Tomohiro Shimozato
RMIT University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tomohiro Shimozato.
Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2009
T Oshima; Yuichi Aoyama; Tomohiro Shimozato; M Sawaki; T Imai; Y Ito; Yasunori Obata; Katsuyoshi Tabushi
Intraoperative electron beam radiotherapy (IOERT) is a technique in which a single-fraction high dose is intraoperatively delivered to subclinical tumour cells using an electron beam after breast-conserving surgery. In IOERT, an attenuation plate consisting of a pair of metal disks is commonly used to protect the normal tissues posterior to the breast. However, the dose in front of the plate is affected by backscatter, resulting in an unpredictable delivered dose to the tumour cells. In this study, an experimental attenuation plate, termed a shielding plate, was designed using Monte Carlo simulation, which significantly diminished the electron beam without introducing any backscatter radiation. The plates performance was verified by measurements. It was made of two layers, a first layer (source side) of polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) and a second layer of copper, which was selected from among other metals (aluminium, copper and lead) after testing for shielding capability and the range and magnitude of backscatter. The optimal thicknesses of the PMMA (0.71 cm) and copper (0.3 cm) layers were determined by changing their thicknesses during simulations. On the basis of these results, a shielding plate was prototyped and depth doses with and without the plate were measured by radiophotoluminescence glass dosimeters using a conventional stationary linear accelerator and a mobile linear accelerator dedicated for IOERT. The trial shielding plate functioned as intended, indicating its applicability in clinical practice.
Journal of Medical Physics | 2010
Tomohiro Shimozato; Keisuke Yasui; Ryota Kawanami; Kousaku Habara; Yuichi Aoyama; Katsuyoshi Tabushi; Yasunori Obata
To investigate the effects of scattered radiation when a thin titanium plate (thickness, 0.05 cm) used for skull fixation in cerebral nerve surgery is irradiated by a 4-MV photon beam. We investigated the dose distribution of radiation inside a phantom that simulates a human head fitted with a thin titanium plate used for post-surgery skull fixation and compared the distribution data measured using detectors, obtained by Monte Carlo (MC) simulations, and calculated using a radiation treatment planning system (TPS). Simulations were shown to accurately represent measured values. The effects of scattered radiation produced by high-Z materials such as titanium are not sufficiently considered currently in TPS dose calculations. Our comparisons show that the dose distribution is affected by scattered radiation around a thin high-Z material. The depth dose is measured and calculated along the central beam axis inside a water phantom with thin titanium plates at various depths. The maximum relative differences between simulation and TPS results on the entrance and exit sides of the plate were 23.1% and – 12.7%, respectively. However, the depth doses do not change in regions deeper than the plate in water. Although titanium is a high-Z material, if the titanium plate used for skull fixation in cerebral nerve surgery is thin, there is a slight change in the dose distribution in regions away from the plate. In addition, we investigated the effects of variation of photon energies, sizes of radiation field and thickness of the plate. When the target to be irradiated is far from the thin titanium plate, the dose differs little from what it would be in the absence of a plate, though the dose escalation existed in front of the metal plate.
Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2011
Tomohiro Shimozato; Y Igarashi; Yoshiyuki Itoh; N Yamamoto; Kuniyasu Okudaira; K Tabushi; Yasunori Obata; Masataka Komori; Shinji Naganawa; M Ueda
We aimed to estimate the scattered radiation from dental metallic crowns during head and neck radiotherapy by irradiating a jaw phantom with external photon beams. The phantom was composed of a dental metallic plate and hydroxyapatite embedded in polymethyl methacrylate. We used radiochromic film measurement and Monte Carlo simulation to calculate the radiation dose and dose distribution inside the phantom. To estimate dose variations in scattered radiation under different clinical situations, we altered the incident energy, field size, plate thickness, plate depth and plate material. The simulation results indicated that the dose at the incident side of the metallic dental plate was approximately 140% of that without the plate. The differences between dose distributions calculated with the radiation treatment-planning system (TPS) algorithms and the data simulation, except around the dental metallic plate, were 3% for a 4 MV photon beam. Therefore, we should carefully consider the dose distribution around dental metallic crowns determined by a TPS.
Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2007
Tomohiro Shimozato; K Tabushi; S Kitoh; Y Shiota; C Hirayama; S Suzuki
To calculate photon spectra for a 10 MV x-ray beam emitted by a medical linear accelerator, we performed numerical analysis using the aluminium transmission data obtained along the central axis of the beam under the narrow beam condition corresponding to a 3x3 cm2 field at a 100 cm distance from the source. We used the BFGS quasi-Newton method based on a general nonlinear optimization technique for the numerical analysis. The attenuation coefficients, aluminium thicknesses and measured transmission data are necessary inputs for the numerical analysis. The calculated x-ray spectrum shape was smooth in the lower to higher energy regions without any angular components. The x-ray spectrum acquired by the employed method was evaluated by comparing the measurements along the central axis percentage depth dose in a water phantom and by a Monte Carlo simulation code, the electron gamma shower code. The values of the calculated percentage depth doses for a 10x10 cm2 field at a 100 cm source-to-surface distance in a water phantom were obtained using the same geometry settings as those of the water phantom measurement. The differences in the measured and calculated values were less than +/-1.0% for a broad region from the shallow part near the surface to deep parts of up to 25 cm in the water phantom.
Physica Medica | 2013
Tomohiro Shimozato; Kuniyasu Okudaira; Hiraku Fuse; Katsuyoshi Tabushi
Nihon Hōshasen Gijutsu Gakkai zasshi | 2011
Kosaku Habara; Tomohiro Shimozato; Yuichi Aoyama; Naoki Hayashi; Keisuke Yasui; Kanji Matsuura; Takashi Furukawa; Ryota Kawanami; Yasunori Obata
放射線医学物理 | 1999
Tomohiro Shimozato; Katsuyoshi Tabushi; Tadashi Tamiya; Shuji Koyama; Norihiko Narita; Setsu Yoshioka; Masatoshi Tsuzaka; Yasunori Obata; Tomoya Uruga; Hajime Tanida; Shuichi Ban; Yoshihito Namito
International Journal of Medical Physics, Clinical Engineering and Radiation Oncology | 2017
Tomohiro Shimozato; Yuichi Aoyama
International Journal of Medical Physics, Clinical Engineering and Radiation Oncology | 2017
Tomohiro Shimozato; Kuniyasu Okudaira
Radiological Physics and Technology | 2013
Mikoto Tamura; Masataka Komori; Hiroshi Oguchi; Yasushi Iwamoto; Toshiya Rachi; Kenji Ota; Atsushi Hemmi; Tomohiro Shimozato; Yasunori Obata