A type of high-energy radiotherapy using a beam of gamma-radiation produced by a radioisotope source encapsulated within a teletherapy unit.
Unstable isotopes of cobalt that decay or disintegrate emitting radiation. Co atoms with atomic weights of 54-64, except 59, are radioactive cobalt isotopes.
Isotopes that exhibit radioactivity and undergo radioactive decay. (From Grant & Hackh's Chemical Dictionary, 5th ed & McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms, 4th ed)
Unstable isotopes of zinc that decay or disintegrate emitting radiation. Zn atoms with atomic weights 60-63, 65, 69, 71, and 72 are radioactive zinc isotopes.

Prognostic variables of papillary and follicular thyroid carcinoma patients with lymph node metastases and without distant metastases. (1/37)

From 1977 through 1995, 1,013 thyroid carcinoma patients received treatment and were followed up at Chang Gung Medical Center in Taiwan. To evaluate the prognostic variables of papillary and follicular thyroid carcinomas with limited lymph node metastases, a retrospective review of these patients was performed. Of these patients, 910 had papillary or follicular thyroid carcinoma, and 119 patients were categorized as clinical stage 2 with limited neck lymph node metastases only at the time of diagnosis. The patients were categorized into two groups as no recurrence and local recurrence or distant metastasis at the end of 1997. After the operations, radioactive iodide (131I) treatments were performed in 114 patients and external radiotherapy for neck region or distant metastases in 18 patients. The median follow-up period of these patients was 5.4 years. Clinical variables were coded in our computer for statistical analysis. After the treatments, 93 patients remained disease-free; 10 were in stage 2; 5 in stage 3; and 11 aggravated to stage 4. Of the clinical variables, age, post-operative first 1311 uptake scans, and 1-month post-operative thyroglobulin levels revealed statistically significant differences between the group which improved and the group which did not. During the follow-up period, five patients died; three patients died of thyroid cancer and two died of intercurrent diseases. Patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma revealed a higher percentage of lymph node metastases. Although limited lymph node metastases did not influence survival rate, patients with poor prognostic factors need more aggressive treatment to avoid progression of the cancer.  (+info)

Possibilities of preventing osteoradionecrosis during complex therapy of tumors of the oral cavity. (2/37)

In recent years, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of tumors of the head and neck. Their successful treatment is one of the greatest challenges for physicians dealing with oncotherapy. An organic part of the complex therapy is preoperative or postoperative irradiation. Application of this is accompanied by a lower risk of recurrences, and by a higher proportion of cured patients. Unfortunately, irradiation also has a disadvantage: the development of osteoradionecrosis, a special form of osteomyelitis, in some patients (mainly in those cases where irradiation occurs after bone resection or after partial removal of the periosteum). Once the clinical picture of this irradiation complication has developed, its treatment is very difficult. A significant result or complete freedom from complaints can be attained only rarely. Attention must therefore be focussed primarily on prevention, and the oral surgeon, the oncoradiologist and the patient too can all do much to help prevent the occurrence of osteoradionecrosis. Through coupling of an up-to-date, functional surgical attitude with knowledge relating to modern radiology and radiation physics, the way may be opened to forestall this complication that is so difficult to cure.  (+info)

Aberrant expression of cyclin A in head and neck cancer. (3/37)

Cyclin A expression was studied in a series of 65 squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck (HNSCC) and compared with known markers of proliferation, iododeoxyuridine (IdUrd) and Ki-67, to assess whether aberrant expression was prevalent. Patients had previously been administered IdUrd to study cell kinetics in relation to outcome of radiotherapy. The data showed that all three parameters were highly correlated although the absolute values were different. The median labelling indices (LI) for IdUrd, cyclin A and Ki-67 were 10.7, 17.1 and 30.8% respectively, reflecting the known pattern of differential cell cycle expression. However, there were a significant number of cases in which an unexpected relationship between cyclin A and either IdUrd or Ki-67 was present. Some of these were attributable to overexpression but others indicated underexpression. Although the greater variability and range of cyclin A expression, coupled with its more closely associated role in cell cycle regulation, might suggest that it may be a more informative marker for cell proliferation than Ki-67, the aberrant expression seen in over one third of cases would indicate that caution should be exercised in interpreting cyclin A as a surrogate marker of proliferation in HNSCC.  (+info)

