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    Comput Methods Programs Biomed. 2010 Jun;98(3):285-92. doi: 10.1016/j.cmpb.2009.07.004. Epub 2009 Aug 19.

    Towards real-time radiation therapy: GPU accelerated superposition/convolution.

    Source

    School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21231-2410, USA. sandford@jhu.edu

    Abstract

    We demonstrate the use of highly parallel graphics processing units (GPUs) to accelerate the superposition/convolution (S/C) algorithm to interactive rates while reducing the number of approximations. S/C first transports the incident fluence to compute the total energy released per unit mass (TERMA) grid. Dose is then calculated by superimposing the dose deposition kernel at each point in the TERMA grid and summing the contributions to the surrounding voxels. The TERMA algorithm was enhanced with physically correct multi-spectral attenuation and a novel inverse formulation for increased performance, accuracy and simplicity. Dose deposition utilized a tilted poly-energetic inverse cumulative-cumulative kernel, with the novel option of using volumetric mip-maps to approximate solid angle ray casting. Exact radiological path ray casting decreased discretization errors. We achieved a speedup of 34x-98x over a highly optimized CPU implementation.

    Copyright 2009 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

    PMID:
    19695731
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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