3 resultados para RADIATION-DOSE DISTRIBUTIONS

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Obiettivo: Il nostro obiettivo è stato quello di confrontare la tomoterapia (HT) e la protonterapia ad intensità modulata (IMPT) nel trattamento del tumore prostatico, seguendo un protocollo di boost simultaneo (SIB) e moderatamente ipofrazionato. Materiali e metodi: Abbiamo selezionato 8 pazienti, trattati con HT e abbiamo rielaborato i piani con 2 campi IMPT. La dose prescritta è stata di 74 Gy sul PTV1 (prostata e vescicole seminali prossimali), 65.8 Gy sul PTV2 (vescicole seminali distali) e 54 Gy sul PTV3 (linfonodi pelvici). Risultati: Sia con IMPT che con HT abbiamo ottenuto una copertura e una omogeneità di dose del target sovrapponibile. Oltre i 65 Gy, HT e IMPT erano equivalenti per il retto, mentre con l’IMPT c’era maggior risparmio della vescica e del bulbo penieno da 0 a 70 Gy. Da 0 fino a 60 Gy, i valori dosimetrici dell’IMPT erano molto più bassi per tutti gli organi a rischio (OARs), eccetto che per le teste femorali, dove la HT aveva un vantaggio dosimetrico rispetto all’IMPT nel range di dose 25-35 Gy. La dose media agli OARs era ridotta del 30-50% con l’IMPT. Conclusioni: Con le due tecniche di trattamento (HT e IMPT) si ottiene una simile distribuzione di dose nel target. Un chiaro vantaggio dosimetrico dell’IMPT sul HT è ottenuto dalle medie e basse dosi. Le attuali conoscenze sulle relazioni dose-effetto e sul risparmio delle madie e basse dosi con l’IMPT non sono ancora state quantificate dal punto di vista clinico.

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The Plasma Focus is a device designed to generate a plasma sheet between two coaxial electrodes by means of a high voltage difference. The plasma is then driven to collapse into a “pinch”, where thermonuclear conditions prevail. During the “pinch phase” charged particles are emitted, with two main components: an ion beam peaked forward and an electron beam directed backward. The electron beam emitted backward by Plasma Focus devices is being investigated as a radiation source for medical applications, using it to produce x-rays by interaction with appropriate targets (through bremsstrahlung and characteristic emission). A dedicated Plasma Focus device, named PFMA-3 (Plasma Focus for Medical Applications number 3), has been designed, put in operation and tested by the research groups of the Universities of Bologna and Ferrara. The very high dose rate (several gray per discharge, in less than 1 µs) is a peculiarity of this device that has to be investigated, as it might modify the relative biological effectiveness (RBE). Aim of this Ph.D. project was to investigate the main physical properties of the low-energy x-ray beams produced by a Plasma Focus device and their potential medical applications to IORT treatments. It was necessary to develop the optimal geometrical configuration; to evaluate the x-rays produced and their dose deposited; to estimate the energy electron spectrum produced in the “pinch phase”; to study an optimal target for the conversion of the x-rays; to conduct simulations to study the physics involved; and in order to evaluate the radio-biological features of the beam, cell holders had to be developed for both irradiations and cell growth conditions.

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In this work, the well-known MC code FLUKA was used to simulate the GE PETrace cyclotron (16.5 MeV) installed at “S. Orsola-Malpighi” University Hospital (Bologna, IT) and routinely used in the production of positron emitting radionuclides. Simulations yielded estimates of various quantities of interest, including: the effective dose distribution around the equipment; the effective number of neutron produced per incident proton and their spectral distribution; the activation of the structure of the cyclotron and the vault walls; the activation of the ambient air, in particular the production of 41Ar, the assessment of the saturation yield of radionuclides used in nuclear medicine. The simulations were validated against experimental measurements in terms of physical and transport parameters to be used at the energy range of interest in the medical field. The validated model was also extensively used in several practical applications uncluding the direct cyclotron production of non-standard radionuclides such as 99mTc, the production of medical radionuclides at TRIUMF (Vancouver, CA) TR13 cyclotron (13 MeV), the complete design of the new PET facility of “Sacro Cuore – Don Calabria” Hospital (Negrar, IT), including the ACSI TR19 (19 MeV) cyclotron, the dose field around the energy selection system (degrader) of a proton therapy cyclotron, the design of plug-doors for a new cyclotron facility, in which a 70 MeV cyclotron will be installed, and the partial decommissioning of a PET facility, including the replacement of a Scanditronix MC17 cyclotron with a new TR19 cyclotron.