A physical anthropomorphic phantom of a one year old child with real-time dosimetry | | Posted on:1998-10-01 | Degree:Ph.D | Type:Dissertation | | University:University of Florida | Candidate:Bower, Mark William | Full Text:PDF | | GTID:1468390014478361 | Subject:Engineering | | Abstract/Summary: | PDF Full Text Request | | A physical heterogeneous phantom has been created with epoxy resin based tissue substitutes. The phantom is based on the Cristy and Eckerman mathematical phantom which in turn is a modification of the Medical Internal Radiation Dose (MIRD) model of a one-year-old child as presented by the Society of Nuclear Medicine. The Cristy and Eckerman mathematical phantom, and the physical phantom, are comprised of three different tissue types: bone, lung tissue and soft tissue. The bone tissue substitute is a homogenous mixture of bone tissues: active marrow, inactive marrow, trabecular bone, and cortical bone. Soft tissue organs are represented by a homogeneous soft tissue substitute at a particular location.;Point doses were measured within the phantom with a Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor (MOSFET)-based Patient Dose Verification System modified from the original radiotherapy application. The system features multiple dosimeters that are used to monitor entrance or exit skin doses and intracavity doses in the phantom in real-time. Two different MOSFET devices were evaluated: the typical therapy MOSFET and a developmental MOSFET device that has an oxide layer twice as thick as the therapy MOSFET thus making it of higher sensitivity. The average sensitivity (free-in-air, including backscatter) of the "high-sensitivity" MOSFET dosimeters ranged from ;The integrated physical phantom was utilized to obtain point measurements of the absorbed dose from diagnostic x-ray examinations. Organ doses were calculated based on these point dose measurements. The phantom dosimetry system functioned well providing real-time measurement of the dose to particular organs. The system was less reliable at low doses where the main contribution to the dose was from scattered radiation. The system also was of limited utility for determining the absorbed dose in larger systems such as the skeleton. The point dose method of estimating the organ dose to large disperse organs such as this are of questionable accuracy since only a limited number of points are measured in a field with potentially large exposure variations. The MOSFET system was simple to use and considerably faster than traditional thermoluminescent dosimetry. The one-year-old simulated phantom with the real-time MOSFET dosimeters provides a method to easily evaluate the risk to a previously understudied population from diagnostic radiographic procedures. | | Keywords/Search Tags: | Phantom, MOSFET, Physical, Real-time, Tissue, Dose | PDF Full Text Request | Related items |
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