How to translate text using browser tools
31 January 2017 Scattered Dose Calculations and Measurements in a Life-Like Mouse Phantom
David Welch, Leah Turner, Michael Speiser, Gerhard Randers-Pehrson, David J. Brenner
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Anatomically accurate phantoms are useful tools for radiation dosimetry studies. In this work, we demonstrate the construction of a new generation of life-like mouse phantoms in which the methods have been generalized to be applicable to the fabrication of any small animal. The mouse phantoms, with built-in density inhomogeneity, exhibit different scattering behavior dependent on where the radiation is delivered. Computer models of the mouse phantoms and a small animal irradiation platform were devised in Monte Carlo N-Particle code (MCNP). A baseline test replicating the irradiation system in a computational model shows minimal differences from experimental results from 50 Gy down to 0.1 Gy. We observe excellent agreement between scattered dose measurements and simulation results from X-ray irradiations focused at either the lung or the abdomen within our phantoms. This study demonstrates the utility of our mouse phantoms as measurement tools with the goal of using our phantoms to verify complex computational models.

©2017 by Radiation Research Society.
David Welch, Leah Turner, Michael Speiser, Gerhard Randers-Pehrson, and David J. Brenner "Scattered Dose Calculations and Measurements in a Life-Like Mouse Phantom," Radiation Research 187(4), 433-442, (31 January 2017). https://doi.org/10.1667/RR004CC.1
Accepted: 1 January 2017; Published: 31 January 2017
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top