An analysis of the time delay and relationship between external sensor signals and internal organ motion for respiratory gated radiotherapy

被引:0
|
作者
Chung, J.
Lee, J.
Kim, J.
Yoon, J.
Jung, W.
Suh, T.
机构
[1] Seoul Natl Univ, Bundang Hosp, Seoul, South Korea
[2] Konkuk Univ Hosp, Seoul, South Korea
[3] Catholic Univ, Seoul, South Korea
关键词
D O I
10.1118/1.2760582
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Purpose: To estimate the delay time and relationship between external signals and internal organ motion for respiratory gated radiotherapy Methods and Materials: In 5 patients, we measured the external respiratory sensor signals, which included respiratory volume, respiratory temperature, and abdominal displacement with three sensors (spirometry, belt‐transducer, and thermistor), and internal organ motion with the fluoroscopy. To evaluate the relationship of the internal organ and external sensor signals, a linear least‐square fit was performed with two signals, and the correlation coefficient (R values) was determined. In order to test the presence of a time‐varying phase relationship, a unique cross‐correlation of the respiratory motion signals and internal organ motion data were performed. Cross‐correlation function (CCF) analysis allows for the identification and estimation of a phase or time delay in two related signals. Results: The correlation coefficient of respiratory signal showed that the internal organ motion to abdominal displacement by piezo respiratory belt‐transducer exhibited high correlation of 0.94 (range 0.98–0.85) with a standard deviation of about 0.06, whereas the respiratory volume and temperature to organ motion was a poor correlation (average 0.70, 0.71). The result of respiratory volume and temperature shows the influence of the phase shift, regarding time delay of 0.2 – 0.4 s. Two sensor signals considered the time delay correction generally correlated well with internal organ motion. Conclusion: This correlation in this study can be used to predict internal organ motion, based on the external sensor signals. If the time delay of external sensor signals was corrected carefully, the use of the respiratory sensor would improve the accuracy for respiratory gated radiotherapy. Thus, it is expected that the respiratory sensors will come into wider use. © 2007, American Association of Physicists in Medicine. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:2386 / 2386
页数:1
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Correlation Between Abdominal Organ Motion and An External Marker Toward Respiratory-Gated Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy for Pancreatic Carcinoma
    Shiinoki, T.
    Narita, Y.
    Nakamura, M.
    Shibuya, K.
    Sawada, A.
    Matsuo, Y.
    Mizowaki, T.
    Ito, A.
    Hiraoka, M.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2009, 36 (06)
  • [32] Analysis of the optimum internal margin for respiratory-gated radiotherapy using end-exhalation phase assessments using a motion phantom
    Yaegashi, Yuji
    Tateoka, Kunihiko
    Nakazawa, Takuya
    Fujimoto, Kazunori
    Shima, Katsumi
    Suzuki, Junji
    Nakata, Akihiro
    Saito, Yuichi
    Abe, Tadanori
    Sakata, Koichi
    Hareyama, Masato
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED CLINICAL MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2012, 13 (02): : 81 - 91
  • [33] Modeling internal respiratory motion for real-time targeting of lung tumors in radiotherapy
    Kyriakou, E.
    McKenzie, R.
    Suchowerska, N.
    RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2007, 84 : S75 - S75
  • [34] Exhale fluctuation in respiratory-gated radiotherapy of the lung: A pitfall of respiratory gating shown in a synchronized internal/external marker recording study
    Nishioka, Seiko
    Nishioka, Takeshi
    Kawahara, Masaki
    Tanaka, Shigeru
    Hiromura, Tadao
    Tomita, Kazuo
    Shirato, Hiroki
    RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2008, 86 (01) : 69 - 76
  • [35] An investigation of correlation between external surrogate signal and internal motion according to respiratory irregularity
    Kim, Changhwan
    Jang, Jiwon
    Lee, Eunho
    Park, Seyjoon
    Han, Soorim
    Han, Min Cheol
    Hong, Chae-Seon
    Kim, Jin Sung
    MEDICAL IMAGING 2024: PHYSICS OF MEDICAL IMAGING, PT 1, 2024, 12925
  • [36] Statistical Analysis of Surrogate Signals to Incorporate Respiratory Motion Variability into Radiotherapy Treatment Planning
    Wilms, Matthias
    Ehrhardt, Jan
    Werner, Rene
    Marx, Mirko
    Handels, Heinz
    MEDICAL IMAGING 2014: IMAGE-GUIDED PROCEDURES, ROBOTIC INTERVENTIONS, AND MODELING, 2014, 9036
  • [37] ANALYSIS OF THE INTERNAL MARGINS FOR RESPIRATORY-GATED RADIOTHERAPY BY USING END-EXPIRATORY PHASE ASSESSMENTS WITH A MOTION PHANTOM: INFLUENCE OF THE 4-DIMENSIONAL-CT SCAN TIME
    Yaegashi, Y.
    Tateoka, K.
    Fujimoto, K.
    Shima, K.
    Suzuki, J.
    Nakazawa, T.
    Hareyama, M.
    RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2010, 96 : S544 - S544
  • [38] Effect of respiratory guidance on internal/external respiratory motion correlation for synchrotron-based pulsed heavy-ion radiotherapy
    He, Pengbo
    Li, Qiang
    Xiao, Guoqing
    Wang, Xiaohu
    Ouyang, Shuigen
    Liu, Ruifeng
    AUSTRALASIAN PHYSICAL & ENGINEERING SCIENCES IN MEDICINE, 2018, 41 (03) : 713 - 720
  • [39] Effect of respiratory guidance on internal/external respiratory motion correlation for synchrotron-based pulsed heavy-ion radiotherapy
    Pengbo He
    Qiang Li
    Guoqing Xiao
    Xiaohu Wang
    Shuigen Ouyang
    Ruifeng Liu
    Australasian Physical & Engineering Sciences in Medicine, 2018, 41 : 713 - 720
  • [40] Technical Note: Intrafractional changes in time lag relationship between anterior-posterior external and superior-inferior internal motion signals in abdominal tumor sites
    Regmi, Rajesh
    Lovelock, D. Michael
    Zhang, Pengpeng
    Pham, Hai
    Xiong, Jianping
    Yorke, Ellen D.
    Goodman, Karyn A.
    Wu, Abraham J.
    Mageras, Gig S.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2015, 42 (06) : 2813 - 2817