Medicine:Tissue-to-air ratio
Tissue-to-air ratio (TAR) is a term used in radiotherapy treatment planning to help calculate absorbed dose to water in conditions other than those directly measured.
Definition
The TAR at a point in a water phantom irradiated by a photon beam is taken to be the ratio of the total absorbed dose at that point to the absorbed dose at the same point in a minimal-scatter phantom with just-sufficient build-up.[1][2]
Tissue-air ratio is defined as the ratio of the dose to water at a given depth to the dose in air measured with a buildup cap:
[math]\displaystyle{ TAR={{D(f,z)} \over {D(f,0)}} }[/math]
where D(f,z) is the dose at a given depth z and distance focus-detector f; and D(f,0) is the dose in air (z=0).
- TAR increases with increasing beam energy because higher energy radiation is more penetrating
- TAR decreases with depth because of attenuation
- TAR increases with field size due to increased scatter contribution
Measurements for each are taken using an ion chamber for identical source to detector distances and field sizes.[3]
See also
References
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tissue-to-air ratio.
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