Use of water-equivalent plastic scintillator for intravascular brachytherapy dosimetry
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 01:41authored byMick Counihan, Kerry Williams, Neil Robinson, W Schummer
Beta irradiation has recently been investigated as a possible technique for the prevention of restenosis in intravascular brachytherapy after balloon dilatation or stent implantation. Present methods of beta radiation dosimetry are primarily conducted using radiochromic film. These film dosimeters exhibit limited sensitivity and their characteristics differ from those of tissue, therefore the dose measurement readings require correction factors to be applied. In this work a novel, mini-size (2 mm diameter by 5 mm long) dosimeter element fabricated from Organic Plastic Scintillator (OPS) material was employed. Scintillation photon detection is accomplished using a precision photodiode and innovative signal amplification and processing techniques, rather than traditional photomultiplier tube methods. A significant improvement in signal to noise ratio, dynamic range and stability is achieved using this set-up. In addition, use of the non-saturating organic plastic scintillator material as the detector enables the dosimeter to measure beta radiation at very close distances to the source.
History
Journal
Australasian Physical and Engineering Sciences in Medicine
Volume
27
Issue
1
Start page
5
End page
10
Total pages
6
Publisher
Australasian College of Physical Scientists and Engineers in Medicine