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Comprehensive Review of Radiation Therapy for CQR studying

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
1 Curie (Ci) =   3.7 x 10^10 bq (dps)  
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1 mCi =   3.7 x 10^7 bq (dps)  
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1 Roentgen (R) =   2.58 x 10^-4 C/kg or 0.96 cGy (or rads), Unit of Exposure, amount of ionization produced by a beam of radiation in AIR, For >1 MeV, 1 R in Air represents approx. 0.96 cGy in Tissue  
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Rad =   100 erg/g  
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Gy =   1 J /kg  
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Dose Equivalent =   absorbed dose in Gy x quality factor  
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Half Life (T1/2) =   ln2 / λ  
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Decay Constant (λ) =   0.693 / T1/2 or ln2 / T1/2  
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HVL (Half Value Layer) =   0.693 / µ, Reduces the exposure rate (intensity) by one-half  
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ln2 =   0.693  
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1 Sieverts (Sv) =   100 rem  
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1 Gray (Gy) =   100 rad  
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Quality Factors =   Xray, Gamma, Beta = 1, Alpha = 20, and Neutrons, Protons = 10 (Protons sometimes = 1 or 2)  
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Dose Equivalent (100 rem=1Sv) =   Absorbed Dose (100 rad=1Gy) x Quality Factor  
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Inverse Square Law Formula =   I1 / I2 = (D2 / D1)^2 , I=Intensity, D=Distance, 1=old, 2=new, *Don't forget to square the distance  
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Inverse Square Law Definition =   The intensity of radiation at a given distance from a point source is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. Increasing distance, reduces the intensity.  
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Relative Biologic Effectiveness (RBE) =   Dose in Gy of 250 kVp / Dose of test radiation  
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Percentage Depth Dose (%DD) =   %DD = TD-Absorbed (Tumor dose) / GD-Prescribed (Given dose) times 100 if decimal form  
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Applied Dose =   Tumor Dose / %DD  
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SSD MU Formula   MU = Dose / %DDxBSFxCFxOPxTFxWF (Back scatter factor, Correction Factors, Output factor, Tray Factor, Wedge Factor)  
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OER =   Oxygen Enhancement Ratio = Dose without O2 / Dose with O2  
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Transmission Factor =   Dose with device / Dose without device  
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Field Magnification =   Image Size / Object Size  
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FS1 / SSD1 =   FS2 / SSD2  
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Kwashiorkor   Protein malnutrition  
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Marasmus   Calorie & Protein malnutrition  
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Undifferentiated   Immature & Unspecialized (ex: stem cell, spermatogonia, erythroblast)  
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Differentiated   Specialized function (ex: spermatozoa, erythrocyte)  
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L'Hermitte's   Electrical shock down body when head is flexed (ex: spinal cord compression or XRT of C or Upper T Spine)  
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Trismus   Difficulty opening mouth, Jaw spasm (ex: XRT chewing muscle)  
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Tenesmus   Spasm of anal or vesical sphincter with pain (ex: XRT Pelvis, desire to empty bladder or bowel)  
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Alpha   Positive, 2 protons+2 neutrons, Great mass, Little penetration  
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Beta   Negative, Little Mass, Great penetration  
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X-ray   Manmade, Originates in electron cloud in tube  
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Gamma   NOT manmade, Originates in nucleus  
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Low LET (Linear Energy Transfer)   (Xray, Gamma), Sparse ionizing radiation separated by long distances  
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High LET (Linear Energy Transfer)   (Alpha, Neutrons), More damage, Dense ionization separated by short distances  
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Front pointer   To find isocenter  
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Back Pointer   To find exit point  
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Beam Splitter (Half-beam blocks)   Splits beam in half to get sharper edge without divergence (XRT H&N & Breast)  
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Partial Transmission Blocks   Used for beam modification rather than shaping  
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Attenuation   Process by which a beam of radiation is reduced in intensity when passing through some material  
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SAD   Source to Axis Distance - 100 cm on Linear Accelerator, 80 cm on Cobalt  
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Bolus   Tissue equivalent used to raise surface dose or compensate or deficit tissue  
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Compensator   Device used to manipulate the dose distribution of the beam  
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Field Size Dependence   Radiation doses affected (aka: Central axis dose increases as...field size increases)  
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Mayneord's Factor   Only used for Extended SSD treatments, a conversion used to show the amount the %DD & MU will increase as the SSD increases  
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Cobalt Dmax   0.5 cm  
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Dmax   The reference depth is normally the level of maximum dose, Dose decreases as the depth increases  
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4MV Dmax   4MV = 1.0 cm  
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6 MV Dmax   6MV = 1 .5 cm  
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10 MV Dmax   10 MV = 2.5 cm  
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15 MV Dmax   15 MV = 3.0 cm  
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20 MV Dmax   20 MV = 4.0 cm  
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25 MV Dmas   25 MV = 5.0 cm  
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Monitor Units (MU)   Unit of Time, Basic unit of machine output  
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Cerrobend (Lipowitz)   BLT with Cheese, 50% Bismuth, 26.7% Lead, 13.3% Tin, 10% Cadmium(toxic)  
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Custom Blocks melt at   70ºC (158º F) - Low melting point  
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C - A - U - T - I - O - N   C=change in bowel or bladder habits, A=a sore that does not heal, U=unusual bleeding or discharge, T=thick or lump anywhere, I=indigestions/difficulty swallowing, O=obvious change in wart or mole, N=nagging cough or hoarseness  
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ALARA   As low as reasonable achievable  
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IMRT   Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy  
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ALL   Acute Lymphatic Leukemia - Most common in children  
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LD 50/30   Lethal dose - 50% will die in 30 days (humans 250-300 cGy total body dose)  
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LD 50/60   More frequently used - 50% will die in 60 days (humans 350-400 cGy total body dose)  
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Best way to minimize patient movement   Communication  
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Single most important way to prevent the spread of infection   Handwashing  