Identification of long-term survivors in primary breast cancer by dynamic modelling of tumour response. (4/37)

Although clinical response to primary chemotherapy in stage II and III breast cancer is associated with a survival advantage, it is the degree of pathological response in the breast and ipsilateral axilla that best identifies patients with a good long-term outcome. A mathematical model of the initial response of 39 locally advanced tumours to anthracycline-based primary chemotherapy has been previously shown to predict subsequent clinical tumour size. This model allows for the possibility of primary resistant disease, the presence of which should therefore be associated with a worse outcome. This study reports the application of this model to an additional five patients with locally advanced breast cancer, as well as to 63 patients with operable breast cancer, and confirms the biological reality of the model parameters for these 100 breast cancers treated with primary anthracycline-based chemotherapy. The tumours that responded to chemotherapy had higher cell-kill (P < 0.0005), lower resistance (P < 0.0001) and slower tumour regrowth (P < 0.002). Furthermore, ER-negative tumours had higher cell-kill (P < 0.05), as compared with ER-positive tumours. All patients with a pathological complete response had zero resistance according to the model. Furthermore, the long-term implication of chemo-resistant disease was demonstrated by survival analysis of these two groups of patients. At a median follow-up of 3.7 years, there was a statistically significantly worse survival for the 37 patients with locally advanced breast cancer identified by the model to have more than 8% primary resistant tumour (P < 0.003). The specificity of this putative prognostic indicator was confirmed in the 63 patients presenting with operable disease where, at a median follow-up of 7.7 years, those women with a resistant fraction of greater than 8% had a significantly worse survival (P < 0.05). Application of this model to patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy may allow earlier identification of clinically significant resistance and permit intervention with alternative non-cross-resistant therapies such as taxoids.  (+info)

Interferon-alpha2a and 13-cis-retinoic acid with radiation treatment for high-grade glioma. (5/37)

Interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) has been safely given concurrently with radiation therapy (RT) in treating gliomas. As single agents, both IFN-alpha and cis-retinoic acid (CRA) have produced objective tumor regressions in patients with recurrent gliomas. In vitro, IFN-alpha2a and CRA enhance radiation therapy effects on glioblastoma cells more than either agent alone. This trial was conducted to determine the clinical effects of IFN-alpha2a and CRA when given concurrently with radiation therapy to patients with high-grade glioma. Newly diagnosed patients with high-grade glioma received IFN-alpha2a at a dosage of 3 to 6 million IU s.c. 4 times a day for 3 days per week and 1 mg/kg CRA by mouth 4 times a day for 5 days per week during the delivery of partial brain radiation therapy at 180 cGy x 33 fractions for 5 days per week for a total of 59.4 Gy during the 7-week period. Use of the antiepileptic phenytoin was prohibited after observing that the combination of IFN-alpha2a, CRA, and phenytoin was associated with a high rate of dermatologic toxicity not seen in a previous study with concurrent IFN-alpha2a and radiation therapy. Forty patients (26 men and 14 women) with a median age of 60 (range, 19 to 81 years) were enrolled between August 1996 and October 1998. Histopathologic diagnoses were glioblastoma multiforme or grade 4 anaplastic astrocytoma in 36 patients, and grade 3 anaplastic astrocytoma in 4 patients. Only 4 patients (10%) underwent a gross total resection of tumor prior to this therapy; 50% were asymptomatic when treatment was initiated. The planned 7-week course of concurrent therapy was completed by 75% of patients; 30% completed the 16-week course of IFN-alpha and CRA alone. At a median follow-up of 36 months, there were 37 deaths, with a median overall survival of 9.3 months and a 1-year survival rate of 42%. There was no improvement in survival compared with a similar group of 19 patients treated with concurrent IFN-alpha2a and radiation therapy in a previous trial. In the high-risk group of patients in the present study, concurrent treatment with IFN-alpha2a, CRA, and RT was feasible, but was not associated with a better outcome compared with a similar patient population treated with radiation therapy and IFN-alpha2a, or compared with radiation therapy alone in other trials.  (+info)

