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Original Article

Absorbed Fraction to the Cell Nucleus for Low Energy Electrons

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Pages 953-958 | Received 25 Aug 1995, Accepted 19 Aug 1996, Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The absorbed fraction ϕ to the cell nucleus for low energy electrons (0.5 keV-50keV) was evaluated. Distributions of radioactivity within either the nucleus (nu) and the cytoplasm (cy), or on the cell membrane (mem) were considered. ϕ was computed as a function of the cell sizes and of the electron energy E. For a strictly intranuclear distribution, ϕnu is close to 1 for very low energy values (E<4 keV), i. e. the energy is totally absorbed in the cell nucleus itself. The absorbed fraction decreases when the energy increases and ϕnu becomes less than 0.1 for E40 keV. For a cell membrane distribution, the absorbed fraction remains always less than 0.2. For very low energy electrons (E<6 keV), ϕmem=0, due to the fact that the electron falls short to the nucleus target. The absorbed fraction is maximum for E ranging from 12 keV to 20 keV. For higher values of E, ϕmem decreases when E increases. When considering a cytoplasmic distribution, the maximum absorbed fraction ϕcy is obtained for E values ranging from lOkeV to 25 keV (ϕcy max=0.27). Dosimetric computations at the cellular level show that the absorbed fraction to the cell nucleus may have values ranging from 0 to 1, depending on the dimensions of the cell, the energy of the emitted electron and on the intracellular localization of the Auger emitter.

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