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      Additional factors for the estimation of mean glandular breast dose using the UK mammography dosimetry protocol.

      Physics in medicine and biology
      Adipose Tissue, radiation effects, Adult, Age Factors, Breast, Female, Humans, Mammography, methods, standards, Middle Aged, Monte Carlo Method, Polymethyl Methacrylate, chemistry, Radiometry, X-Rays

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          Abstract

          The UK and European protocols for mammographic dosimetry use conversion factors that relate incident air kerma to the mean glandular dose (MGD) within the breast. The conversion factors currently used were obtained by computer simulation of a model breast with a composition of 50% adipose and 50% glandular tissues by weight (50% glandularity). Relative conversion factors have been calculated which allow the extension of the protocols to breasts of varying glandularity and for a wider range of mammographic x-ray spectra. The data have also been extended to breasts of a compressed thickness of 11 cm. To facilitate the calculation of MGD in patient surveys, typical breast glandularities are tabulated for women in the age ranges 40-49 and 50-64 years, and for breasts in the thickness range 2-11 cm. In addition, tables of equivalent thickness of polymethyl methacrylate have been provided to allow the simulation for dosimetric purposes of typical breasts of various thicknesses.

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