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Most RadioResistant Cell Cycle   S cell cycle (broadest shoulder)  
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Most RadioSensitive Cell Cycle   M (mitosis) cell cycle (shallow shoulder/steepest slope), Then G2  
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Most common site for Breast cancer   Left Breast, Upper Outer Quadrant  
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Cobalt Beam   Polyenergetic or Heterogeneous because more than one energy is decaying from isotope, for XRT purposes 2 energies are averaged to 1.25 MeV  
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Need High Radiation Area Sign if:   Greater than 100 mrem/hr  
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Most RadioSensitve Organ   Testes and Ovaries  
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Most RadioSensitive Cell   Lymphocytes (WBC)  
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Which wedge tilts the most and what is it directly proportional to   60º wedge tilts the most, Higher the degree of wedge=The greater the Tilt  
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What corrects for divergence?   Couch kicks, Independent jaws, Half beam blocks  
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Beam shaping should be how close to the patient's skin   NOT closer than 15 cm from patient's skin  
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2D compensators   Wedges - Cephalic/Caudal directions only  
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3D compensators   For Right/Left directions only  
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Attenuation capability of Cerrobend   85% lead density, which means cerrobend blocks must be. 15% thicker than lead to achieve the same attenuation  
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Most common lymph node chain for H&N   Jugulodigastric (Subdigastic), Also, Node of Rouviere (lateral retropharyngeal)  
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Most common lip carcinoma   Men and Lower Lip  
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Most common site for Epstein Barr Virus   Nasopharynx  
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The tolerance of radiation is inversely proportional to...   the volume of the organ irradiated  
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5 stages of death and dying - Kubler-Ross   DABDA = Denial/Shock, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, Acceptance  
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6 'Rights' of Drug Administration   Right Patient, Drug, Dose, Route, Time, Documentation  
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3 Stages of Malignant Transformation (normal to malignant)   1. Initiation (altered DNA), 2. Promotion(acts on other cells/NOT DNA, 3. Progression (change to malignant, once detectable (1cm) contains 1 billion cancer cells  
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3 most common cancers in Men   1. Prostate, 2. Lung, 3. Colon  
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3 most common cancers in Women   1. Breast, 2. Lung, Colon  
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3 most common cancer deaths in Men   1. Lung, 2. Prostate, 3. Colon  
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3 most common cancer deaths in Women   1. Lung, 2. Breast, 3. Colon  
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Hyperfractionation   Decrease in Dose/fx (below conventional 1.8-2 Gy, but More fractions, Allows higher total dose & tumor control without increasing late complications  
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Hypofractionation   Increase in Dose/fx (higher than conventional 1.8-2 Gy, but Less fractions, Will lower the therapeutic ratio between tumors and late responding tissues, Used on Palliative cases where late effects are not a concern  
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Accelerated Fractionation   Increased rate of dose delivery (above 10 Gy/week), Bad early effects, ^Dose/fx, ^Fx/day, ^Fx/week  
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Carcinoma spreads   Centrifugally  
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Sarcoma spreads   Longitudinally  
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Temporary Hair Loss Dose   20-40 Gy  
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Permanent Hair Loss Dose   55 Gy  
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Protraction   Early Effects, Length of time which total dose is delivered  
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Fractionation   Late Effects, When the total dose of radiation is divided into several, smaller doses over a period of several days, there are fewer toxic effects on healthy cells  
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RBC   Male: 4.32-5.72 trillion cells/L (4.32-5.72 million cells/mcL), Female: 3.90-5.03 trillion cells/L  
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WBC   3.5-10.5 billion cells/L  
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Platelets   150-450 billion/L  
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Hemoglobin   Male: 13.5-17.5 grams/dL (135-175 grams/L), Female: 12.0-15.5 grams/dL  
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Hemotocrit   Male: 38.8-50.0 percent, Female: 34.9-44.5 percent  
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BUN   10-20 mg/dl  
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1 J/kg   Gray  
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100 ergs/g   Rad  
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If %DD is 0.80, it means...   80% is absorbed (transmitted), and 20% is attenuated (reduced, surface dose)  
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Therapeutic Ratio Formula =   NTTD (healthy) / LD (tumor)  
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Split Field Test   Test for longitudinal displacement of the collimator for jaw symmetry, Done using plastic-covered blocked xray film with beams 180º apart, checks the alignment between 2 parallel-opposed fields  
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Misalignment of Split Field Test is caused by:   1. Focal spot displacement, 2. Misalignment of collimator jaws/collimator, 3. Gantry Rotation Axis  
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Superficial   50-140 kVp, 15-20 cm distance, Dmax=0, 1-6 mm Al  
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Orthovoltage   150-500 kVp, 50-70 cm distance, Tin (by xray target), 1-4 mm Cu, Tin (closest to patient), Thoraeus Filter  
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VanDeGraff   2-3 MeV, 100 cm distance, Used to treat Seminoma  
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Betatron   Circular orbit, Noisy, Used for Industrial radiation  
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Cyclotron   Protons, 15-50 MeV, Less treatments needed  
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Radium (Ra226) Half Life (T1/2)   1600 Years, No longer used for treatments  
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Cesium (Cs137) Half Life (T1/2)   30 Years, Breast/Cervix, Tubes/Needles  
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Strontium (Sr90) Half Life (T1/2)   28 Years, Pterygium (eye), Topical  
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Cobalt Half Life (T1/2)   5.26 Years, 1.25 MeV, Encased spheres  
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Iridium Half Life (T1/2)   74 days, Breast/Cervix, Seeds  
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Strontium (Sr89) Half Life (T1/2)   52.7 days, Bone, Solution/Intravenous  
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Iodine (I125) Half Life (T1/2)   60 days, Prostate, Seeds  
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Palladium (Pd103) Half Life (T1/2)   17 days, Prostate, Seeds  
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Phosphorus (P32) Half Life (T1/2)   14.3 days, Ovarian, Solution/Injection  
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Iodine (I131) Half Life (T1/2)   8 days, Thyroid, Capsule  
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Radon (Rn222) Half Life (T1/2)   3.83 days, No longer used (Gold 198 replaced it)  
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Gold (Au198) Half Life (T1/2)   2.7 days, Prostate, Seeds  
