PMID- 26232251 OWN - NLM STAT- MEDLINE DCOM- 20160328 LR - 20161021 IS - 1879-5447 (Electronic) IS - 0158-9938 (Linking) VI - 38 IP - 3 DP - 2015 Sep TI - Monte Carlo and experimental internal radionuclide dosimetry in RANDO head phantom. PG - 465-72 LID - 10.1007/s13246-015-0367-0 [doi] AB - Monte Carlo techniques are widely employed in internal dosimetry to obtain better estimates of absorbed dose distributions from irradiation sources in medicine. Accurate 3D absorbed dosimetry would be useful for risk assessment of inducing deterministic and stochastic biological effects for both therapeutic and diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals in nuclear medicine. The goal of this study was to experimentally evaluate the use of Geant4 application for tomographic emission (GATE) Monte Carlo package for 3D internal dosimetry using the head portion of the RANDO phantom. GATE package (version 6.1) was used to create a voxel model of a human head phantom from computed tomography (CT) images. Matrix dimensions consisted of 319 x 216 x 30 voxels (0.7871 x 0.7871 x 5 mm(3)). Measurements were made using thermoluminescent dosimeters (TLD-100). One rod-shaped source with 94 MBq activity of (99m)Tc was positioned in the brain tissue of the posterior part of the human head phantom in slice number 2. The results of the simulation were compared with measured mean absorbed dose per cumulative activity (S value). Absorbed dose was also calculated for each slice of the digital model of the head phantom and dose volume histograms (DVHs) were computed to analyze the absolute and relative doses in each slice from the simulation data. The S-values calculated by GATE and TLD methods showed a significant correlation (correlation coefficient, r(2) >/= 0.99, p < 0.05) with each other. The maximum relative percentage differences were