Image-guided radiotherapy Health Dictionary

Image-guided Radiotherapy: From 1 Different Sources


(IGRT) the process of imaging during a course of radiation treatment to verify the internal position of the target in comparison to the initial planning scan. This enables adjustment of *treatment fields to improve coverage and allows the use of smaller treatment volumes. The possible methods for IGRT include cone beam CT, *tomotherapy, *cyberknife, and ultrasound and kilovoltage X-rays of implanted fiducial markers.
Health Source: Oxford | Concise Colour Medical Dictionary
Author: Jonathan Law, Elizabeth Martin

Radiotherapy

A treatment which uses atomic particles and high energy rays to destroy cancerous cells.... radiotherapy

Body Image

A person’s perception of the different parts of his or her own body.... body image

Interstitial Radiotherapy

Treatment of a cancerous tumour by inserting radioactive material into the growth or into neighbouring tissue. Using this method, also called brachytherapy, radiation can be targeted at the diseased area.

Radioactive material (usually artificial radioisotopes) contained in wires, small tubes, or seeds is then implanted into or near the diseased tissue under general anaesthesia. The material is left in place for variable amounts of time depending on the radioactive substance and the tumour being treated. (See also intracavitary therapy; radiotherapy.)... interstitial radiotherapy

Self-image

A person’s view of his or her own personality and abilities. Some neurotic disorders stem from an incongruity between self-image and how others see one.

Psychotherapy treats neurosis by changing a person’s self-image.... self-image

After-image

n. an impression of an image that is registered by the brain for a brief moment after an object is removed from in front of the eye, or after the eye is closed. A positive afterimage, which lasts a few seconds, retains the colour and brightness of the original image; the more common negative afterimage lasts longer and has colours and brightness that are complementary to the original.... after-image

Analogue Image

a traditional X-ray image on film that is in shades that range smoothly from black to white with no appreciable steps from one shade of grey to the next (see grey scale). Analogue images can be converted to digital format (see digitization) for manipulation and storage by computers and other electronic devices.... analogue image

Digital Image

an image made up of *pixels. Each pixel has numbers (digits) to describe its position and shade on the *grey scale. The more shades available, described by the number of computer bits required to store the shade of grey, the more accurately the image represents the original tissue contrast. An 8-bit computer image shows 28 (256) possible shades of grey, close to the maximum the human eye can differentiate. 12-bit (4096 levels of grey) images are of much higher quality and take up more memory. They can be manipulated more easily by computer using image enhancement techniques. Compare analogue image.... digital image

External Beam Radiotherapy

see teletherapy.... external beam radiotherapy

Image-guided Surgery

see computer-assisted surgery.... image-guided surgery

Image Intensifier

an electronic device that provides a TV image from an X-ray source. The X-rays strike a fluorescent screen after passing through the patient, giving off electrons, which are accelerated using an electron lens before striking a second fluorescent screen, which is usually attached to a video camera. The acceleration of the electrons amplifies the signal from the original image, giving a brighter picture, so that the radiation dose can be reduced. Images can be taken from the camera to be observed in real time on a video monitor or, using a brief higher-dose exposure, to provide a more detailed static image (see digital spot imaging).... image intensifier

Intensity-modulated Radiotherapy

(IMRT) radiotherapy using multiple beams with variable intensity across each field, resulting in dose distributions that can fit to concave shapes and thus reduce dose to surrounding healthy tissues and organs. It can be used to treat a wide range of cancers and can enable safe delivery of higher doses to tumours.... intensity-modulated radiotherapy

Portal Image

an electronic image taken during radiotherapy treatment to verify the position of radiation beams.... portal image



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