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Yttrium (Y90) Half Life (T1/2)   64 HOURS, Liver, Topical  
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TEDE Limits   Total Effective Dose Equivalent Limits  
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Controlled Area - TEDE Limits   0.1 rem/week  
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Uncontrolled Area - TEDE Limits   0.01 rem/week  
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Cumulative (Lifetime) - TEDE Limits   10 mSv (1 rem) x (Age in years)  
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Stochastic - Occupational Workers (Annual - only job exposure) - TEDE Limits   50 mSv (5 rem)  
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Nonstochastic - Occupational Workers (Annual - only job exposure) - TEDE Limits   Threshold=500 mSv (5 rem), LensEye=150mSv(15rem), Organs=500mSv(50rem)  
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Public Annual - TEDE Limits   Frequent=1mSv(0.1rem), Infrequent=5mSv(0.5rem), LensEye=15mSv(15rem), Organs=50mSv(5rem)  
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Embryo-Fetus TEDE Limits   5mSv(0.5rem), Monthly=0.5mSv(0.05rem)  
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2 Types of Gas-filled radiation measuring devices   1. Ionization Chamber (Cutie pie), 2. Geiger-Muller Counter  
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Ionization Chamber   Two electrodes and applied voltage, Measured in mR/hr (not good for low levels), Pocket dosimeter (type of ionization chamber)  
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Geiger-Muller Counter   Uses more voltage so secondary ions, More sensitive (good for low levels, but not high)  
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4 Types of Personnel Monitoring devices   1. Film Badges, 2. Pocket Dosimeter, 3. Thermoluminescent Dosimeter (TLD), 4. Optically Stimulated Luminescent Dosimeter (OSL)  
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Film Badges   Crystal Silver Bromide, Metal filters and film packet, Low (do not penetrate filters, but gets where no filters), Med (penetrate tin but not lead filter), High (penetrates all filters)  
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Pocket Dosimeter   Can be read immediately, NO permanent record, Expensive, Errors  
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Thermoluminescent Dosimeter (TLD)   Crystals of Lithium Fluoride, Gives off light when heated that is proportional to amount of radiation, Badges/Rings  
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Optically Stimulated Luminescent Dosimeter (OSL)   Aluminum Oxide, Laser reads luminescent in proportion to radiation exposure, Extremely accurate, Luxel by Landauer-Hexagon  
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Xray's wavelength   Short wavelength  
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Xray production   99% heat, only 1% xray (75-80% Brems)  
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Energy and Frequency   Directly proportional  
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Wavelength   Inversely proportional to Energy and Frequency  
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Stochastic   Randomly determined, Random probability distribution or pattern, May be analyzed statistically but may not be predicted precisely  
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Nonstochastic   Fixed probability determined, Threshold dose to which the effects will not occur, Threshold dose and Time over which the dose was received cause the effect (ex: acute vs. chronic exposure)  
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Examples of Nonstochastic Effects   Ex: erythema, cataract formation, sterility, radiation sickness and death. Threshold dose and Time over which the dose was received cause the effect (ex: acute vs. chronic exposure)  
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Lead   High Atomic #=More Dense,=Attenuates more, Wall=LowAtomic#=LowerAttenuation  
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5 Types of Photon Interactions   1. Coherent Scatter (Rayleigh/Thompson/Classical/Simple), 2. Photoelectric (Einstein's Nobel Prize, 3. Compton (Incoherent), 4. Pair Production, 5. Photodisintegration  
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Coherent Scatter (Rayleigh/Thompson/Classical/Simple)   1-50 kVp, Interacts with: Atoms/Electrons oscillates, Energy: No change/Slight direction change, By-product: None  
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Photoelectric (Einstein's Nobel Prize)   <1 MeV, Interacts with: INNER K-shell Electron, Energy: Changed/All e- transferred/Total Absorption, By-product: Characteristic Photons or Auger Electrons  
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Compton (Incoherent)   200 kVp-2 MeV, Interacts with: OUTER shell Electrons/Free e-/Low binding energy, Energy: Reduced/Partial Energy Transfer, By-product: Compton Scattered electron/photon  
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Pair Production   1.022 MeV, 3-10 MeV is most common, Interacts with: Nucleus, Energy: Absorbed & transforms into positron & negatron/Important at 10 MeV/Predominant at >50 MeV, By-product: Positron & Negatron (annihilate into two 0.511 MeV photons  
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Photodisintegration   >10 MeV, Interacts with: Nucleus & emits neutrons & gamma rays, Energy: Absorbed by Nucleus/High Z material/Neutron contamination hazard, By-product: Neutrons/possible protons/Proton-Neutron(Deuteron)/Alpha  
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2 Types of Electron Interactions   1. Collision (Characteristic), 2. Radiative (Bremsstrahlung)  
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Collision (Characteristic)   Most common Electron Interaction, Electron beam lose energy by collision interaction more than radiation interaction due to low Z # of tissue, Electron loss is 2 MeV/cm of tissue  
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Radiative (Bremsstrahlung)   Increase with increasing energy and increasing Z# of absorber  
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Two types of Electron Collision Interactions:   1. Elastic (incoming electrons give up all of its energy (No kinetic energy lost), 2. Inelastic (allow bounce back where the incoming electrons share its energy)  
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Practical range of electrons =   MeV / 2  
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Depth of 80% isodose line =   MeV / 3  
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Depth of 90% isodose line =   MeV / 4  
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Electron Lead Shielding in mm =   MeV / 2  
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Tolerance Doses (TD5/5) =   The radiation dose that would result in 5% risk of severe complications within 5 years after irradiation  
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Testes - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   1-2 Gy  
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Ovaries - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   6-10 Gy  
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Eyes (Lens) - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   6-12 Gy  
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Kidney - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   20-30 Gy  
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Thyroid - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   20–40 Gy  
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Lung - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   23–28 Gy  
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Skin - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   30–40 Gy  
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Liver - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   35–40 Gy  
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Bone Marrow - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   40–50 Gy  
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Heart - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   43–50 Gy  
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Gastrointestinal - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   50–55 Gy  
