Impact of secondary particles on microdistribution of deposited dose in biological tissue in the presence of gold and gadolinium nanoparticles under photon beam irradiation

It is experimentally proven that nanoparticles of high-Z materials can be used as radiosensitizers for photon beam therapy. In the authors’ opinion, data available as of today on the impact of secondary particles (electrons, photons and positrons generated in biological tissue by p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ivan A. Konobeev, Yurij A. Kurachenko, Igor’ N. Sheino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National Research Nuclear University (MEPhI) 2019-05-01
Series:Nuclear Energy and Technology
Online Access:https://nucet.pensoft.net/article/35798/download/pdf/
id doaj-92187e03d09b45e696de940400ca9c3f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-92187e03d09b45e696de940400ca9c3f2020-11-25T03:05:26ZengNational Research Nuclear University (MEPhI)Nuclear Energy and Technology2452-30382019-05-015210911610.3897/nucet.5.3579835798Impact of secondary particles on microdistribution of deposited dose in biological tissue in the presence of gold and gadolinium nanoparticles under photon beam irradiationIvan A. Konobeev0Yurij A. Kurachenko1Igor’ N. Sheino2SRC – Burnasyan Federal Medical Biophysical Center of Federal Medical Biological AgencyObninsk Institute for Nuclear Power Engineering National Research Nuclear University MEPhISRC – Burnasyan Federal Medical Biophysical Center of Federal Medical Biological Agency It is experimentally proven that nanoparticles of high-Z materials can be used as radiosensitizers for photon beam therapy. In the authors’ opinion, data available as of today on the impact of secondary particles (electrons, photons and positrons generated in biological tissue by penetrating beam of primary photons) on the distribution of deposited dose during photon beam therapy in the presence of nanoparticles, are insufficient. Investigation of this impact constituted the main goal of this work. Two-stage simulation was performed using Geant4 platform. During the first stage a layer of biological tissue (water) was irradiated by monoenergetic photon sources with energies ranging from 10 keV to 6 MeV. As the result of this modeling spectra of electrons, photons and positrons were obtained at the depth of 5 cm. During the second stage the obtained photon spectra were used to irradiate gold, gadolinium and water nanoparticles. Radial distributions of energy deposited around nanoparticles were obtained as the result of this modeling. Radial DEF (Dose Enhancement Factor) values around nanoparticles of gold and gadolinium positioned in water at the depth of 5 cm were obtained after processing the collected data. Contributions from primary photons and secondary particles (electrons, photons and positrons generated in the layer of water with 5-cm thickness by the penetrating beam of primary photons) in the additional dose deposited around the nanoparticles were calculated as well. It was demonstrated that layer of biological tissue placed between the source of photons and nanoparticles considerably changes the initial spectrum of photons and this change is significant in the analysis of mechanism of radiosensitization of biological tissues by nanoparticles for all energies of photon sources (up to 6 MeV). It was established that interaction of electrons and positrons with nanoparticles does not lead to significant increase of additional dose in the vicinity of their surfaces and can be most likely excluded from consideration in the analysis of radiosensitization mechanism of nanoparticles. https://nucet.pensoft.net/article/35798/download/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ivan A. Konobeev
Yurij A. Kurachenko
Igor’ N. Sheino
spellingShingle Ivan A. Konobeev
Yurij A. Kurachenko
Igor’ N. Sheino
Impact of secondary particles on microdistribution of deposited dose in biological tissue in the presence of gold and gadolinium nanoparticles under photon beam irradiation
Nuclear Energy and Technology
author_facet Ivan A. Konobeev
Yurij A. Kurachenko
Igor’ N. Sheino
author_sort Ivan A. Konobeev
title Impact of secondary particles on microdistribution of deposited dose in biological tissue in the presence of gold and gadolinium nanoparticles under photon beam irradiation
title_short Impact of secondary particles on microdistribution of deposited dose in biological tissue in the presence of gold and gadolinium nanoparticles under photon beam irradiation
title_full Impact of secondary particles on microdistribution of deposited dose in biological tissue in the presence of gold and gadolinium nanoparticles under photon beam irradiation
title_fullStr Impact of secondary particles on microdistribution of deposited dose in biological tissue in the presence of gold and gadolinium nanoparticles under photon beam irradiation
title_full_unstemmed Impact of secondary particles on microdistribution of deposited dose in biological tissue in the presence of gold and gadolinium nanoparticles under photon beam irradiation
title_sort impact of secondary particles on microdistribution of deposited dose in biological tissue in the presence of gold and gadolinium nanoparticles under photon beam irradiation
publisher National Research Nuclear University (MEPhI)
series Nuclear Energy and Technology
issn 2452-3038
publishDate 2019-05-01
description It is experimentally proven that nanoparticles of high-Z materials can be used as radiosensitizers for photon beam therapy. In the authors’ opinion, data available as of today on the impact of secondary particles (electrons, photons and positrons generated in biological tissue by penetrating beam of primary photons) on the distribution of deposited dose during photon beam therapy in the presence of nanoparticles, are insufficient. Investigation of this impact constituted the main goal of this work. Two-stage simulation was performed using Geant4 platform. During the first stage a layer of biological tissue (water) was irradiated by monoenergetic photon sources with energies ranging from 10 keV to 6 MeV. As the result of this modeling spectra of electrons, photons and positrons were obtained at the depth of 5 cm. During the second stage the obtained photon spectra were used to irradiate gold, gadolinium and water nanoparticles. Radial distributions of energy deposited around nanoparticles were obtained as the result of this modeling. Radial DEF (Dose Enhancement Factor) values around nanoparticles of gold and gadolinium positioned in water at the depth of 5 cm were obtained after processing the collected data. Contributions from primary photons and secondary particles (electrons, photons and positrons generated in the layer of water with 5-cm thickness by the penetrating beam of primary photons) in the additional dose deposited around the nanoparticles were calculated as well. It was demonstrated that layer of biological tissue placed between the source of photons and nanoparticles considerably changes the initial spectrum of photons and this change is significant in the analysis of mechanism of radiosensitization of biological tissues by nanoparticles for all energies of photon sources (up to 6 MeV). It was established that interaction of electrons and positrons with nanoparticles does not lead to significant increase of additional dose in the vicinity of their surfaces and can be most likely excluded from consideration in the analysis of radiosensitization mechanism of nanoparticles.
url https://nucet.pensoft.net/article/35798/download/pdf/
work_keys_str_mv AT ivanakonobeev impactofsecondaryparticlesonmicrodistributionofdepositeddoseinbiologicaltissueinthepresenceofgoldandgadoliniumnanoparticlesunderphotonbeamirradiation
AT yurijakurachenko impactofsecondaryparticlesonmicrodistributionofdepositeddoseinbiologicaltissueinthepresenceofgoldandgadoliniumnanoparticlesunderphotonbeamirradiation
AT igornsheino impactofsecondaryparticlesonmicrodistributionofdepositeddoseinbiologicaltissueinthepresenceofgoldandgadoliniumnanoparticlesunderphotonbeamirradiation
_version_ 1724678487812341760