Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Dose distribution for dental cone beam CT and its implication for defining a dose index

2012; Oxford University Press; Volume: 41; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1259/dmfr/20920453

ISSN

1476-542X

Autores

Ruben Pauwels, C Theodorakou, Zuzana Walker, Hilde Bosmans, Reinhilde Jacobs, Keith Horner, Ria Bogaerts,

Tópico(s)

Advanced X-ray and CT Imaging

Resumo

To characterize the dose distribution for a range of cone beam CT (CBCT) units, investigating different field of view sizes, central and off-axis geometries, full or partial rotations of the X-ray tube and different clinically applied beam qualities. The implications of the dose distributions on the definition and practicality of a CBCT dose index were assessed.Dose measurements on CBCT devices were performed by scanning cylindrical head-size water and polymethyl methacrylate phantoms, using thermoluminescent dosemeters, a small-volume ion chamber and radiochromic films.It was found that the dose distribution can be asymmetrical for dental CBCT exposures throughout a homogeneous phantom, owing to an asymmetrical positioning of the isocentre and/or partial rotation of the X-ray source. Furthermore, the scatter tail along the z-axis was found to have a distinct shape, generally resulting in a strong drop (90%) in absorbed dose outside the primary beam.There is no optimal dose index available owing to the complicated exposure geometry of CBCT and the practical aspects of quality control measurements. Practical validation of different possible dose indices is needed, as well as the definition of conversion factors to patient dose.

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