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People Exposed To More Radiation From Medical
People Exposed To More Radiation From Medical

... Yes, from about 124,000 person sievert in 1990 to 900,000 person sievert in 2006. Half of that (about 440,000 person sievert) is from CT scans. Can you compare this to something with which I’m familiar? The estimated collective dose to the U.S. population from natural background radiation is 918,000 ...
Ionizing radiation as a factor of environment
Ionizing radiation as a factor of environment

... typically result when very large dosages of radiation are received in a short amount of time. These effects will often be evident within hours or days. Examples of nonstochastic effects include erythema (skin reddening), skin and tissue burns, cataract formation, sterility, radiation sickness and de ...
printable version - Environment, Health and Safety
printable version - Environment, Health and Safety

... (possibly through smoking or eating when hands are contaminated), there is, in general, no radiation hazard from these patients who have received diagnostic doses of radioactive materials. No special precautions are needed in caring for them, and there are no restrictions on patient activities or co ...
American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and
American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and

... radiation field sizes adequately to cover the entire range of potential tumor positions within the body. This approach by default incorporates a large volume of normal tissue that might receive unnecessary radiation in the process. Therefore, it would be preferable to limit the radiation field size ...
File Ref.No.38933/GA - IV - J2/2013/CU  UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT
File Ref.No.38933/GA - IV - J2/2013/CU UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT

... months followed by clinical training of 12 months in two semesters. A project work is to be submitted during the period. VI. MEDIUM OF INSTRUCTION – English VII. ATTENDANCE – A candidate is required to put in at least 80% attendance in theory and   practical subjects separately in the recognized ins ...
Dosimetric verification of respiratory
Dosimetric verification of respiratory

... common goal is applied to all types of cancer: Deliver the prescribed dose to the target while sparing as much normal tissue as possible. Delineation of the GTV (gross tumor volume) is contoured onto the treatment planning CT and a margin is applied expanding the volume in order to create the PTV (p ...
ViewRay™ References
ViewRay™ References

... The authors report the first magnetic resonance (MR) images produced by their prototype MR system integrated with a radiation therapy source. The prototype consists of a 6 MV linac mounted onto the open end of a biplanar 0.2 T permanent MR system which has 27.9 cm pole-to-pole opening with flat grad ...
Personnel radiation dose considerations in the use of an
Personnel radiation dose considerations in the use of an

... scanner (GE Healthcare), using standard whole-body imaging scanning parameters; however, as the scan was specifically for radiotherapy planning purposes, it extended only over the lungs and was thus of a shorter duration than a routine whole-body scan (10–15 min compared with 30–35 min). The patient ...
The American Society for Radiation Oncology`s 2010 Core
The American Society for Radiation Oncology`s 2010 Core

... residency program teaching institutions was reconvened again to update the curriculum in 2009. Methods and Materials: Members of this committee have associations with ASTRO, the American Association of Physicists in Medicine, the Association of Residents in Radiation Oncology, the American Board of ...
multiplan" treatment planning system
multiplan" treatment planning system

... time needed to create a treatment plan. Highly conformal plans can be created with fewer total monitor units, so treatment delivery time is also reduced. • Sequential Optimization can be scripted to enable the user to store planning objectives for use with future similar cases, thereby further redu ...
Current and Future Trends in Proton Treatment of Prostate Cancer
Current and Future Trends in Proton Treatment of Prostate Cancer

... radiotherapy besides making it more expensive? “It gave us neutrons, which did not work, and protons, that did.” Eric Hall, Ph.D., ASTRO Gold Medal Address, 1994 ...
Medical radiation exposure and accidents. Dosimetry and radiation
Medical radiation exposure and accidents. Dosimetry and radiation

... licensed health care facilities can release patients who have been treated with unsealed radioactive material or with implants containing radioactive material [45, 46]. Safety instructions must be provided to patients or to their guardians, to ensure that doses to other individuals remain “As Low As ...
Slate_gray covers.indd - American Society for Radiation Oncology
Slate_gray covers.indd - American Society for Radiation Oncology

... to determine treatment volume and critical structures, commonly referred to as organs at risk (OARs), in close proximity to the treatment area or more distant and receiving a dose of radiation that needs monitoring. For either EBRT or brachytherapy, clinical treatment planning results in a complete, ...
Computed Tomography Routine Examinations and the Related Risk
Computed Tomography Routine Examinations and the Related Risk

... comparison between different categories of patients in terms of organ doses, effective doses and DLP in five examined categories abdomen, head, thorax, cervical ...
PDF - Medical Journal of Australia
PDF - Medical Journal of Australia

... account for delineation uncertainties is reduced, and less normal tissue is irradiated, thus reducing treatment toxicity. A proposed new workflow for prostate radiation therapy planning using MRI scans only is shown in Box 1(B). The prostate and organs would be automatically defined on a high-contra ...
EMERGING - American Society for Radiation Oncology
EMERGING - American Society for Radiation Oncology

... delivery has focused on the motion inherent in target structures and normal organs in their proximity. These structures are subject to targeting uncertainty due to motion not adequately represented on planning computer tomography (CT) scans that may occur both during (intrafraction) and between (int ...
TREAT WHAT YOU SEE see what you treat
TREAT WHAT YOU SEE see what you treat

... Heavy Industries Ltd. Brainlab develops the software technology including motion management and is an innovator in image-guided surgery, radiotherapy and radiosurgery. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. develops the MHI-TM2000 linear accelerator system capable of identification of tumor location and t ...
File Ref.No.38933/GA - IV - J2/2013/CU  UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT
File Ref.No.38933/GA - IV - J2/2013/CU UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT

