Abstract

The application of annihilation gamma-ray monitoring to the adaptive therapy of carbon ion radiotherapy (C-ion RT) requires identification of the peak intensity position and confirmation of activated elements with annihilation gamma-rays generated at the C-ion-irradiated site from those transported to unirradiated sites. Real-time monitoring of C-ion-induced annihilation gamma-rays was implemented using a Compton camera in a mouse model. An adult C57BL/6 mouse was anesthetized, and C-ion beams were directed into the abdomen at 1 × 109 particles/s for 20 s. The 511 keV annihilation gamma-rays, generated by the interaction between the irradiated C-ion beam and the target mouse, were detected using a silicon/cadmium telluride (Si/CdTe) Compton camera for 20 min immediately after irradiation. The irradiated site and the peak intensity position of 511 keV gamma emissions due to C-ion beam irradiation on a mouse were observed at the abdomen of the mouse by developing Compton images. Moreover, the positron emitter transport was observed by evaluating the range of gamma-ray emission after the C-ion beam irradiation on the mouse. Our data suggest that by confirming the peak intensity and beam range of C-ion RT with Si/CdTe-based Compton camera, it would be possible to reduce the intra-fractional and inter-fractional dose distribution degradation. Therefore, the results of this study would contribute to the future development of adaptive therapy with C-ion RT for humans.

Highlights

  • Compton cameras were originally developed in the field of astronomy to observe black-holes, supernovae, and the extreme universe [1, 2]

  • The 511 keV annihilation gamma-rays from the Na-22 point sources were detected using the Compton camera for 3 min

  • general parametric function (GPF) were fit to the corresponding profiles pass through the peak position of the two images to estimate the point spread function (PSF)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Compton cameras were originally developed in the field of astronomy to observe black-holes, supernovae, and the extreme universe [1, 2]. The direction of the incident gamma-ray is restricted within a cone surface using the position and energy information from the two sub-detectors. A Compton camera is a compact (i.e., ∼44.5 × 34.0 × 23.5 cm in size) device that can detect multiple radionuclides exhibiting a wide energy range (from a few hundred keV up to few MeV) simultaneously. These features indicate the device’s potential for applications in medical imaging [6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call