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Model studies of the role of oxygen in the FLASH effect
- Source :
- Med Phys, Medical physics, vol 49, iss 3
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Current radiotherapy facilities are standardized to deliver dose rates around 0.1-0.4Gy/s in 2Gy daily fractions, designed to deliver total accumulated doses to reach the tolerance limit of normal tissues undergoing irradiation. FLASH radiotherapy (FLASH-RT), on the other hand, relies on facilities capable of delivering ultrahigh dose rates in large doses in a single microsecond pulse, or in a few pulses given over a very short time sequence. For example, most studies to date have implemented 4-6MeV electrons with intra-pulse dose rates in the range 106 -107 Gy/s. The proposed dependence of the FLASH effect on oxygen tension has stimulated several theoretical models based on three different hypotheses: (i) Radiation-induced transient oxygen depletion; (ii) cell-specific differences in the ability to detoxify and/or recover from injury caused by reactive oxygen species; (iii) self-annihilation of radicals by bimolecular recombination. This article focuses on the observations supporting or refuting these models in the frame of the chemical-biological bases of the impact of oxygen on the radiation response of cell free, in vitro and in vivo model systems.
- Subjects :
- Radical
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Biomedical Engineering
chemistry.chemical_element
Electrons
Oxygen
Article
Flash (photography)
FLASH radiotherapy
peroxyl radicals
Irradiation
chemistry.chemical_classification
Reactive oxygen species
Pulse (signal processing)
Radiotherapy Dosage
General Medicine
Oxygen tension
Other Physical Sciences
Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Microsecond
chemistry
radical recombination
Biophysics
Radiation Oncology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Med Phys, Medical physics, vol 49, iss 3
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1f61f10ccde0633337f2c05c2021fc2d