... The Board of Studies in Radiation Physics, vide paper read as (3), resolved to approve the Revised Syllabus of MSc programme in Radiation Physics under CCSS (PG) in the University Teaching Department, with effect from 2013 admissions. The Dean Faculty of Science recommended to implement the resoluti ...
Required/Required when applicable/Optional
Required/Required when applicable/Optional

... *Registration using a soft tissue surrogate for the tumor is recommended. *Free-breathing CTs are not to be used as reference images for 4D CBCT IGRT process **Clearly visible anatomical markers are acceptable as fiducials, e.g. inserted radio-opage markers or Lipiodol from prior TACE treatment. Whe ...
A Summary of Radiation Dose Guidelines and Limits Applicable to
A Summary of Radiation Dose Guidelines and Limits Applicable to

... and the permissible limits of the institutional license. The HUSC will examine the merits of the proposal itself with regard to the likelihood of success, given the research plan, the magnitude of the radiation dose risk and the plausibility of the data upon which the dose estimates are based. In ge ...
Spring 2014
Spring 2014

... The centre has already treated a wide Knowing that this has never been variety of disease sites including done before, the Washington Unilung, stomach, colon, bladder, ilium, versity team is moving slowly abdomen, breast and mediansti- towards the adaptive stage. They num, to name but a few. The sys ...
Computed tomography: Are we aware of radiation risks in computed
Computed tomography: Are we aware of radiation risks in computed

... Is It True That CT Scans May Increase My Risk of Cancer? CT is valuable imaging tool and plays an important role in the evaluation of many diseases. It has been recognized since early studies on Xrays and radioactive minerals that exposure to high levels of radiation can cause clinical damage to the ...
Fiducial Markers in Image-guided Radiotherapy
Fiducial Markers in Image-guided Radiotherapy

... cancer and, for the purposes of this manuscript, this organ site will be exclusively focused on. Prostate cancer demonstrates a dose–response profile such that increasing delivery of dose to tumor is associated with better outcomes. However, prostate radiotherapy presents several unique issues for w ...
EANM procedure guideline for the treatment of liver
EANM procedure guideline for the treatment of liver

... Pre-therapy evaluation of serum liver enzymes, cholinesterase, blood cell count, coagulation and creatinine should be monitored and known before the procedure. Angiography performed by high-speed multislice CT (angio-CT) may be valuable as a noninvasive tool for procedure planning, in order (1) to v ...
Radiation Safety and Physics
Radiation Safety and Physics

... sieverts (200-300 rem). A typical daily fraction for treatment of breast cancer is 1.8 Gy (180 rem) and in special circumstances single dose fractions in other parts of the body may be as high as 8 Gy. If the reported high radiation dose at Fukushima was localized, it is likely that the burns suffer ...
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Brachytherapy

Brachytherapy (from the Greek word βραχύς brachys, meaning ""short-distance""), also known as internal radiotherapy, sealed source radiotherapy, curietherapy or endocurietherapy, is a form of radiotherapy where a sealed radiation source is placed inside or next to the area requiring treatment. Brachytherapy is commonly used as an effective treatment for cervical, prostate, breast, and skin cancer and can also be used to treat tumours in many other body sites.Brachytherapy can be used alone or in combination with other therapies such as surgery, external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) and chemotherapy.Brachytherapy contrasts with unsealed source radiotherapy in which a therapeutic radionuclide (radioisotope) is injected into the body to chemically localize to the tissue requiring destruction. It also contrasts to EBRT, in which high-energy x-rays (or occasionally gamma-rays from a radioisotope like cobalt-60) are directed at the tumour from outside the body. Brachytherapy instead involves the precise placement of short-range radiation-sources (radioisotopes) directly at the site of the cancerous tumour. These are enclosed in a protective capsule or wire, which allows the ionizing radiation to escape to treat and kill surrounding tissue but prevents the charge of radioisotope from moving or dissolving in body fluids. The capsule may be removed later, or (with some radioisotopes) it may be allowed to remain in place.A key feature of brachytherapy is that the irradiation affects only a very localized area around the radiation sources. Exposure to radiation of healthy tissues farther away from the sources is therefore reduced. In addition, if the patient moves or if there is any movement of the tumour within the body during treatment, the radiation sources retain their correct position in relation to the tumour. These characteristics of brachytherapy provide advantages over EBRT - the tumour can be treated with very high doses of localised radiation whilst reducing the probability of unnecessary damage to surrounding healthy tissues.A course of brachytherapy can be completed in less time than other radiotherapy techniques. This can help reduce the chance for surviving cancer cells to divide and grow in the intervals between each radiotherapy dose. Patients typically have to make fewer visits to the radiotherapy clinic compared with EBRT, and the treatment is often performed on an outpatient basis. This makes treatment accessible and convenient for many patients. These features of brachytherapy mean that most patients are able to tolerate the brachytherapy procedure very well.Brachytherapy represents an effective treatment option for many types of cancer. Treatment results have demonstrated that the cancer cure rates of brachytherapy are either comparable to surgery and EBRT or are improved when used in combination with these techniques. In addition, brachytherapy is associated with a low risk of serious adverse side effects.The global market for brachytherapy reached US$680 million in 2013, of which the High-Dose Rate (HDR) and LDR segments accounted for 70%. Microspheres and electronic brachytherapy commanded the remaining 30%. The brachytherapy market is expected to reach over US$2.4 billion in 2030, growing by 8% annually, mainly driven by the microspheres market as well as electronic brachytherapy, which is gaining significant interest worldwide as a user-friendly technology.
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