Primary hemangioma of the occipital bone in the region of the torcula--two case reports. (6/37)

Two rare cases of subtorcular occipital bone hemangioma occurred in 26-year-old and 30-year-old female patients. Partial resection was performed in both cases because of the proximity to the torcula. No recurrence was seen at follow-up examination at 9 and 12 months.  (+info)

Treatment results by uneven fractionated irradiation, low-dose rate telecobalt therapy as a boost, and intraoperative irradiation for malignant glioma. (7/37)

The prognosis of malignant glioma is extremely poor. We applied conventionally fractionated irradiation combined with 1-(4-amino-2-methyl-5-pyrimidinyl)methyl-3-(2-chloroethyl)-3-nitrosourea (ACNU), uneven fractionated irradiation with ACNU, low dose rate telecobalt therapy as a boost, and intraoperative irradiation against 110 malignant gliomas to investigate the efficacy of these methods as alternative treatments for malignant glioma. Although local tumor control by uneven fractionated irradiation was better than that by the other methods, no significant improvement was obtained in survival rates. As a result of multiple regression analysis, age and histology were major factors for survival rates, and the difference of treatment methods was not important. Both low-dose rate telecobalt therapy as a boost and intraoperative irradiation showed little advantage because of the high risk of brain necrosis associated with them.  (+info)

Tumor regression dynamics with external radiotherapy in cancer cervix and its implications. (8/37)

BACKGROUND: To study the external radiotherapy (EXTRT) regression patterns in cancer of the cervix. AIMS: Evaluate EXTRT tumor regression doses (TRD) for 50% (TRD50), 80% response (TRD80), normalized dose response gradient (g50) and slope (slope50) with clinical outcome. SETTINGS AND DESIGN: Patients, treated solely with radiotherapy and enrolled for other prospective studies having weekly tumor regressions recorded were considered. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Seventy-seven patients received 50Gy of EXTRT at 2 Gy/fraction followed by 18Gy of high-dose rate intracavitary brachytherapy at 6 Gy/fraction. Loco-regional regressions were assessed clinically at weekly intervals during EXTRT to generate EXTRT dose-response curves. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS USED: Student's t test, logistic regression, Kaplan Meier and Cox's proportional hazard model. Scatter plots were fitted using cubic fit. RESULTS: Age (P=0.052) and absence or presence of gross residual tumor (AGRT and PGRT respectively) following EXTRT (P<0.001) were the only determinants for complete response (CR) at 1 month following completion of radiotherapy. EXTRT tumor regression sigmoid curves obtained for various patient characteristics differed only for those with AGRT and PGRT with differences in TRD50, (P<0.001); TRD80 (P<0.001) and slope50 (P=0.001). Response status to EXTRT was a prognosticator for loco-regional disease free survival (LDFS) (AGRT vs. PGRT; P=0.046). On multivariate analysis, both TRD50 and TRD80 emerged as significant predictors for tumor status at end of EXTRT while TRD80 was the sole determinant of LDFS. CONCLUSION: Extent of tumor regression to EXTRT is an important predictor for treatment outcome in cancer cervix as evident from TRD50 and TRD80 values of EXTRT tumor regression curves.  (+info)

Radioisotope teletherapy is a type of cancer treatment that uses high-energy radiation from a radioisotope to destroy cancer cells. In this procedure, the radioisotope is placed outside the body and aimed at the tumor site, rather than being inserted into the body like in brachytherapy. The radiation travels through space and penetrates the tissue to reach the tumor, where it damages the DNA of cancer cells and inhibits their ability to divide and grow. This type of radiotherapy is often used for larger or more difficult-to-reach tumors, as well as for palliative care in advanced stages of cancer. Examples of radioisotopes commonly used in teletherapy include cobalt-60 and cesium-137.

Cobalt radioisotopes are radioactive forms of the element cobalt, which are used in various medical applications. The most commonly used cobalt radioisotope is Cobalt-60 (Co-60), which has a half-life of 5.27 years.

