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Proceedings Volume Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles IV: Review of Progress and Strategies for the Future, 1023901 (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2281167
This PDF file contains the front matter associated with SPIE Proceedings Volume 10239, including the Title Page, Copyright information, Table of Contents, and Conference Committee listing.
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Proceedings Volume Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles IV: Review of Progress and Strategies for the Future, 1023904 (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2270945
Radiation therapy of tumors progresses continuously and so do devices, sharing a global market of about $ 4 billions,
growing at an annual rate exceeding 5%. Most of the progress involves tumor targeting, multi-beam irradiation, reduction
of damage on healthy tissues and critical organs, dose fractioning. This fast-evolving scenario is the moving benchmark
for the progress of the laser-based accelerators towards clinical uses. As for electrons, both energy and dose requested by
radiotherapy are available with plasma accelerators driven by lasers in the power range of tens of TW but several issues
have still to be faced before getting a prototype device for clinical tests. They include capability of varying electron
energy, stability of the process, reliability for medical users. On the other side hadron therapy, presently applied to a
small fraction of cases but within an exponential growth, is a primary option for the future. With such a strong
motivation, research on laser-based proton/ion acceleration has been supported in the last decade in order to get
performances suitable to clinical standards. None of these performances has been achieved so far with laser techniques.
In the meantime a rich crop of data have been obtained in radiobiological experiments performed with beams of particles
produced with laser techniques. It is quite significant however that most of the experiments have been performed moving
bio samples to laser labs, rather moving laser equipment to bio labs or clinical contexts. This give us the measure that
laser community cannot so far provide practical devices usable by non-laser people.
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Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles I
Proceedings Volume Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles IV: Review of Progress and Strategies for the Future, 1023906 (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2263951
We present the development of a high throughput phase contrast screening system based on LWFA Xray
sources for plant imaging. We upgraded the INRS laser-betatron beam line and we illustrate its
imaging potential through the innovative development of new tools for addressing issues relevant to
global food security. This initiative, led by the Global Institute of Food Security (GIFS) at the U of
Saskatchewan, aims to elucidate that part of the function that maps environmental inputs onto specific
plant phenotypes. The prospect of correlating phenotypic expression with adaptation to environmental
stresses will provide researchers with a new tool to assess breeding programs for crops meant to thrive
under the climate extremes.
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Proceedings Volume Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles IV: Review of Progress and Strategies for the Future, 1023907 (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2264974
A major challenge of spatio-temporal radiation biomedicine concerns the understanding of biophysical events triggered by an initial energy deposition inside confined ionization tracks. This contribution deals with an interdisciplinary approach that concerns cutting-edge advances in real-time radiation events, considering the potentialities of innovating strategies based on ultrafast laser science, from femtosecond photon sources to advanced techniques of ultrafast TW laser-plasma accelerator. Recent advances of powerful TW laser sources (~1019 W cm-2) and laser-plasma interactions providing ultra-short relativistic particle beams in the energy domain 5-200 MeV open promising opportunities for the development of high energy radiation femtochemistry (HERF) in the prethermal regime of secondary low-energy electrons and for the real-time imaging of radiation-induced biomolecular alterations at the nanoscopic scale. New developments would permit to correlate early radiation events triggered by ultrashort radiation sources with a molecular approach of Relative Biological Effectiveness (RBE). These emerging research developments are crucial to understand simultaneously, at the sub-picosecond and nanometric scales, the early consequences of ultra-short-pulsed radiation on biomolecular environments or integrated biological entities. This innovating approach would be applied to biomedical relevant concepts such as the emerging domain of real-time nanodosimetry for targeted pro-drug activation and pulsed radio-chimiotherapy of cancers.
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Proceedings Volume Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles IV: Review of Progress and Strategies for the Future, 102390A (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2268300
The planned laser-driven ionizing beams (photon, very high energy electron, proton, carbon ion) at laser facilities have the unique property of ultra-high dose rate (>Gy/s-10), short pulses, and at ELI-ALPS high repetition rate, carry the potential to develop novel laser-driven methods towards compact hospital-based clinical application. The enhanced flexibility in particle and energy selection, the high spatial and time resolution and extreme dose rate could be highly beneficial in radiotherapy. These approaches may increase significantly the therapeutic index over the currently available advanced radiation oncology methods. We highlight two nuclear reactionbased binary modalities and the planned radiobiology research. Boron Neutron Capture Therapy is an advanced cell targeted modality requiring 10B enriched boron carrier and appropriate neutron beam. The development of laser-based thermal and epithermal neutron source with as high as 1010 fluence rate could enhance the research activity in this promising field. Boron-Proton Fusion reaction is as well as a binary approach, where 11B containing compounds are accumulated into the cells, and the tumour selectively irradiated with protons. Due to additional high linear energy transfer alpha particle release of the BPFR and the maximum point of the Bragg-peak is increased, which result in significant biological effect enhancement. Research at ELI-ALPS on detection of biological effect differences of modified or different quality radiation will be presented using recently developed zebrafish embryo and rodent models.
