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Irregular motion impacts treatment accuracy and can be compensated by larger margins or online adaptive approaches. A seamless workflow for fast and accurate 4D-dose reconstruction allows dosimetric monitoring intra- and inter-fractionally, as a basis for adaptive therapy. This study presents a real-time, motion-adaptive framework that combines motion modeling and treatment verification, integrated into the dose delivery and monitoring systems to enable continuous assessment of the delivered 4D-dose.The framework includes a GPU-based analytical algorithm for real-time dose reconstruction in carbon ion therapy, interfaced with the dose delivery and optical tracking systems at the Centro Nazionale di Adroterapia Oncologica (CNAO). A motion model, driven by external surrogate tracking, generates a virtual CT every 150 ms, used for 4D-dose reconstruction with measured spot parameters. Planned and delivered doses are compared after each iso-energy slice. The framework was validated at CNAO using a geometric target and a 4D lung tumor phantom with a moving 2D ionization chamber array, under regular and irregular motion patterns.The framework successfully generated real-time CT images of the lung phantom, showing strong agreement with ground-truth images. Dose reconstructions were performed within inter-spill times during delivery, ensuring rapid assessment. Comparisons against detector measurements yielded an average gamma-index passing rate of 99% (3%/3 mm), confirming the accuracy of both the motion model and the integrated treatment verification system.This work presents the first real-time framework for carbon ion therapy, integrating motion modeling and dose reconstruction to handle irregular motion, fully embedded in a clinic-like setup.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6560/adf592 | DOI Listing |
Chaos
September 2025
School of Mathematics and Physics, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China.
This study employs physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) to investigate the narrow escape problem in irregular domains, aiming to understand how key parameters influence molecular escape behavior and to analyze the most probable transition pathway of molecules. We focus on two critical metrics: mean exit time and escape probability, characterizing escape behavior in stochastic systems. Using PINNs, we effectively address the domain's complexities and examine the effects of parameters such as diffusion coefficient, angular velocity, annular area, and absorption domain size on mean exit time and escape probability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
September 2025
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260, USA.
Modeling membrane interactions with arbitrarily shaped colloidal particles, such as environmental micro- and nanoplastics, at the cell scale remains particularly challenging, owing to the complexity of particle geometries and the need to resolve fully coupled translational and rotational dynamics. Here, we present a force-based computational framework capable of capturing dynamic interactions between deformable lipid vesicles and rigid particles of irregular shapes. Both vesicle and particle surfaces are represented using triangulated meshes, and Langevin dynamics resolves membrane deformation alongside rigid-body particle motion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Phys
August 2025
Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
Background: Low-field MRI provides superior soft-tissue contrast compared to CT while costing significantly less than high-field MRI, which makes it a more accessible option for MRI-guided radiation therapy planning. Four-dimensional MRI (4D-MRI) is a technique that has been increasingly adopted clinically for internal target volume (ITV) delineation in free-breathing liver radiotherapy planning, and it requires high spatial resolution and accurate respiratory phase differentiation to enable precise dose planning. The feasibility of 4D-MRI at low-field strength, specifically at 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagn Reson Med
August 2025
The Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Purpose: True real-time cardiac MRI (CMR), necessary for capturing live cardiac dynamics and imaging irregular cardiac rhythms, remains challenging. In this article, we move toward real-time CMR in multiple reconstruction frameworks via strategies to predict cardiac motion, improve computational efficiency, reduce artifacts, and preserve spatial resolution.
Theory And Methods: A published predictive signal model (PMOT) for imaging irregular cardiac dynamics was modified (mPMOT) to enable efficient computation of state-transition matrices for predicting cardiac motion, as training PMOT is computationally expensive.
Sensors (Basel)
August 2025
Department of Mechatronics, Silesian University of Technology, Akademicka 2A, 44-100 Gliwice, Poland.
This paper presents the results of experimental research on rolling resistance forces occurring during the motion of omnidirectional wheels equipped with dual rows of passive rollers. Due to the complexity of wheel-surface interactions and the stochastic nature of contact transitions, such wheels are often characterized experimentally rather than analytically. A custom-built test stand was used to measure resistance forces for different wheel orientations (0°, 30°, 45°, 60°, and 90°) and two vertical loads (117.
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