Co-60 emits gamma rays and beta particles, making it useful for radiation therapy to treat cancer, as well as for sterilizing medical equipment and food irradiation. In radiation therapy, Co-60 is used in teletherapy machines to deliver a focused beam of radiation to tumors, helping to destroy cancer cells while minimizing damage to surrounding healthy tissue.

It's important to note that handling and disposal of cobalt radioisotopes require strict safety measures due to their radioactive nature, as they can pose risks to human health and the environment if not managed properly.

Radioisotopes, also known as radioactive isotopes or radionuclides, are variants of chemical elements that have unstable nuclei and emit radiation in the form of alpha particles, beta particles, gamma rays, or conversion electrons. These isotopes are formed when an element's nucleus undergoes natural or artificial radioactive decay.

Radioisotopes can be produced through various processes, including nuclear fission, nuclear fusion, and particle bombardment in a cyclotron or other types of particle accelerators. They have a wide range of applications in medicine, industry, agriculture, research, and energy production. In the medical field, radioisotopes are used for diagnostic imaging, radiation therapy, and in the labeling of molecules for research purposes.

It is important to note that handling and using radioisotopes requires proper training, safety measures, and regulatory compliance due to their ionizing radiation properties, which can pose potential health risks if not handled correctly.

Zinc radioisotopes are unstable isotopes or variants of the element zinc that undergo radioactive decay, emitting radiation in the process. These isotopes have a different number of neutrons than the stable isotope of zinc (zinc-64), which contributes to their instability and tendency to decay.

Examples of zinc radioisotopes include zinc-65, zinc-70, and zinc-72. These isotopes are often used in medical research and diagnostic procedures due to their ability to emit gamma rays or positrons, which can be detected using specialized equipment.

Zinc radioisotopes may be used as tracers to study the metabolism and distribution of zinc in the body, or as therapeutic agents to deliver targeted radiation therapy to cancer cells. However, it is important to note that the use of radioisotopes carries potential risks, including exposure to ionizing radiation and the potential for damage to healthy tissues.

