Publications by authors named "L Karsch"

Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers discovered that this drop in IgA happens because the immune system cells that make it are harmed after injury.
  • * They also found that certain cells called neutrophils cause this problem, but if these cells are removed or their action is blocked, the levels of IgA can be preserved in both patients and mice.
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Purpose: A better characterization of the dependence of the tissue sparing effect at ultra-high dose rate (UHDR) on physical beam parameters (dose, dose rate, radiation quality) would be helpful towards a mechanistic understanding of the FLASH effect and for its broader clinical translation. To address this, a comprehensive study on the normal tissue sparing at UHDR using the zebrafish embryo (ZFE) model was conducted.

Methods: One-day-old ZFE were irradiated over a wide dose range (15-95 Gy) in three different beams (proton entrance channel, proton spread out Bragg peak and 30 MeV electrons) at UHDR and reference dose rate.

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. Local magnetic resonance (MR) signal loss was previously observed during proton beam irradiation of free-floating water phantoms at ambient temperature using a research prototype in-beam magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner. The emergence of this MR signal loss was hypothesised to be dependent on beam-induced convection.

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Laser plasma-based accelerators (LPAs) of protons can contribute to research of ultra-high dose rate radiobiology as they provide pulse dose rates unprecedented at medical proton sources. Yet, LPAs pose challenges regarding precise and accurate dosimetry due to the high pulse dose rates, but also due to the sources' lower spectral stability and pulsed operation mode. Formodels, further challenges arise from the necessary small field dosimetry for volumetric dose distributions.

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The main advantage proton beams offer over photon beams in radiation therapy of cancer patients is the dose maximum at their finite range, yielding a reduction in the dose deposited in healthy tissues surrounding the tumor. Since no direct method exists to measure the beam's range during dose delivery, safety margins around the tumor are applied, compromising the dose conformality and reducing the targeting accuracy. Here, we demonstrate that online MRI can visualize the proton beam and reveal its range during irradiation of liquid-filled phantoms.

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