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A. S. Cucoanes, D. L. Balabanski, F. Canova, P. Cuong, F. Negoita, F. Puicea, K. A. Tanaka
Proceedings Volume Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles IV: Review of Progress and Strategies for the Future, 102390B (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2273769
The huge progress made in the laser driven ion acceleration had open the possibility of using ions generated in high power laser interactions with solid targets for the production of medical isotopes. Indeed, lasers could provide several key features with respect to the traditional method where the target activation is produced by particle beams delivered by cyclotrons. The price and the dimensions of high power lasers are on a descendant slope and the quality of the produced ion beams is continuously increasing. However, in order to compete with cyclotrons, the average proton current intensity has to be increased for example by increasing the frequency of the laser pulses.
In our contribution, we review the general ideas of the laser-based radioisotope production and we present our analysis on the potential of the medical isotope generation at ELI-NP with a focus on 18F. We use estimations of the proton beam parameters and a code implemented in Geant4 for computing the yield of the main production channel taking into account the experimental conditions available soon at ELI-NP.
The obtained results are compatible with previous studies and will be verified by experiments foreseen at the future ELI-NP facility, under construction now in Magurele, Romania.
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Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles II
Proceedings Volume Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles IV: Review of Progress and Strategies for the Future, 102390C (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2271183
As an alternative modality to conventional radiotherapy, electrons with energies above 50 MeV penetrate deeply into tissue, where the dose can be absorbed within a tumour volume with a relatively small penumbra. We investigate the physical properties of VHEEs and review the state-of-the-art in treatment planning and dosimetry. We discuss the advantages of using a laser wakefield accelerator (LWFA) and present the characteristic features of the electron bunch produced by the LWFA and compare them with that from a conventional linear accelerator.
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Proceedings Volume Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles IV: Review of Progress and Strategies for the Future, 102390H (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2265383
Recently there is a great interest to the drug-free methods of treatment of various diseases. For example, audiovisual
therapy is used for the stress therapy. The main destination of the method is the health care and well-being.
Visual content in the given case is formed when laser radiation is passing through the optical mediums and elements. The
therapy effect is achieved owing to the color varying and complicated structure of the picture which is produced by the
refraction, dispersion effects, diffraction and interference.
As the laser source we use three laser sources with wavelengths of 445 nm, 520 nm and 640 nm and the optical power up
to 1 W. The beam is guided to the optical element which is responsible for the final image of the dome surface. The
dynamic image can be achieved by the rotating of the optical element when the laser beam is static or by scanning the
surface of the element.
Previous research has shown that the complexity of the image connected to the therapy effect. The image was chosen
experimentally in practice. The evaluation was performed using the fractal dimension calculation for the produced image.
In this work we model the optical image on the surface formed by the laser sources together with the optical elements.
Modeling is performed in two stages. On the first stage we perform the simple modeling taking into account simple
geometrical effects and specify the optical models of the sources.
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Proceedings Volume Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles IV: Review of Progress and Strategies for the Future, 102390J (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2264686
One of the promising methods for early diagnosis of malignant diseases of the respiratory organs and the
gastrointestinal tract (GIT) is now considered a fluorescence method. Application autofluorescence phenomenon in
endoscopy allows to obtain a fluorescent image of the mucosa, which shows the difference in the intensity of the
autofluorescence of healthy and the affected tissue in the green and red regions of the spectrum. The result of the work is
to determine on the basis of scientific research and prototyping capabilities of creating fluorescence video endoscope and
the development of fluorescent light (illuminator FLU) for videoendoscopy complex. The solution of this problem is
based on the method of studying biological objects in lifetime condition.
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Proceedings Volume Medical Applications of Laser-Generated Beams of Particles IV: Review of Progress and Strategies for the Future, 102390K (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2265844
Analysis of the polarization characteristics of the scattered radiation of biological tissues in some cases provides a
qualitatively new results in the study of biological samples. These results can be used in medicine and food industry. As
a result of the work, it was determined that the high concentration of scattering particles, the nonuniformity of their
dimensions, forms make the task of creating an adequate optical model of a biotissue quite difficult, though many
interesting tissue properties can be potentially studied by means of polarized light. In this case, the method for control
the freshness of meat samples is considered for by obtaining the Stokes parameters of the polarized radiation scattered
forward by the meat product.
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