... radioisotope teletherapy MeSH E02.831.387.500 - motion therapy, continuous passive MeSH E02.831.671.221 - communication methods ...
... the division developed one of the first teletherapy units that used the radioisotope cobalt-60 to destroy cancerous tumours. ... Soon after, the division was given responsibility for selling radioisotopes produced by the newly established Chalk River ...
A major use of systemic radioisotope therapy is in the treatment of bone metastasis from cancer. The radioisotopes travel ... External beam radiotherapy (teletherapy) began at the turn of the century with relatively low voltage (. 3.0.CO;2-I. PMID ... Targeting can also be achieved by attaching the radioisotope to another molecule or antibody to guide it to the target tissue. ... The radioisotopes are delivered through infusion (into the bloodstream) or ingestion. Examples are the infusion of ...
His department subsequently developed one of the world's first radioisotope scanners. He was awarded Gold Medal for Radiation ... inventor of the cobalt-60 teletherapy unit, that Johns was prompted to go into medical physics. ...
Radioisotopes produced gamma rays in the megavolt range, but prior to World War II virtually the only radioisotope available ... Beginning in the 1950s, cobalt-60 was widely used in external beam radiotherapy (teletherapy) machines, which produced a beam ... Cobalt therapy is the medical use of gamma rays from the radioisotope cobalt-60 to treat conditions such as cancer. ... Before the development of medical linear accelerators in the 1970s, the only artificial radiation source used for teletherapy ...
For teletherapy sources, however, the radioactive density (Ci in a given volume) needs to be very high, which is not possible ... When enriched in radioisotopes, such as 137CsCl or 131CsCl, caesium chloride is used in nuclear medicine applications such as ... In the production of radioactive sources, it is normal to choose a chemical form of the radioisotope which would not be readily ... This is a drawback for its radioactive form which urges a search for less chemically mobile radioisotope materials. Commercial ...
December 2013 - A truck transporting a 111 TBq (3.0 kCi) cobalt-60 teletherapy source from a Tijuana hospital to a waste ... 1999 - Kingisepp, Leningrad Oblast, Russia - The radioisotope core of a radio thermal generator was recovered at a bus station ... 1997 - Georgia - A medical teletherapy cobalt-60 source was left unsecured near a station, causing a fatal radiation exposure ... December 1998 - Istanbul, Turkey - two sealed transport packages for spent cobalt-60 teletherapy sources from a shipment of ...
During the same time, the OAEP was informed of the three teletherapy units in the car park, and a separate investigating team ... The licensing of radioisotopes and nuclear material for import, export, possession and use in Thailand is regulated by the Thai ... Although the symbol was displayed on the teletherapy head, none of those handling the device were aware of its meaning, nor ... The device involved in the Samut Prakan accident was a rotational Gammatron-3 teletherapy unit, manufactured by Siemens and ...
With a short half-life of 8 days, this radioisotope is not of practical use in radioactive sources in industrial radiography or ... Cobalt-60 tends to be used in teletherapy units as a higher photon energy alternative to caesium-137, while iridium-192 tends ... Because both radium and radon are very radiotoxic and very expensive due to their natural rarity, these natural radioisotopes ... www.iem-inc.com/information/tools/radiation-energies/gamma-emitters useful radioisotope search tool "Cobalt-60". (Articles ...
... though technically all radioisotopes of iodine are radioiodines; see isotopes of iodine). Pusey 1900, p. 302 Kassabian 1907, p ... teletherapy), locoregional ablative therapy (such as brachytherapy (sealed source radiation therapy), selective internal ... teletherapy and brachytherapy), Interventional Radiology / Interventional Oncology (selective internal radiation therapy (SIRT ...
When IGR moved to its new premises in 1985, it left behind a caesium-137-based teletherapy unit purchased in 1977. The fate of ... a caesium salt made with a radioisotope, caesium-137) encased in a shielding canister made of lead and steel. The source was ... They partially disassembled the teletherapy unit and placed the source assembly in a wheelbarrow to later take to Alves' home. ... warning them about the danger of keeping a teletherapy unit at an abandoned site, but they could not remove the equipment by ...
Teletherapy is the first of four classes of radiotherapy, as grouped by treatment distance. teletherapy-treatment from a ... Cobalt units which use radiation from the radioisotope cobalt-60 produce stable, dichromatic beams of 1.17 and 1.33 MeV, ... Teletherapy is the most common form of radiotherapy (radiation therapy). The patient sits or lies on a couch and an external ... Notably, photon beams deriving from radioisotopes are approximately monoenergetic, as contrasted with the continuous ...
A gaseous leak of a radioisotope of iodine, 131I, was detected at a large medical radioisotope laboratory, Institut national ... December 2013 - A truck transporting a 111 TBq 60Co teletherapy source from a Tijuana hospital to a waste storage facility was ... A radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG) located on the Arctic shore was discovered in a highly degraded state. The ... Two radioisotope thermoelectric generators were dropped 50 meters onto the tundra at Zemlya Bunge island during an airlift when ...
