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Perturbations of radiation field caused by titanium dental implants in pencil proton beam therapy

C. Oancea, A. Luu, I. Ambrožová, G. Mytsin, V. Vondráček, M. Davídková,

. 2018 ; 63 (21) : 215020. [pub] 20181029

Language English Country England, Great Britain

Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

The aim of this study was to investigate the absorbed dose and the linear energy transfer (LET) of a scanning proton pencil beam at the Proton Therapy Center Czech, applied to phantoms containing metal implants. We investigated two different phantoms composed of commonly used metals with a known chemical composition. Two rectangular phantoms consisted of water-equivalent environment material with a 65 mm thickness surrounding the 2, 5, 10 and 15 mm inserts of grade-2 and grade-5 Titanium. Track-etched detectors (TEDs) were placed behind the phantoms to gather the data. The measured LET spectra behind the implants were compared with Monte Carlo simulations using the Geant4 toolkit, version 10.03.p01. The simulations were used to provide additional information regarding the contribution of each type of particles to the LET spectra (protons, alpha particles, deuteron, neutrons, photons, and electrons) and to estimate the LET spectra above the TED's detection threshold. We used two different beam energies to study the most pertinent irradiation scenarios, one in the Bragg curve plateau and one at the maximum. The measurement of the LET spectra behind phantoms irradiated with a proton beam in the plateau region of the Bragg curve led to the detection of numerous particles with a very high LET. Lateral dose enhancement at the border between implants and the plastic material was detected when the phantoms were exposed to a proton beam and the data were recorded in the Bragg peak maximum. In this area, the dose increased 13 times for grade-2 Ti and 12 times for grade-5 Ti. The performed experimental study highlights the effect of dental implants on the LET spectra and absorbed dose when a proton pencil beam is crossing high-density titanium.

References provided by Crossref.org

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