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Vasculoconnective tissue - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   50–60 Gy  
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Spinal Cord - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   50–60 Gy  
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Brain - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   55–70 Gy  
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Peripheral nerve - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   65–77 Gy  
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Mucosa - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   65–77 Gy  
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Bone and cartilage - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   >70 Gy  
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Muscle - TD 5/5 - TD 50/5   >70 Gy  
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Dose for Skin Reactions   15-30 Gy=Hair Loss, 20Gy=Erythemia, 30Gy=Dry Desquamation, 40Gy=Wet Desquamation  
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Increase kVp =   Penetration ⬆️, Contrast ⬇️, More scatter, Directly Proportional to=kvP,Penetration,&Scatter, ⬆️kVP=⬆️Penetration=⬆️Scatter  
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Increase Mass =   Penetration ⬇️, Contrast ⬆️(for Larger patients), Directly Proportional to=Mass,Contrast,&Density, ⬆️Mass=⬆️Density=⬆️Contrast  
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CT Hounsfield Units - Air, Water, Bone   Air = -1000, Water = 0, Bone = +1000  
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Bremsstrahlung   Inelastic electron nuclei collisions, Most important method for producing xray beams, high z# material (lead)  
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Compton   Dominant process for energy level use in RT, Most common interaction in RT  
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Beam Modifiers   1. Shielding (Cerrobend blocks, Asymmetric jaws, MLC), 2. Compensation (Compensators, Bolus), 3. Wedge Filtration (Wedges), 4. Flattening (Flattening Filters)  
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Oxygen Enhancement Ratio (OER) =   Dose withOUT O2 / Dose WITH O2  
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Organ At Risk (OAR) =   Dose OFF center / Dose at CAX  
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Attenuation Factors (Wedge/Tray) =   Dose WITH device in radiation beam / Dose withOUT device in radiation beam  
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TD (Dose at Depth) =   Given (Dmax Dose) x %DD  
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Protons   High LET, Delivers energy all at once due to heavy particle and Braggs Peak  
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Gross Clinton Planted Trees Irradically   Gross Tumor, Clinical Target (GTV + micro), Planned Target (GTV+CTV+move), Treated Volume (95% isodose line), Irradiated Volume (All Treated)  
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Electron Skin Treatments   En Face = Gantry parallel to pt's skin, central ray perpendicular to pt's skin  
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QA Tolerances - Crosshairs, Light Field, Collimator, & ODI/SSD   Within 2 mm  
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Back Scatter Factor (BSF)   BSF ⬆️ = Field Size i⬆️, ⬆️beam energy = scatter ⬇️ = BSF ⬇️  
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Dose Rate Constancy (Electron & Xray) - DAILY   3%  
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Electron Flatness & Symmetry (Monthly)   3%  
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Xray Flatness & Backup Timer/MU (Monthly)   2%  
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How often for Isocenter Check (Gantry/Collimator/Couch/Table/Axes)   Yearly - 2mm  
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Linear Leakage   0.1% of useful beam at 1m  
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Sign - Caution Radiation Area   5-100 mrem/hr  
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Sign - Caution HIGH Radiation Area   >100 mrem/hr  
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Sign - Grave Danger Radiation Very High   >500 rem/hr  
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4 Nonspecific Phase Chemo Drugs   1. Alkylating Meds, 2. Antitumor Antibiotics, 3. Hormonal Meds, 4. Nitrosoureas  
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Alkylating Meds   Affects the synthesis of DNA by cross linking to inhibit cell reproduction, Cisplatin (plantinol), Nitrogen mustard, Cyclophosphamide (cytoxin), Alopecia  
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Antitumor Antibiotics   Interferes with DNA & RNA synthesis, gonadal suppression, Doxorubicin (Adriamycin), Bleomycin Sulfate (Blenoxane), Daunorubicin (Cerubidine), Heart & Lung Problems, Anaphylaxis  
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Hormonal Meds   Suppresses the immune system & blocks normal hormones, Changes balance & slows growth, Sex characteristics, electrolyte imbalance, gyneomastia, weight gain, hypertention, hot flashes, Hydrocortisone, Prednisone, Tomoxifin (Nalvadex-decreses estrogen)  
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Nitrosoureas   Can cross the Blood brain barrier, Inhibits DNA & RNA sythesis, Carmustine, Lomustine  
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2 Specific Phase Chemo Drugs   1. Plant Alkaloids (M phase), 2. Antimetabolite (S phase)  
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Plant Alkaloids (M Phase)   Prevents cell division causing cellular death, Neurotoxicity, Ptosis (drooping eyes), Hoarseness, Neuropathy, Taxol (anaphylaxis), Vincristine (oncovin)-Most common for neurotoxicity, Vinbsislasine  
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Antimetabolite (S Phase)   Replaces normal proteins required for DNA synthesis to halt synthesis of cell protein, 5FU (fluorouracil, adrucil, Alopecia, Stomatis (mouth sores), diarrhea, Methotrexate (Folex)-Alopecia, Gastrointestional, Skin Toxicity  
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Candidiasis   Thrush  
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Stomatitis   Mouth Sores  
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Normal Respiration (breaths/min)   Adult = 12-20, Child = 22-50  
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Normal Pulse (beats/min)   Adult = 60-100, Child = 100-140  
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Normal Blood Pressure (Systolic/Diastolic)   Adult = 120/80, Child = 100-60  
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Normal Temperature   98.6º F (37º C)  
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Hypoglycemia (Low Blood Glucose)   Result of Insulin overdose, Cool Moist Pale Skin, Blurred Vision, Difficulty Talking, Blurred Vision, Increased Heart Rate, Eat or drink Glucose rich food  
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Hyperglycemia (High Blood Glucose)   Hot Dry Flushed Skin, Increased thirst (Polydipsia), Nausea, Vomiting. Polyuria (Increased urine), Need IV Fluids and possibly insulin  
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Hypovelemic   Direct loss of circulating blood volume, Anxiety  
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Septic   Caused by decreased tissue perfusion and oxygen delivery from severe infection  
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Asepsis   Free from all disease  
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Medical Asepsis (clean technique)   Helps reduce number and hinder transfer of pathogens  
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Surgical Asepsis   Free of all Microorganisms  
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Sterile Technique   Process that Destroys all microbial life forms, Autoclave (heat, steam, pressure), Gas, Chemicals (Amphyl, Cidex)  
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Disinfection   Process that Reduces microbial life forms, Boiling water, Liquid chemicals, Chlorine compounds  
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Nosocomial Infections   Infections that develop/acquired in the hospital  
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Universal Precautions   Prevent transmission of HIV, hepatitis, and other pathogens that spread through bodily fluids, Use protective barriers.  
