Voxel-based models representing the male and female ICRP reference adult - The skeleton

被引:58
作者
Zankl, M. [1 ]
Eckerman, K. E. [2 ]
Bolch, W. E. [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] GSF, Natl Res Ctr Environm & Hlth, Inst Radiat Protect, D-85764 Neuherberg, Germany
[2] Oak Ridge Natl Lab, Div Life Sci, Oak Ridge, TN 37831 USA
[3] Univ Florida, Dept Nucl & Radiol Engn, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA
[4] Univ Florida, Dept Biomed Engn, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1093/rpd/ncm269
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
For the forthcoming update of organ dose conversion coefficients, the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) will use voxel-based computational phantoms due to their improved anatomical realism compared with the class of mathematical or stylized phantoms used previously. According to the ICRP philosophy, these phantoms should be representative of the male and female reference adults with respect to their external dimensions, their organ topology and their organ masses. To meet these requirements, reference models of an adult male and adult female have been constructed at the GSF, based on existing voxel models segmented from tomographic images of two individuals whose body height and weight closely resemble the ICRP Publication 89 reference values. The skeleton is a highly complex structure of the body, composed of cortical bone, trabecular bone, red and yellow bone marrow and endosteum ('bone surfaces' in their older terminology). The skeleton of the reference phantoms consists of 19 individually segmented bones and bone groups. Sub-division of these bones into the above-mentioned constituents would be necessary in order to allow a direct calculation of dose to red bone marrow and endosteum. However, the dimensions of the trabeculae, the cavities containing bone marrow and the endosteum layer fining these cavities are clearly smaller than the resolution of a normal CT scan and, thus, these volumes could not be segmented in the tomographic images. As an attempt to represent the gross spatial distribution of these regions as realistically as possible at the given voxel resolution, 48 individual organ identification numbers were assigned to various parts of the skeleton: every segmented bone was subdivided into an outer shell of cortical bone and a spongious core; in the shafts of the long bones, a medullary cavity was additionally segmented. Using the data from ICRP Publication 89 on elemental tissue composition, from ICRU Report 46 on material mass densities, and from ICRP Publication 70 on the distribution of the red bone marrow among and marrow cellularity in individual bones, individual elemental compositions for these segmented bone regions were derived. Thus, most of the relevant source and target regions of the skeleton were provided. Dose calculations using these regions will be based on fluence-to-dose response functions that are multiplied with the particle fluence inside specific bone regions to give the dose quantities of interest to the target tissues.
引用
收藏
页码:174 / 186
页数:13
相关论文
共 23 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1995, ANN ICRP
[2]   Skeletal absorbed fractions for electrons in the adult male:: Considerations of a revised 50-μm definition of the bone endosteum [J].
Bolch, W. E. ;
Shah, A. P. ;
Watchman, C. J. ;
Jokisch, D. W. ;
Patton, P. W. ;
Rajon, D. A. ;
Zankl, M. ;
Petoussi-Henss, N. ;
Eckerman, K. F. .
RADIATION PROTECTION DOSIMETRY, 2007, 127 (1-4) :169-173
[3]   Conversion coefficients based on the VIP-MAN anatomical model and EGS4-VLSI code for external monoenergetic photons from 10 keV to 10 MeV [J].
Chao, TC ;
Bozkurt, A ;
Xu, XG .
HEALTH PHYSICS, 2001, 81 (02) :163-183
[4]   ACTIVE BONE-MARROW DISTRIBUTION AS A FUNCTION OF AGE IN HUMANS [J].
CRISTY, M .
PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 1981, 26 (03) :389-400
[5]  
Cristy M, 1987, TM8381V7 ORNL
[6]   Response functions for computing absorbed dose to skeletal tissues from photon irradiation [J].
Eckerman, K. F. ;
Boch, W. E. ;
Zankl, M. ;
Petoussi-Henss, N. .
RADIATION PROTECTION DOSIMETRY, 2007, 127 (1-4) :187-191
[7]   Adult female voxel models of different stature and photon conversion coefficients for radiation protection [J].
Fill, UA ;
Zankl, M ;
Petoussi-Henss, N ;
Siebert, M ;
Regulla, D .
HEALTH PHYSICS, 2004, 86 (03) :253-272
[8]  
ICRU, 1992, ICRU Report, P46
[9]  
International Commission of Radiological Protection (ICRP), 2002, ANN ICRP, V32
[10]  
JONES DA, 1996, PRINCIPLES PREVENTIO, P90