The UF series of tomographic computational phantoms of pediatric patients
Two classes of anthropomorphic computational phantoms exist for use in Monte Carlo radiation transport simulations: tomographic voxel phantoms based upon three-dimensional (3D) medical images, and stylized mathematical phantoms based upon 3D surface equations for internal organ definition. Tomograph...
Gespeichert in:
Veröffentlicht in: | Medical physics (Lancaster) 2005-12, Vol.32 (12), p.3537-3548 |
---|---|
Hauptverfasser: | , , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | Two classes of anthropomorphic computational phantoms exist for use in Monte Carlo radiation transport simulations: tomographic voxel phantoms based upon three-dimensional (3D) medical images, and stylized mathematical phantoms based upon 3D surface equations for internal organ definition. Tomographic phantoms have shown distinct advantages over the stylized phantoms regarding their similarity to real human anatomy. However, while a number of adult tomographic phantoms have been developed since the early 1990s, very few pediatric tomographic phantoms are presently available to support dosimetry in pediatric diagnostic and therapy examinations. As part of a larger effort to construct a series of tomographic phantoms of pediatric patients, five phantoms of different ages (
9
‐
month
male,
4
‐
year
female,
8
‐
year
female,
11
‐
year
male, and
14
‐
year
male) have been constructed from computed tomography (CT) image data of live patients using an IDL-based image segmentation tool. Lungs, bones, and adipose tissue were automatically segmented through use of window leveling of the original CT numbers. Additional organs were segmented either semiautomatically or manually with the aid of both anatomical knowledge and available image-processing techniques. Layers of skin were created by adding voxels along the exterior contour of the bodies. The phantoms were created from fused images taken from head and chest-abdomen-pelvis CT exams of the same individuals (
9
‐
month
and
4
‐
year
phantoms) or of two different individuals of the same sex and similar age (
8
‐
year
,
11
‐
year
, and
14
‐
year
phantoms). For each model, the resolution and slice positions of the image sets were adjusted based upon their anatomical coverage and then fused to a single head-torso image set. The resolutions of the phantoms for the
9
‐
month
,
4
‐
year
,
8
‐
year
,
11
‐
year
, and
14
‐
year
are
0.43
×
0.43
×
3.0
mm
,
0.45
×
0.45
×
5.0
mm
,
0.58
×
0.58
×
6.0
mm
,
0.47
×
0.47
×
6.00
mm
, and
0.625
×
0.625
×
6.0
mm
, respectively. While organ masses can be matched to reference values in both stylized and tomographic phantoms, side-by-side comparisons of organ doses in both phantom classes indicate that organ shape and positioning are equally important parameters to consider in accurate determinations of organ absorbed dose from external photon irradiation. Preliminary studies of external photon irradiation of the
11
‐
year
phantom indicate significant departures of organ dose coefficients fr |
---|---|
ISSN: | 0094-2405 2473-4209 |
DOI: | 10.1118/1.2107067 |