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Strict Isolation   Spreads by direct contact or air, Gown, Gloves, Mask required, Private room with door closed and negative air flow (special ventilation), Articles from room labeled and bagged  
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Reverse (Protective) Isolation   To protect immunosuppressed patients from infection, Mask, Gown, & Sterile Gloves, Patient isolated from dust, dirt, plants, wet areas  
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Contact Isolation   Spreads by close or direct contact, Mask, Gown, Gloves if close contact  
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Respiratory Isolation   Spreads by large droplets in short distances, Private Room required, Mask required if close contact (No gown or gloves)  
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TB (Tuberculosis) / Acid-fast Bacilli (AFB) Isolation   Spreads by airborne (Long), Private room with door closed and negative air flow, Mask NOT adequate, Respirator recommended (NO gown or gloves)  
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Enteric Precautions   Spread by direct or indirect contact with fecal material, ONLY mask, gown, and gloves if in contact with fecal material  
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Drainage and Secretion Precautions   Spread by direct/indirect with secretion/drainage, ONLY mask, gown, and gloves if in contact with infectious material  
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6 Cycles of Infection   1. Causative Agent (source), 2. Mode of Transmission, 3. Reservoir (for microorganism growth, 4. Portal of Entry, 5. Susceptible Host, 6. Portal of Exit  
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Fomite   Objects or materials that are likely to carry infection, such as clothes, utensils, and furniture  
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Vector   Organisms, such as intermediate parasites or microbes, but it could be an inanimate medium of infection such as dust particles  
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5 Methods of Transmission   1. Contact (Direct & Indirect)-Most common nosocomial, 2. Droplet (Short-doesn't linger), 3. Airborne (Long-Days), 4. Common Inanimate Vehicles (food, blood, feces), 5. Vector Borne (insect or animal)  
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6 Intentional - Tort Law (legal wrong)   1. Civil Assault (threaten), 2. Civil Battery (touch), 3. False Imprisonment (confinement), 4. Libel (Written), 5. Slander (Oral), 6. Invasion of Privacy (Pt exposed/Info released)  
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2 Unintentional - Tort Law (legal wrong)   1. Negligence (neglect), 2. Malpractice (Lack of skill/Misconduct)  
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Doctrine of Respondent Superior   holding employer responsible for negligent employee  
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Res Ipss Loquitor   "the thing speaks for itself", Court can decide, No need for witness present  
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Doctrine of Forseeability   Knowledge of actions or lack of information that could cause injury  
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Pacemaker Dose   Most <500 cGy so blocking required  
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Latent Period for Cataracts   200 cGy=8-35 yrs, 250-650 cGy=8 yrs, 650-1150 cGy = 4 yrs  
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Hormesis   The hypothesis that low doses of radiation are beneficial, stimulating the activation of repair mechanisms that protect against disease  
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Metaplasia   Abnormal change in nature of tissue (ex: change cell type)  
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Anaplasia   Loss of cell differentiation, hard to define origin (rapid growth of malignant tumor)  
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Kyphosis   Excessive Convex Spine Posteriorly (hunch back)  
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Lordosis   Excessive Convex L-Spine (arch back)  
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Reticuloendothelial cells   Kupffer's cells in Liver  
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Crypt Cells   Peyer patches in Small Intestines  
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Lymph Flow   Interstitial > Capillaries > Afferent vessels > Nodes > Efferent vessels > Lymphatic Trunk > Collecting Ducts > Subclavian Veins  
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# of Bones   206 bones (29 Skull, 14 Facial, 33 Vertebral, 12 pairs of Ribs), 7 C-spine, 12 T-spine, 5 L-spine, 4 Coccygeal, C1 Atlas-Yes, (No body), C2 Axis-No, (Ondontoid-dens), 7 True Ribs, 8-12 False Ribs, 11-12 Floating Ribs  
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Genetic Restitution   Single radiation-induced break into 2 fragments (can join)  
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Genetic Structural Changes   Damaged cells can survive and may or may not be able to reproduce to produce more damaged cells  
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Genetic Gene Amplification   DNA replication becomes selective and reproduce at increased rate  
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Genetic Chromosome Transposition   Broken cell fragment tries to repair and rejoin  
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Genetic Gene Transposition   Cell creates wrong genetic code  
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Genetic Mutation   Missing an element  
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Electromagnetic Spectrum Colors   Roy G Biv: Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet  
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Electromagnetic Spectrum Types   R MIVUX G: Radiofrequency (MRI), MIcrowaves, Infared, Visible Light, Ultraviolet, Xray, Gamma  
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Xray =   Short wavelength, High Energy & Frequency  
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3 Stages of Tumor Development (Carcinogenesis)   1. Initiation, 2. Promotion, 3. Progression  
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Initiation - Tumor Development (Carcinogenesis)   Direct exposure of DNA to a carcinogen, change must be permanent and unrepairable  
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Promotion - Tumor Development (Carcinogenesis)   Threshold effect then enhances growth, effects may be reversible if period between  
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Progression - Tumor Development (Carcinogenesis)   Detectable tumor that must develop own blood supply to survive  
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3 Embryo/Fetus Stages of Development for 250 cGy   1. Preimplantation, 2. Organogenesis, 3. Fetal  
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Preimplantation Stage of Development - Embryo/Fetus for 250 cGy   Day 0-10, No growth retardation if brought to term, mostly death  
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Organogenesis Stage of Development - Embryo/Fetus for 250 cGy   Day 10-Week 6, Neonatal death, CNS and Skeletal abnormalities  
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Fetal Stage of Development - Embryo/Fetus for 250 cGy   Week 7-Until Birth, Mental retardation & Microcephaly, LD50 equal to adults  
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5 Cellular Stage of Radiosensitivity (from most sensitive to lease) - Lymphocyte is exception   1. VIM, 2. DIM, 3. Vessel/Connective, 4. RPM, 5. FPM  
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VIM - Cellular Stage of Radiosensitivity   Most sensitive, Type A Spermatogonia, Basal cells, Crypt cells  
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DIM - Cellular Stage of Radiosensitivity   Myelocytes and Intermediate Spermatogonia  
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Vessel/Connective - Cellular Stage of Radiosensitivity   Endothelial cells and Fibroblasts  
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RPM - Cellular Stage of Radiosensitivity   Lymphocytes (BUT Sensitive) and Parenchymal of Liver  
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FPM - Cellular Stage of Radiosensitivity   Least sensitive, Muscle, Nerve, Erythrocytes  
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Dose / Response Relationship   10 Gy for Early effects, 3 Gy for Late effects, *So late responding tissues are more sensitive to changes in fractionation.  
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Biological Effect of Radiation   Directly proportional to Dose & Volume --- Effect ⬆️as Dose & Volume⬆️, Inversely proportional to Time of administration ---Longer the time, ⬇️ the effect  
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Histology - Kidney   80% Renal Cell-Adenocarcinoma, 5% Renal Pelvis-mostly Transitional  
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Histology - Ureters   Transitional  
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Histology - Urinary Bladder   Transitional  
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Histology - Prostate   Adenocarcinoma  
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Histology - Cervix (SMA 12 serum test)   Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) - begins in endocervical canal (external os)  
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Histology - Vaginal   Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) - posterior upper third of vagina  
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Histology - Uterus   Adenocarcinoma (most common), Fundus (upper part of uterus), *Clear cell & Papillary Carcinoma - poor prognosis, Adenocanthoma (benign or combo), Secretory Adenocarcinoma, Leiomyosarcoma (smooth muscle)  
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Histology - Ovarian (CA125 serum test)   Epithelial Carcinoma (most common), (Stomal & Germ cell-less common)  
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Histology - Larynx   Glottic (most common-65%), Supraglottic (2nd), Subglottic (3rd),  
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Histology - Breast   Infiltrating Ductal Carcinoma (IDC) (most common), Infiltrating Lobular Carcinoma (2nd), Mucinous, Colloid, Tubular, Papillary Carcinoma  
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Histology - Esophagus   90% Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) (epithelial lining), 10%Adenocarcinoma (closer to stomach)  
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Histology - Stomach   Adenocarcinoma, 95% Columnar (glanular epithelium), Lymphoma, Leimyosarcoma  
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Histology - Pancreas   Adenocarcinoma, Islet cell (2 types)  
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Histology - Colo/Rectal   90% Adenocarcinoma, Lymphoma, Leiomyosarcoma  
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Histology - Anus   Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC)  
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Nonstochastic   Deterministic/Threshold dose required, EARLY effects, SEVERITY increases with dose.  
