Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Linear Accelerator

Getting the Necessary Shielding Right



The use of heavy concrete or ordinary concrete in conjunction with steel to construct the primary barrier of the room is the basic design requirement leading to the construction of the safe facility meant for the use of the medical linear accelerator.

Concrete and Concrete Materials

Today heavy concrete are widely used method for the protection against radiations in Radiation Therapy. Traditionally, it has a limiting effect of heavy aggregates to the baryte gravels and sands. A considerable improvement in the characteristics has occurred, producing concrete with a much higher specific gravity, increasing the density from 3 to 4 if not more to 5.4 which can be realised. These new performance are necessary for widening the common use in radiation therapy.  

Concrete & Metal as a combination

If not carried out correctly, the metal layer could potentially result in a source of photoneutron production where it presents a problem of radiation exposure beyond its shield.  The problem resulting from photoneutron production in the shielding occurs only for the primary beam barriers and not for the secondary barriers. It becomes more pronounce for larger field. To do calculations of photoneutron production, it is necessary to fold the incident photon spectrum into the cross-section curve for photoneutron production as a function of photon energy. 
 
Assuming that bare iron or steel plate or slab is considered, and the neutron production from a lead plate of  1.8MeV for a 15MV x-ray beam to 2.2MeV for a 25MV x-ray beam, the neutron from an iron plate would have a lower average energy because of the high threshold energy. A conservative treatment is to consider 2.2MeV in all cases. If the metal is very thick, the neutron penetrating to the other side will be significantly degraded in energy. A significantly good example is to consider that all the neutrons are created in the first x-ray Tenth-Value-Layer (TVL) and then decrease the average energy in the remaining thickness accordingly to National Council on Radiation Protection recommendation.

The neutrons will be produced in circular areas, typically of the order of 4.5 meters and 3 meters away from the isocentre for the walls and ceilings, respectively. This yields radii of 137cm and 100cm respectively. They are nearly uniform sources, too large to treat as point sources when you are close to them.  At one meter, a lead plate would give a fluence-to-dose of 14 rem/week. For iron plate, it would give 1.7 rem/week. 

Clearly, the above present a true problem that must be alleviate in some manner. This can be accomplished by the use of some neutron shielding materials after or before the metal plate. Preferably one does both the options. Since the photoneutron production is isotropic, if the metal plate is on the inside surface of the room, the neutron will add a small amount of whole body neutron dose to the patient and a certain amount of room activation. X-ray shielding on the inside of the metal plate will virtually always be concrete. The neutron production will be decreased simply by the x-ray attenuation of the intervening concrete. The usual x-ray TVL's are adequate since pair production is not important in concrete.  Note the neutron dose inside the room is attenuated very fast with the inside concrete layer, since the neutron TVL's are less than half of the x-ray TVL's. One x-ray TVL of concrete inside the metal plate will decrease the neutron production by a factor of 10 and will attenuate the resultant neutrons by a factor of 100, in the point source approximation. 

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Surgical Light - Implementation Process

Fig 1
Understand the need to decide on the workflow of the surgical process and also the surgeon operating position. The orientation of the surgeon's operating position plays an important role when come to setup design for each piece of operating device and structures that hold the surgical lights, service pendants, monitor screen, etc.





Fig 2
The pictures above (Fig 1) and (Fig 2) show the design plans for the surgical lights and the service pendants. The surgical lights are position at the centre of the operating room. The centre stem holds and supports two main surgical light structures each with a monitor screen. This is a setup for four articulating arms with two rotating axes - one set for the first surgical lights with a monitor and the second set of axis for the second surgical light with the second monitor.

Notice that the circular movements for the articulating arms are an important factor determining a well-planned design so much so that they don't end up fighting for space where the needs arise during the surgery. Next we look at the height of the ceiling below (Fig 3) if there are sufficient space for the surgical lights, pendants, video camera, etc. Depending on the number of stacks/articulating arms to be installed, this ultimately affect the minimum height requirements for the installation.

Fig 3

Next we planned the pendant position where the anaesthesia system would likely be stationed. The other pendants would be for the surgical equipment like the electrosurgical unit, aspirator, physiologic monitor, etc.

Fig 3 - Ceiling Height

Once the design has been firmed up, we need to cater for most important aspects of safety and that is the structural reinforcement of the current or new site where steel structure supports the weight of each piece of installation within the operating site, i.e, the ceiling structure.


Don't forget the next most important part within the operating theatre is also the airflow system. Ensure number of air exchange are not affected by the new installation.


Finally, consider the need to connect up the gases - oxygen, medical air, nitrous oxide, vacuum, gas scavenging, carbon dioxide, the electrical socket, equipotential point, and the LAN point.


Thursday, January 20, 2011

LED Surgical Light

From halogen to LED lightings. LED technology has been around for many years and until quite recently, the development of LED into surgical lightings has taken a new evolvement with benefits to the light characteristics. Its

  benefits are aplenty: low heat thereby reduces energy consumption; multi-lens matrix combination creating 3D perception effects where lights are distributed and the effect is a homogeneous and shadow-free light output; excellent lifespan mininises outage, etc.