Results 261 to 270 of about 2,488,526 (298)
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Organ Doses and Effective Dose Equivalent

Radiation Protection Dosimetry, 1985
For a modified version of the anthropoid MIRD phantom the organ doses and the effective dose equivalent for external neutron irradiation have been calculated in the past by the so called CHORD method. It was anticipated from a few preliminary Monte Carlo Calculations and based upon basic physical considerations that CHORD results may be generally too ...
Wittmann, A., Morhart, A., Burger, G.T.
openaire   +3 more sources

THE EFFECTIVE DOSE EQUIVALENT AND EFFECTIVE DOSE FOR HOT PARTICLES ON THE SKIN

Health Physics, 2005
Whole body exposure from photon-emitting hot particles is a relatively new problem. Until recently, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission required the use of deep dose equivalent (DDE) to estimate and report whole body exposures from hot particles. In this study, effective dose equivalent (EDE) and effective dose (ED) were calculated for point sources
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Effective dose ? how effective for patients?

Radiation and Environmental Biophysics, 1993
The question discussed in this paper is whether effective dose can reflect the risk to patients from radiological procedures and can be used, for example, to optimise procedures and compare risks of various methods, to define dose constraints, and to estimate the risks to individuals or populations attributed to medical exposures.
G, Drexler   +3 more
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Effects of high-dose cytarabine

Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 1982
Plasma, urine, cerebrospinal fluid, and tear concentrations of cytarabine (ara-C) were measured in 15 patients receiving 3 gm/m2 IV ara-C given as a 1 hr infusion every 12 hr for 6 days. The two assay methods used for measuring ara-C concentrations (high-pressure liquid chromatography and radioimmunoassay) gave much the same results.
K R, Hande   +4 more
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Dose normalization and pre-dose effect

Nuclear Tracks and Radiation Measurements (1982), 1985
Abstract Dose normalization of the TL signal from quartz and feldspar used for dating is often complicated by the pre-dose effect resulting from the samples having received different doses prior to application of the monitor dose. Assuming that the pre-dose effect increases linearly with dose the normalized build-up curves can be expressed by the ...
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Effects of Low Doses of Radiation

Health Physics, 1996
This is a brief review of what is known from experimental studies about the effects of low doses of radiation, and approaches that might improve risk estimates are discussed. The dose-response relationships for cancer induction by radiation vary markedly between tissues.
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The Effective Dose of Midazolam

Anesthesiology, 1981
J G, Reves, I, Kissin, L R, Smith
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Dose‐response Effect

Acta Paediatrica, 1987
P J, Smith, P C, Hindmarsh, C G, Brook
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Dose per Fraction and Dose Rate Effect

Tumori Journal, 2010
FRANCO, Pierfrancesco   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Effective Dose and Dose-Length Product in CT

Radiology, 2009
Paul C, Shrimpton   +4 more
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