Clinical dosimetry measurements in radiotherapy

Author(s)

    • Rogers, D. W. O.
    • Cygler, Joanna E.

Bibliographic Information

Clinical dosimetry measurements in radiotherapy

D. W. O. Rogers, Joanna E. Cygler, editors

(Medical physics monograph, no. 34)

Medical Physics Pub., c2009

  • : CD-ROM

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Note

"Proceedings of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine Summer School Colorado College, Colorado Springs, Colorado June 21-25, 2009"--T.p.

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

While radiation dosimetry is no longer the ""hot topic"" of research that it once was, new treatment modalities still have challenges to be solved and detector systems are constantly being developed. But as a relatively mature subject, there is no widely used current book devoted to clinical dosimetry. A primary purpose of producing this Summer School was to create such a text to help in the education of clinical physicists who had not had access to the forefront research into understanding radiation dosimetry. Making sure the dose delivered to the patient is what it should be is one of the most important jobs medical physicists have. There are many aspects to doing this, but at the core, the radiation must be accurately measured. One of the original major tasks of the AAPM was to establish methods which its members could use to reliably carry out this task, and it has been highly successful. There have been clinical dosimetry protocols and formalisms for brachytherapy dosimetry developed, calibration laboratories accredited, and a myriad of task group reports produced on different dosimetry techniques and delivery modalities.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 A Historical Perspective: A Brief History of Dosimetry, Calibration Protocols, and the Need for Accuracy Peter R. Almond, Ph.D. Chapter 2 Basic Radiation Interactions, Definition of Dosimetric Quantities, and Data Sources Jeffrey V. Siebers, Ph.D., and Geoffrey D. Hugo, Ph.D Chapter 3 Cavity Theory, Stopping-Power Ratios, Correction Factors Alan E. Nahum, Ph.D. Chapter 4 General Characteristics of Radiation Dosimeters and a Terminology To Describe Them D.W.O. Rogers, Ph.D. Chapter 5 Monte Carlo Applications in Measurement Dosimetry J. Seuntjens, Ph.D., and D.W.O. Rogers, Ph.D. Chapter 6 Ionization Chamber Instrumentation Larry A. DeWerd, Ph.D., Stephen D. Davis, M.Sc., Laura J. Bartol, M.S.,and Frank Grenzow, B.S.E.E. Chapter 7 Review of TG-51 Protocol M. Saiful Huq, Ph.D. Chapter 8 Clinical Implementation of the TG-51 Calibration Protocol David S. Followill, Ph.D. Chapter 9 The Physics of the AAPM''s TG-51 Protocol D.W.O. Rogers, Ph.D. Chapter 10 Kilovoltage X-Ray Dosimetry for Radiation Therapy C.-M. Charlie Ma, Ph.D. Chapter 11 Dosimetric Characteristics of Clinical Photon Beams Jatinder R. Palta, Ph.D. Chapter 12 Current Approach in Clinical Electron Beam Dosimetry Dimitris N. Mihailidis, Ph.D. Chapter 13 Brachytherapy Dose Calculation Formalism, Dataset Evaluation, and Treatment Planning System Implementation Mark J. Rivard, Ph.D., Christopher S. Melhus, Ph.D., and Jeffrey F. Williamson, Ph.D. Chapter 14 Thermoluminescent Detector and Monte Carlo Techniques for Reference-Quality Brachytherapy Dosimetry Jeffrey F. Williamson, Ph.D., and Mark J. Rivard, Ph.D. Chaper 15 Primary Standards of Air Kerma for 60Co and X-Rays and Absorbed Dose in Photon and Electron Beams Malcolm McEwen, Ph.D. Chapter 16 Primary Standards for Brachytherapy Sources Michael G. Mitch, Ph.D., and Chrisopher G. Soares, Ph.D. Chapter 17 The Calibration Chain: Role of BIPM, PSDLs, and ADCLs J. Seuntjens, Ph.D., and M. McEwen, Ph.D. Chapter 18 QA for Clinical Dosimetry, with Emphasis on Clinical Trials Geoffrey S. Ibbott, Ph.D. Chapter 19 Dosimetry for IMRT Thomas Rockwell Mackie, Ph.D. Chapter 20 Dosimetry of Small Photon Beams Used for Stereotactic Radiosurgery/Radiotherapy Sonja Dieterich, Ph.D., Carlo Cavedon, D.S., and Ellen E. Wilcox, Ph.D. Chapter 21 Hadron Dosimetry Hugo Palmans, Ph.D., Andrzej Kacperek, Ph.D. and Oliver Jäkel. Ph.D. Chapter 22 Treatment of Uncertainties in Radiation Dosimetry Michael J, Mitch, Ph.D., Larry A. DeWerd, Ph.D. Ronaldo Minniti, Ph.D., and Jeffrey F. Williamson, Ph.D Chapter 23 Radiochromic Film Christopher G. Soares, Ph.D., Samuel Trichter, M.S.and Stephen D. Davis, M.Sc. Chapter 24 Thermoluminescent Dosimetry Larry A. DeWerd, Ph.D., Laura J. Bartol, M.S.and Stephen D. Davis, M.Sc. Chapter 25 Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) Dosimetry in Radiotherapy Joanna E. Cygler, Ph.D., and Eduardo G. Yukihara, Ph.D. Chapter 26 Radiographic Film Indra J. Das, Ph.D. Chapter 27 Diamond Detector Indra J. Das, Ph.D. Chapter 28 Diode Dosimetry for Megavoltage Electron and Photon Beams T. C. Zhu, Ph.D., and A. S. Saini, Ph.D. Chapter 29 MOSFET Dosimetry in Radiotherapy Joanna E. Cygler, Ph.D., and Paolo Scalchi, Ph.D. Chapter 30 Gel Dosimetry L. John Schreiner, Ph.D., FCCPM and Tim Olding, M.Sc. Chapter 31 Fricke and Alanine Dosimeters Malcolm R. McEwen, Ph.D., and Carl Ross, Ph.D. Chapter 32 Plastic Scintillation Detectors Sam Beddar, Ph.D., and Tina Marie Briere, Ph.D. Appendix A Stopping-Power Ratios, Ratios of Mass-Energy Coefficients, and CSDA Ranges of Electrons D.W.O. Rogers, Ph.D. Appendix B Answers to Problems

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  • Medical physics monograph

    Published for the American Association of Physicists in Medicine by the American Institute of Physics

Details

  • NCID
    BB03707290
  • ISBN
    • 9781888340846
    • 9781888340839
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Madison, Wis.
  • Pages/Volumes
    xv, 1112 p.
  • Size
    24 cm.
  • Attached Material
    1 CD-ROM
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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