Radiobiology 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Where does most of the radiation we are affected by come from?

A
Natural sources (90%)
e.g CMBR
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2
Q

What is internal exposure?

A

Mainly comes from inhalation and mainly radon.

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3
Q

Why weren’t harmful effects of radiation initially noticed?

A

The effects often take time - latent effects.

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4
Q

What was the first fractionation of raditotherapy?

A

18 x 1hr treatments to divide concentration of radiation

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5
Q

What is indirect action?

A

High energy electrons break chemical bonds to release highly reactive chemical agents

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6
Q

What is direct action?

A

The high energy electron causes damage directly to the cell - notably to the DNA double helix

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7
Q

What does LET stand for and what does it mean?

A

Linear Energy Transfer
The rate at which energy is deposited along a particle track per unit of distance.
Most of the energy is deposited at the end of the track - the bragg peak

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8
Q

Where does the damage occur following direct or indirect action?

A

Interactions break DNA strand. (Low LET likely to produce repairable breaks, high LET = multiple strand breaks)

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9
Q

Absorbed Dose is…

A

the Gy

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10
Q

What is equivalent dose?

A

This depends on the LET and therefore the type of radiation involved.
Uses a weighting factor which depends upon the quality of radiation.
Equivalent dose = sum of Wr (weighting factor) x D (absorbed dose).
Unit = Sv

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11
Q

What is effective dose?

A

different organs and tissues experience radiobiological damage differently ( as well as dependence on LET).
Tissue weighting factor is added. E= Wt x Ht
Unit is also Sv

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12
Q

What is a deterministic effect?

A

The severity of effect - depends on the amount of dose received.
Usually a threshold before an effect is apparent.
e.g erythema

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13
Q

What is a stochastic effect?

A

Probability of occurrence depends on the amount of dose - not guaranteed.
Never a probability of zero.
e.g cancer induction

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14
Q

What does a therapeutic ratio mean?

A

High probability of tumour control and tumour cell death while minimising risk to normal tissues.

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15
Q

How is a therapeutic ratio achieved?

A

Through fractionation.
Through conformation, geometrically and dosimetry, high dose to the target volume to minimise dose to surrounding tisues.

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