel radio guided surgery (RGS) technique for cerebral tumors using
radiation is being developed. Checking the availability of a
radio-tracer that can deliver a emitter to the tumor is a
fundamental step in the deployment of such technique. This paper reports a
study of the uptake of 90Y labeled (DOTATOC) in the meningioma and the high
grade glioma (HGG) and a feasibility study of the RGS technique in these cases.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figure
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