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Stochastic   Nonthreshold, LATE effect, PROBABILITY increases with dose.  
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Total Body Irradiation 3 Stages & Symptoms   1. Prodromal (minutes-days)(N-V-D), 2. Latent (hours-weeks)(no symptoms, but damage), 3. Manifest Illness (hours-weeks)(organ system damage)(3 Syndromes)  
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3 Syndromes of Manifest Illness Stage of TBI   1. Hematopoitic (Bone Marrow) syndrome-1-10 Gy, 3 w-6 m if survive, 2. Gastrointestinal (Small Intestines) syndrome-10-50 Gy, death3-10 days, 3. Cerebrovascular (CNS) syndrome-⬆️10 Gy, death under 3 days  
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3 Main Factors Affecting Responses to Radiation   1. Physical Factors - LET, RBE, & Dose Rate, 2. Chemical Factors - Radiosensitizers, Radioprotectors, & Oxygen Enhancement Ratio (OER), 3. Biological Factors - Cell Cycle - How cells distributed in cell cycle and Sensitive of phase in cell cycle  
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LET   Linear Energy Transfer (LET), High & Low LET, Rate of energy loss along the path of the particle  
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Low LET   Electromagnetic radiation, X-ray & Gamma rays (short wavelengths, high energy), Sparse ionization over Long distances, Cause damage through indirect action over long distances, free radical damage  
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High LET   Particulate radiation, Neutrons & Alpha particles (large mass, Dense over Short distances), More destructive than Low LET, lose energy fast, DNA death  
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Radiobiology   Study of absorption, effects, and damage from ionizing radiation on living systems  
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Ionization   Occurs when an electron is ejected from the shell of atom and becomes charged, which then interacts with matter causing damage to tissue in path  
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2 Basic Types of Interactions with Ionization   1. Direct (Deoxyribonucleic Acid-DNA damage), Alpha, Proton, Electron 2. Indirect - X-ray, Gamma, Neutrons, & Fast Electrons, free radicals interact w/H20, (hydroxyl & hydrogen peroxide), INDIRECT Action is leading cause of damage since bodies 80% water.  
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3 Cellular Responses to Radiation   1. Division (Mitotic Delay)-Most Common, 2. Interphase Death (NONmitotic), 3. Reproductive Failure (Mitotic Death)  
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Somatic Effect   Radiation-Induced Cancer  
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Genetic Effect   Offspring of person irradiated, genetic mutation  
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RBE   Relative Biologic Effectiveness (RBE) - calculation comparing the effectiveness of different types of radiation to produce a specific biological response, RBE=Dose (Gy) of 250 kVp X-ray / Dose (Gy) Test Radiation  
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Dose Rate Effect   Directly proportional to Field Size, Inversely proportional to Distance, High dose rate will produce more damage, Significant with low LET due to cellular repair, NOT relevant with High LET due to cell death  
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Radiosensitizers   Most common is Oxygen, Oxygenation agents - Nitromidazoles  
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If cell survival curve has a shallower shoulder (increased survival), what cells are they?   Hypoxic Cells  
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Radioprotectors   Cysteine, Cysteamine, Amofostin (WR2721), DRF (Dose Reduction Factor)-used to determine the effectiveness of radioprotector  
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OER   Oxygen Enhancement Ratio (OER) - hypoxic cells more resistant to radiation, Means Low LET (xray/gamma) 2 1/2-3 times more resistant to radiation than oxic cells  
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Oxygen Fixation Hypothesis   Indirect damage from Low LET becomes permanent when oxygen is present  
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Law of Bergonie & Tribondeau   States cells are more sensitive to radiation if they are Actively dividing, Have long mitotic life, and undifferentiated (embryo, young child)  
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Ancel & Vitemberger Revised Law   Cell sensitivity depends on biological condition of cell, Damage is the same, but undetected until the cell divides  
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Rubin & Casarett   Identified the 5 Cell Populations - Vegetative Intermitotic VIM, Differentiated Intermitotic DIM, Multipotential Connective Tissue, Reverting Postmitotic RPM, Fixed Postmitotic FPM  
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Most Radiosensitive Cell Cycle Phase   M (Mitotic) Phase  
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Most Radioresistent Cell Cycle Phase   S (Synthesis) Phase  
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Reason for Fractionation (fx) in Radiation Treatments (tx)   Fx allow repair of sublethal damage to healthy cells, *Mitotic Index-proportion of cells in mitosis at any one time, If dose under 10 Gy, then cells can repair causing mitotic index to ⬆️ as delayed cells are allowed to progress into mitosis  
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Four R's of Radiobiology (5th discussed is Radiosensitivity)   1. Repair, 2. Reoxygenation, 3. Redistribution (Reassortment), 4. Repopulation  
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Repair - 1st R's of Radiobiology   (NORMAL Cells), After radiation, damage is repaired as long as the injury was sublethal and there is rest period between exposures  
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Reoxygenation - 2nd R's of Radiobiology   (TUMOR Cells), Occurs during rest period, Tumor cells generally become oxygenated after radiation is delivered contributing to radiosensitivity before next treatment  
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Redistribution (Reassortment) - 3rd R's of Radiobiology   (Normal or Tumor cells), Relates to the Cell Cycles, Goal is to irradiate on daily basis in order to damage tumor cells as they enter sensitive phase (Mitosis) resulting in more tumor cell death  
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Repopulation - 4th R's of Radiobiology   (Normal or Tumor Cells), Important reason for fractionation, Protraction (overall tx time), As healthy tissue is repopulating, undesirable tumor regrowth also can occur during tx  
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Protraction   Overall treatment time, Prolonging total dose given over time  
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Standquist Isoeffect   Led to Fractionation, NTTD (Normal Tissue Tolerance Doses) were established  
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Therapeutic Ratio   Measures success potential of radiation using TLD (Tumor Lethal Dose), TR=NTTD/TLD  
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TD5/5   5% will have complications in 5 years  
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Ellis developed...   NSD (Norminal Standard Dose), 2 flaws-neglected cell sensitivity & volume of tissue irradiated, Now, Biologic Effective Dose (BED) is used  
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BED   Biologic Effective Dose (BED) - Aids treatment planning because it includes the aspects that Nominal Standard Dose (NSD) calculation lacks which is neglecting cell sensitivity & volume of tissue irradiated  
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2 Healing Processes of Radiation Exposure   1. Regeneration, 2. Repair  
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Healing Process of Radiation Exposure - Regeneration   *Same cell type replaces damaged cell type, Most common in structures that received acute side effects and have actively dividing cells  
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Healing Process of Radiation Exposure - Repair   *Different cell type replaces damaged cell type, Most common in radioresistent structures as a result of chronic, irreversible changes  
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Apoptosis   Programmed Cell Death, Normal process by human body, cleans unwanted cells, Important for Tissue Homeostatis  
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Necrosis   Accidental Cell Death, Caused by tissue damage due to cancer or radiation treatments  
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Candidiasis   Thrush  
