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E-grāmata: Image-Guided Radiation Therapy

Edited by (Wake Forest University, School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA)
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"Preface This book presents key image-guided radiation treatment (IGRT) technologies for external beam radiotherapy and caps a multidecade phase of technology development in the realm of conformal, customized radiation treatment. This development phase has been somewhat brief and vigorous, with new IGRT innovations such as increased image fidelity and adaptive radiotherapy continuing through the present day. IGRT had been in development in earnest since the early 1990s as a desired companion to intensity-modulated radiation treatment (IMRT). It was known at the time that beam-intensity modulation would be proven to enable beamlets of radiation dose to be formed and delivered to give highly conformal treatment to target volumes, while at the same time providing avoidance of even nearby normal structures. IMRT was being developed with pathways that were based on particular technological features of each vendor's designs for their multileaf collimators (MLCs) and linear accelerators, e.g., leaf design (width, height, focus, speed, etc.), dose rate control, error checking, and gantry motion control. In a previous decade, the 1980s into the mid-1990s, three-dimensional conformal radiation treatment (3D-CRT) had been developed such that for the first time, using static pretreatment 3D images from computed tomography (CT), anatomical volumes could be identified and segmented for the target, normal structures, and the external contour. As 3D-CRT and IMRT technologies developed, it was recognized that confirming "correct" treatment geometry for every individual fraction might be important, since daily variations in treatment position and the locations of internal structures would lead to blurring (degradation) of the cumulative dose distribution"--Provided by publisher.

Recenzijas

Image-Guided Radiation Therapy contains valuable information on the history of image-guided radiation treatment (IGRT), imaging systems, and secondary technologies. It is extensive in the explanation of how such systems are used clinically, and it covers most of the devices offered by manufacturers today. It is truly a remarkable compilation of focused and detailed chapters that span the art of image-guided radiation therapy. Michael S. Gossman, Medical Physics, June 2012

Series Preface ix
Preface xi
Acknowledgment xiii
Editor xv
Contributors xvii
1 Optical and Remote Monitoring IGRT
1(12)
Sanford L. Meeks
Twyla R. Willoughby
Katja M. Langen
Patrick A. Kupelian
2 Ultrasound-Guided Radiation Therapy
13(14)
Janelle A. Molloy
3 In-Room CT System for IGRT
27(16)
James R. Wong
Minoru Uematsu
Zhanrong Gao
4 Megavoltage Fan Beam CT IGRT
43(28)
Gustavo Hugo Olivera
Thomas Rockwell Mackie
5 Kilovoltage Cone-Beam CT Guidance of Radiation Therapy
71(40)
Jeffrey H. Siewerdsen
Jan-Jakob Sonke
6 Megavoltage Cone-Beam IGRT
111(20)
Olivier Morin
Jean Pouliot
7 Kilovoltage X-Ray IMRT and IGRT
131(16)
Hiroki Shirato
Masayori Ishikawa
Shinichi Shimizu
Gerard Bengua
Ken Sutherland
Rikiya Onimaru
Hidefumi Aoyama
8 Kilovoltage Radiography for Robotic Linac IGRT
147(10)
Martin J. Murphy
9 Respiratory-Correlated CT
157(18)
Canell J. Hampton
10 4D PET/CT in Radiotherapy
175(12)
Sadek A. Nehmeh
Yusuf E. Erdi
11 On-Board Digital Tomosynthesis: An Emerging New Technology for Image-Guided Radiation Therapy
187(16)
Q. Jackie Wu
Devon Godfrey
Lei Ren
Sua Yoo
Fang-Fang Yin
12 Image Registration and Segmentation in Radiation Therapy
203(20)
Michael B. Sharpe
Michael Velec
Kristy K. Brock
Index 223
J. Daniel Bourland is a professor in the Department of Radiation Oncology at Wake Forest University School of Medicine. Dr. Bourland is a fellow of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine and a diplomate of the American Board of Radiology. He earned a Ph.D. in medical and health physics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His research interests include imaging in radiation treatment, small field dose calculations, radiosurgery, bioeffects from radiological terrorism, and small animal irradiations.