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Magnetic resonance imaging of radiation dose distributions using a polymer-gel dosimeter

450

Citations

17

References

1994

Year

TLDR

The BANG polymer‑gel dosimeter is a hypoxic gelatin matrix containing acrylamide monomers that polymerize upon irradiation, shortening water proton transverse relaxation times and changing optical density, thereby enabling MRI‑based 3‑D dose mapping. Its R₂ response is reproducible and linear up to ~8 Gy (slope 0.25 s⁻¹ Gy⁻¹ at 1.5 T), allowing high‑resolution, stable 3‑D dose imaging by MRI and optical methods, even for low‑activity sources.

Abstract

A new formulation of a tissue-equivalent polymer-gel dosimeter for the measurement of three-dimensional dose distributions of ionizing radiation has been developed. It is composed of aqueous gelatin infused with acrylamide and N, N'-methylene-bisacrylamide monomers, and made hypoxic by nitrogen saturation. Irradiation of the gel, referred to as BANG, causes localized polymerization of the monomers, which, in turn, reduces the transverse NMR relaxation times of water protons. The dose dependence of the NMR transverse relaxation rate, R2, is reproducible (less than 2% variation) and is linear up to about 8 Gy, with a slope of 0.25 s-1Gy-1 at 1.5 T. Magnetic resonance imaging may be used to obtain accurate three-dimensional dose distributions with high spatial resolution. Since the radiation-induced polymers do not diffuse through the gelatin matrix, the dose distributions recorded by BANG gels are stable for long periods of time, and may be used to measure low-activity radioactive sources. Since the light-scattering properties of the polymerized regions are different from those of the clear, non-irradiated regions, the dose distributions are visible, and their optical densities are dependent on dose.

References

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