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Atlas Vertebra   C1  
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Axis Vertebra   C2 - Dens (Odontoid)-protrudes up through c1  
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External Anatomic Location - C4   Hyoid Bone  
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External Anatomic Location - C4-5   Thyroid Cartilage  
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External Anatomic Location - C4-5   Larynx  
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External Anatomic Location - C6   Cricoid Cartilage  
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External Anatomic Location - C7   Prominent Spinous Process  
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External Anatomic Location - T3   SSN (Suprasternal Notch)  
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What happens internally at level - T4   Clavicles & 1st ribs articulates  
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What is located internally at level T5   Carina (Bifurcation of Trachea)  
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External Anatomic Location - T9-10   Xiphoid Process  
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What is located internally at level - T11-L3   Kidneys  
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What happens at level L2 internally?   Spinal Cord ends  
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External Anatomic Location - L3   Umbilicus  
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External Anatomic Location - L4   Illiac Crest  
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External Anatomic Location - S2   PSIS (Posterior Superior Iliac Spine)  
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External Anatomic Location - Coccyx   Pubic Symphysis & Greater Trochanters  
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What quadrant - Liver & Pancreas   Right Upper Quadrant  
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What Quadrant - Spleen & Stomach   Left Upper Quadrant  
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Histology - Oropharynx   Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SSC)  
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Histology - Maxillary Sinus   Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SSC)  
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Histology - Hodgkins Lymphoma   Reed-Sternberg Cells in lymph nodes  
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Histology - Wilm's Tumor   Nephroblastoma (Kidney cancer in children), Unfavorable histologies - Anaplastic, Sarcoatoid, Clear cell, Rhabdoid  
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Esophagus - most common site   45% Middle, 40% Lower, 15% Upper (worst prognosis)  
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Stomach - most common site   50% Pylorus (lower, leads to duodenum), 25% Lesser Curvature, 10% Cardia (Upper-worst prognosis), 2-3% Greater Curvature  
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Pancreas - most common site   70% head of pancreas  
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ColoRectal - most common site   50% Rectum, 20% Sigmoid, 16% Cecum, 8% Transverse/Splenic Flexure, 6% Descending Colon  
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Ewing's Sarcoma - most common site   Diaphysis of Long Bones, Lower half of the body  
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Bladder - Staging / Grading Systems   Jewett-Marshall Zero & A-D, AJCC TNM  
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Prostate - Staging / Grading Systems   Gleason, TNM, Am. Urological A-D  
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Cervical - Staging / Grading Systems   FIGO, TNM  
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Hodgkins - Staging / Grading Systems   Ann Arbor Staging, REAL, WHO  
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Procedure for Esophagus   Ivor Lewis  
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Procedure for Pancreas   Whipple  
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Most common Dose per day   180-200 cGy  
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Most common Palliative Dose   300 cGy x 10 days  
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Tenesmus   Constant feeling the need to defacate  
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Proctitis   Inflamed rectum  
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Cystitis   Inflamed bladder  
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Telangiescasia   small blood vessels breaking  
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Fistula or Perforation   Opening in wall  
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Fissure   Tear  
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How to calculate the time to deliver a specific dose...   MU (Time) = Dose / All other factors, If using Cobalt, take the answer and multiple by 1/60 (___sec x 1min/60sec = ___min___sec)  
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How to calculate for Field Size and SSD changes...   FS1 / SSD1 = FS2 / SSD2  
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What is SSD if SAD is 100 with a target depth of 12?   88, (100 SAD - 12 depth = 88 SSD)  
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Patient is treated using SAD method to 10x15cm field. At SAD of 100. What is the field size on skin surface if the target depth is 12 cm?   8.8 x 13.2 cm, (SAD - 12 = SAD), then (FS1 / SSD1 = FS2 / SSD2)  
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If dose is 200 cGy at 100 cm, what is the dose at 80 cm?   312.5 cGy, (I1 / I2 = (D2 / D1)2, *Don't forget to square the distance, *Only use Inverse Square Law when Dose & Distance are asked! (200cGy/x = (80/100)2 = 312.5 cGy)  
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What shielding of lead should be used in mm for 16 MeV?   8 mm of lead, (MeV / 2 = shielding of lead)  
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X, Y, Z Coordinates   X = Lateral, Y = Longitudinal, Z = Vertical  
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80% isodose depth =   80% isodose depth = MeV / 3  
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90% isodose depth =   90% isodose depth = MeV / 4  
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If using 10 MeV, at 2 cm what is the MeV at that depth?   6 MeV, Electron beam loses energy at approximately 2 MeV / cm so 2x2=4, then 10 - 4 = 6 MeV  
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If 3 fields, AP, Rt Lat, & Lt Lat, treated with 300 cGy, what is each dose if AP=50%, RtLat=30%, LtLat=20%?   *AP = 300 x 0.5 = 150 cGy, *Rt Lat = 300 x 0.3 = 90 cGy, *Lt Lat = 300 x 0.2 = 60 cGy  
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If AP and lateral field are treated with 2:1 weighting with dose of 200, what dose wi each field getting?   dose / # of weighting = Dose per weightings, 200 / 3 = 66.7, then 66.7 x 2 = 133.67 for AP field and 66.7 for Lateral field  
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Field magnifications calculations...   SFD / SAD or Larger # / Smaller # = how many times more magnified at the SAD  
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If cobalt was to deliver 150 cGy in 6.23 minutes and treatment was terminated after 3.06 minutes, what was the dose delivered?   73.6 cGy, 6.23 x 60sec/1min = 373.8sec, 3.06 x 60sec/1min = 183.6sec, then (150cGy / 373.8sec = X / 183.6sec)  
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If machine is to deliver 90 cGy in 112 MU and shuts down after 43 MU, how much dose was delivered?   35 cGy, *Proportion Formula, 90 / 112 = X / 43, X=cGy  
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Patient is being treated on a 6 MV at 100 cm SSD. Collimator setting is 15x15cm. No blocking or MLC. Prescription states 300 cGy/fraction is to be delivered at Dmax (given dose), what is the dose delivered at 5 cm? PDD=87.9   263.7 cGy, *%DD = TD/GD x 100, then (87.9 = X/300 x 100), X = 87.9x300 / 100 = 263.7  
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If tumor dose is 350 cGy and given dose is 425 cGy, what is the %DD?   82.4%, *%DD = TD (absorbed) / GD (prescribed/given/dmax) x 100 (*or simply change decimal to a percentage)  
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What is the formula for Given/Applied Dose?   Applied Dose = TD / %DD (decimal form)  
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If %DD is 0.638 and tumor dose is 280 cGy, what is the given dose?   438.87 cGy, Given dose = TD / %DD, *If %DD is listed as 63.8%, simple change to decimal form prior to calculation.  
