An investigation has been carried out into the properties of the BANG polymer gel and its use in the dosimetry of low dose rate brachytherapy. It was discovered that the response of the gel was reproducible and linear to 10 Gy. The gel was found to be tissue equivalent with a response independent of energy to within experimental accuracy (standard error of measurement +/- 5%). The slope of the calibration curve was found to increase from 0.28 +/- 0.01 s-1 Gy-1 to 0.50 +/- 0.02 s-1 Gy-1 for an increase in monomer concentration from 6 to 9%. Absorbed dose distributions for a straight applicator containing 36 137Cs sources were measured using the gel and the results compared with measurements made with thermoluminescent dosemeters (TLDs) and calculated values. Good agreement was found for the relative measurements. The root mean square residual percentage errors were 3%, 1% and 4% for the gel and the two groups of TLDs, respectively. There were some significant differences in absolute values of absorbed dose in the gel, possibly owing to the effects of oxygen. Measurements of a complex gynaecological insert were also made and compared with isodose curves from a planning system (Helax TMS), and in areas unaffected by oxygen diffusion the isodose levels from 100 to 50% agreed to within less than 0.5 mm.
Our study revealed that, for recent radiotherapy techniques, the use of multileaf collimators for beam shaping removing the flattening filter could offer some advantages, including an increased dose rate and decreased out-of-field dose.
Polymer gels with and without 60 ppm of 10B were exposed to an epithermal neutron beam produced by the Dynamitron at the University of Birmingham on two separate occasions. Eight vials containing the gel, four with and four without boron, were irradiated in pairs in a water phantom for 5 h. The maximum dose was calculated to be 9 Gy in A-150 tissue equivalent plastic, 4 cm deep in the phantom. Measurements were made of the variation of relaxation rates of the gels with depth in a phantom. These were compared with calculations using the MCNP Monte Carlo program and the gel response followed the general trend of the results of the calculations. The calculations showed that the absence of boron gave 66.1% and 44.3% of the absorbed dose with boron and the measurements showed the response of the gel without boron to give 65+/-2% and 41+/-6% of the response with boron for the two halves of the first vial. All the gel measurements showed an enhancement in absorbed dose when boron was added. These results indicate that polymer gels may have a role in measuring the enhancement of absorbed dose due to boron in an epithermal or thermal neutron.
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