REDUCING ELECTRON CONTAMINATION FOR PHOTON BEAM-QUALITY SPECIFICATION

被引:18
作者
LI, XA [1 ]
ROGERS, DWO [1 ]
机构
[1] NATL RES COUNCIL CANADA, INST NATL MEASUREMENT STAND, OTTAWA K1A 0R6, ONTARIO, CANADA
关键词
D O I
10.1118/1.597395
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
The percentage depth dose at 10 cm in a 10 x 10-cm2 photon beam at an SSD of 100 cm, %dd(10), is a better beam-quality specifier for radiotherapy beams than the commonly used values of TPR10(20) or nominal accelerating potential. The presence of electron contamination affects the measurement of %dd(10) but can be removed by the use of a 0.1-cm lead filter, which reduces surface dose from contaminant electrons from the accelerator by more than 95% for radiotherapy beams with energies from Co-60 to 50 MV. The filter performs best when it is placed immediately below the head. An electron-contamination correction factor is introduced to correct for electron contamination from the filter and air. It converts the %dd(10) which includes the electron contamination with the filter in place [hereafter %dd(10)m], into %dd(10) for just the photons in the filtered beam. The correction factor is a linear function of %dd(10)m for all filtered beams with %dd(10)m>70%. A small correction for the photon filtering effect converts the pure photon %dd(10) for the filtered beam into that for the unfiltered beam, which can be used to determine stopping-power ratio. Calculations show that the values of water-to-air stopping power ratio in the unfiltered beam are related to the values of %dd(10)m in the filtered beam by a cubic function. The uncertainty of stopping-power ratios in unfiltered beams for the same value of the %dd(10)m is within 0.2% for all beams.
引用
收藏
页码:791 / 797
页数:7
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]   STOPPING POWER DATA FOR HIGH-ENERGY PHOTON BEAMS [J].
ANDREO, P ;
BRAHME, A .
PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 1986, 31 (08) :839-858
[2]  
ANDREO P, 1989, 7 P C NAT FIS MED OV, P9
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1983, MED PHYS, V10, P741
[4]  
[Anonymous], [No title captured]
[5]   ELECTRON CONTAMINATION IN CO-60 GAMMA-RAY BEAMS [J].
ATTIX, FH ;
LOPEZ, F ;
OWOLABI, S ;
PALIWAL, BR .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 1983, 10 (03) :301-306
[6]  
BIELAJEW AF, 1987, NUCL INSTRUM METH B, V18, P165
[7]  
Biggs P J, 1979, Med Phys, V6, P291, DOI 10.1118/1.594580
[8]   THE FORWARD PRODUCTION OF HIGH-ENERGY ELECTRONS FROM MEGAVOLTAGE PHOTON BEAMS [J].
BIGGS, PJ .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 1987, 14 (05) :767-771
[9]   AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE PRESENCE OF SECONDARY ELECTRONS IN MEGAVOLTAGE PHOTON BEAMS [J].
BIGGS, PJ ;
RUSSELL, MD .
PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 1983, 28 (09) :1033-1043
[10]   SURFACE DOSES FOR ACRYLIC VERSUS LEAD ACRYLIC BLOCKING TRAYS FOR CO-60, 8-MV, AND 17-MV PHOTONS [J].
BOVA, FJ ;
HILL, LW .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 1983, 10 (02) :254-256