TY - JOUR
T1 - The density measurements in pCT imaging
AU - Evseev, Ivan
AU - De Assis, Joaquim Teixeira
AU - Yevseyeva, Olga
AU - Schelin, Hugo Reuters
AU - Klock, Márgio Cezar Loss
AU - Setti, João Antônio Palma
AU - Lopes, Ricardo Tadeu
AU - Vinagre Filho, Ubirajara Maribondo
AU - Schulte, Reinhard W.
AU - Williams, David C.
N1 - AA(Polytechnic Institute/State Univ. of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), AB(Polytechnic Institute/State Univ. of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), AC(Polytechnic Institute/State Univ. of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), AD(CEFET-PR, Brazil), AE(CEFET-PR, Brazil), AF(CEFET-PR, Brazil), AG(Federal Univ. of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), AH(Institute of Nuclear Engineering, Brazil), AI(Loma Linda Univ. Medical Ctr., USA), AJ(Univ.
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - In existing proton treatment centers, dose calculations are performed based on x-ray computerized tomography (CT). Alternatively, the therapeutic proton beam could be used to collect the data for treatment planning via proton CT (pCT). With the development of medical proton gantries, first at Loma Linda University Medical Center and now in several other proton treatment centers, it is of interest to continue the early pCT investigations of the 1970s and the early 1980s. From that time, the basic idea of the pCT method has advanced from average energy loss measurements to an individual proton tracking technique. This reduces the image degradation due to multiple Coulomb scattering. Thereby, the central pCT problem shifts to the fidelity of the physical information obtained about the scanned patient, which will be used for proton treatment planning. The accuracy of relative electron density distributions extracted from pCT images was investigated in this work using continuous slowing down approximation (CSDA) and water-equivalent-thickness (WET) concepts. Analytical results were checked against Monte Carlo simulations, which were obtained with SRIM2003 and GEANT4 Monte Carlo software packages. The range of applications and the sources of absolute errors are discussed.
AB - In existing proton treatment centers, dose calculations are performed based on x-ray computerized tomography (CT). Alternatively, the therapeutic proton beam could be used to collect the data for treatment planning via proton CT (pCT). With the development of medical proton gantries, first at Loma Linda University Medical Center and now in several other proton treatment centers, it is of interest to continue the early pCT investigations of the 1970s and the early 1980s. From that time, the basic idea of the pCT method has advanced from average energy loss measurements to an individual proton tracking technique. This reduces the image degradation due to multiple Coulomb scattering. Thereby, the central pCT problem shifts to the fidelity of the physical information obtained about the scanned patient, which will be used for proton treatment planning. The accuracy of relative electron density distributions extracted from pCT images was investigated in this work using continuous slowing down approximation (CSDA) and water-equivalent-thickness (WET) concepts. Analytical results were checked against Monte Carlo simulations, which were obtained with SRIM2003 and GEANT4 Monte Carlo software packages. The range of applications and the sources of absolute errors are discussed.
KW - Density measurements
KW - Monte Carlo simulation
KW - Proton computed tomography
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U2 - 10.1117/12.595720
DO - 10.1117/12.595720
M3 - Conference article
SN - 1605-7422
VL - 5745
SP - 764
EP - 774
JO - Progress in Biomedical Optics and Imaging - Proceedings of SPIE
JF - Progress in Biomedical Optics and Imaging - Proceedings of SPIE
IS - II
M1 - 84
T2 - Medical Imaging 2005 - Physics of Medical Imaging
Y2 - 13 February 2005 through 15 February 2005
ER -