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If you hav an AP field and Lateral Wedge fields, what will be the hinge angle and what degree of wedge will be used?   90º hinge angle, 90 / 2 = 45º wedge used  
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100 rad = ? Gy   1 Gy  
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100 rem = ? Sv   1 Sv  
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What is the quality factor for alpha particles?   20  
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What is the quality factor for xray and gamma?   1  
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What is the dose equivalent for absorbed dose of 7.98 Gy of Alpha radiation?   159.6 Sv, DE(Sv) = AD(Gy) x QF, Quality Factor of Alpha is 20  
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If a radiographer receives 1.4795 Sv over a lifetime, what is their lifetime in rems?   147.95 rem, 1 Sv = 100 rem, (1.4795 x 100)  
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Convert 45.84 rem into mSv:   458.4, 1 Sv = 100 rem & 1 Sv = 1000 mSv, (45.84/100x1000)  
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Convert 377.943 Sv into mSv:   377,943, 1 Sv = 1000 mSv, (377.943x1000)  
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Convert 325 Gy into rads:   32,500 rads, 1 Gy = 100 rads, (325x100)  
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Convert 39.72 rads into Gy:   0.3972 Gy, 1 Gy = 100 rad, (0.3972 Gy)  
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Convert 30 Gy into cGy:   3000 cGy, 1 Gy = 100 cGy, (30x100)  
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What is the dose equivalent for absorbed dose of 2 rads of xray?   2 rem, DE(Sv/rem) = AD(Gy/rad) x QF, rads >rem, Gy>Sv  
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If an individual was exposed to 1 Gy of Xray, 1 Gy of Alpha, and 1 Gy of Gamma, what is the dose equivalent?   22 Sv, DE(Sv/rem) = AD(Gy/rad) x QF, rads>rem, Gy>Sv  
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Concert 27 R into C/kg:   0.006966 C/kg, 1 R = 2.58 x 10^-4 Coulombs/kg  
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5 Gy of test radiation and 20 Gy of 250 kVp xray to produce same reaction. What is the RBE?   RBE = 4, (RBE=20 / 5 = Dose of 250 kVp/Dose of test radiation  
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5 Steps to Improve Setup Accuracy   1. Use comfortable, relaxed position for patient, 2. Use lasers during sim & tx, 3. Use surface markings as much sup, inf, and lat as possible, 4. Use external landmarks, 5. Make reproducible positioning and immobilization devices.  
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6 Objectives of Immobilization   1. Limit patient movement, 2. Reduce position errors, 3. Reduce setup time, 4. Provide pt reassurance so they feel secure/safe, 5. Reduce need for cooperation by allowing them to be relaxed, 6. Provide conversation w/rigid body position  
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Why is a High Therapeutic Index good?   Comparison of the dose likely to provide cure to the dose that will cause harm. (Toxid Dose / Therapeutic dose), The Higher the index, the Better the chance of good outcome  
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2 Things that will Increase the Therapeutic Index   1. Reproducible Simulation, 2. Treatment Planning  
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Brachytherapy   Means 'close or near', radiotherapy delivered at close proximity to the tumor site using a radioisotope (low or high dose)(emits radiation during its decay)  
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Cobalt   Radioisotope that produces Gamma radiation of approximately 1.25 MeV  
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Depth Dose   Percentage of the maximum dose delivered as a function of the depth within tissue, various beams and energies  
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EBRT   Also called Teletherapy (from a distance), radiation delivered by linear accelerator, cobalt machine, and orthovoltage machines  
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Superficial Machine   50-125 keV, skin cancers, keloids  
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Orthovoltage Machine   125-500 keV, skin cancer  
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Megavoltage (Supervoltage) Machine   Greater than 1 MeV  
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Monoclonal Antibiody   Targeted therapy against specific cell or pathway, Antibody (type of protein) made from single clone of immune cells that can be used to produce specific targeted meds , used with radioisotope in radioimmunotherapy  
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Gamma Knife   Cobalt sources used for SRS (Stereotactic Radiosurgery)  
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CyberKnife   Robotic Linear Accelerator for SRS (Stereotactic Radiosurgery) & SBRT (Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy)  
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What product must be in a lead radiation therapy room door? What is this product shielding?   Borated Polyethylene, Required because lead does NOT stop Neutrons (produced with energy over 10 MeV)  
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EPID   Electronic Portal Imaging Device - Used for imaging the tx fields and comparing to DRR (Digitally Reconstructed Radiographs) from simulation  
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What is MLC made of?   Multi-Leaf Collimator is made out of Tungsten leaves  
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What is Alpha Cradles made of?   Polyurethane foam cast  
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Abscopal Effect   Effects outside of treatment field, Can be positive (regress disease outside treated area) or negative (pneumonitis), most likely result of activating immune response  
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Alpha/Beta Ratio   Attempts to quantify the dose response of early and late responding tissues, Shows where radiation damage is equal. Generally, 10 Gy for Early and 2 Gy for Late responding tissue.  
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Accelerated Hyperfractionation used for...   Rapidly growing or Poor responsive tumors, Often for retreatment of areas  
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Xerostomia   Dry Mouth  
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Pterygia   Abnormal growth of tissue on cornea  
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Radiation therapy used to prevent what benign or non cancerous...   Pterygia, Keloids, Heterotopic Bone Formation, Acoustic neuromas, hemangiomas, Fibromatoses, Meningiomas, Exophthalmos (Graves disease), Gynomastia, Trigeminal Neuralgia  
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PBI and PCI   Partial Breast Irradiation or Prophylactic Cranial (Brain) Irradiation (often when small cell lung cancer)  
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Skin sparing   Maximum radiation absorbed dose occurs Below the surface of skin, ALL MeV RT due to Compton Absorption, Penetration of beam increases as energy increases  
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1 of the 4 R's of Radiobiology that ONLY affects NORMAL cells   Repair  
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1 of the 4 R's of Radiobiology that ONLY affects TUMOR cells   Reoxygenation  
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2 of the 4 R's of Radiobiology that can affect Normal OR Tumor Cells   Redistribution (reassortment) & Repopulation  
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Created by: mkzimmy
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