These include the beta-emitting strontium-90 sources used as radioisotope thermoelectric generators for beacons in lighthouses ... The effects of using Cesium-137 teletherapy sources as a radiological weapon (dirty bomb), Hellenic Arms Control Center, ... Two metal scavengers broke into an abandoned radiotherapy clinic and removed a teletherapy source capsule containing powdered ...
As humans, plants, and animals consume food, air, and water, an inventory of radioisotopes builds up within the organism (see ... teletherapy machines for cancer treatment and industrial radiography units. The symbol is to be placed on the device housing ... Cosmic rays may also produce radioisotopes on Earth (for example, carbon-14), which in turn decay and emit ionizing radiation. ... "Gas Filled Detectors" (PDF). Lecture notes for MED PHYS 4R06/6R03 - Radiation & Radioisotope Methodology. MacMaster University ...
Ingested alpha emitter radioisotopes such as transuranics or actinides are an average of about 20 times more dangerous, and in ... in his pocket A space traveller who is irradiated by cosmic rays A person who is treated for cancer by either teletherapy or ... A person who is being treated for cancer by means of a radiopharmaceutical where a radioisotope is used as a drug (usually a ... some experiments up to 1000 times more dangerous than an equivalent activity of beta emitting or gamma emitting radioisotopes. ...
... radioisotope teletherapy MeSH E02.831.387.500 - motion therapy, continuous passive MeSH E02.831.671.221 - communication methods ...
Cobalt radioisotopes -- therapeutic use , Radioisotope teletherapyNLM classification: QZ 269 ... QZ 269 84CO Cobalt-60 teletherapy : QZ 269 84WO Computers in radiotherapy and oncology : QZ 269 86BO Boron-neutron capture ... Cobalt-60 teletherapy : a compendium of international practice, a joint undertaking of the International Atomic Energy Agency ...
International activities have involved 40 countries and have included recovery, replacement, and disposition of radioisotope ... and radiation teletherapy. ... sources are typically used in practices such as radioisotope ...
Historically, the three main divisions of radiation therapy are external beam radiation therapy (EBRT or XRT) or teletherapy, ... and systemic radioisotopes are given by infusion or oral ingestion that is delivered immediately after surgical removal of the ... brachytherapy or sealed source radiation therapy, and systemic radioisotope therapy or unsealed source radiotherapy. The ...
Radioisotope Radioisotope: An unstable isotope of an element that decays or disintegrates spontaneously, emitting energy ( ... Usually a sealed source of radiation used in teletherapy and industrial radiography, as a power source for batteries, or in ... radiation). Approximately 5,000 natural and artificial radioisotopes have been identified. Some radioisotopes, such as ... Radiocarbon dating: A technique for estimating the age of an object by measuring the amounts of various radioisotopes in it. ...
Some radioisotopes pose an extreme risk. One case of inadvertent dispersal-the 1988 Goiânia, Brazil, incident-killed four and ... The cobalt-60 was reportedly from an old teletherapy machine. While the Curie content has not been reported, I would estimate ... Such unstable isotopes are referred to as radioisotopes, which undergo decay in one of three ways: alpha, beta, or gamma decay ... In the Goiania case, the gamma-emitting radioisotope was cesium-137 in the chemical form of cesium chloride, which is a salt- ...
TBG Companies have 1000s of Teletherapy units-Cobalt 60 Gamma Beam with IMRT capabilities on some, and 1000 plus X Ray, Cesium ... Radioisotope Production, Proton Therapy, Theranostics/Targeted Systemic Radiation Therapy, Blood, Animal Cell and Research ... Teletherapy, IMRT treatment planning software, Heavy Ion 400 MeV ion, Rapid Cycling Medical Synchrotron Proton-to-Carbon, a ...
Radioisotope teletherapy. Charakt. formalna: Zagraniczny artyku Charakt. merytoryczna: Praca oryginalna. J zyk publikacji: ENG ... Radioisotope teletherapy - methods ; Receptors, thyrotropin - antagonists & inhibitors ; Receptors, thyrotropin - immunology ; ...
Unsealed source radiotherapy, also called a systemic radioisotope.. *External beam radiation therapy or teletherapy. ... Radioisotopes are passed through ingestion in the bloodstream. It is mainly used in the treatment of cancer of bone metastasis ... This feature makes it more preferred than external beam radiation therapy (teletherapy). Brachytherapy takes less time as ... Unsealed source radiotherapy: popularly known as systemic radioisotope therapy is a targeting therapy. The targeting process ...
Medical Physics, Dosimetry, Radiation, Dosimeters, Dosage, Radiotherapy, Photon Beams, Radioisotope Scanning, Biological ... Teletherapy, Linac, Shielding, Central Axis Depth, Acceptance Tests, Commissioning, Quality Assurance, Equipment, Brachytherapy ...
Approximately 5,000 natural and artificial radioisotopes have been identified. Some radioisotopes, such as Molybdenum-99, are ... Usually a sealed source of radiation used in teletherapy and industrial radiography, as a power source for batteries, or in ... Radioisotope. An unstable isotope of an element that decays or disintegrates spontaneously, emitting energy (radiation). ... A technique for estimating the age of an object by measuring the amounts of various radioisotopes in it. ...
Approximately 5,000 natural and artificial radioisotopes have been identified. Some radioisotopes, such as Molybdenum-99, are ... Usually a sealed source of radiation used in teletherapy and industrial radiography, as a power source for batteries, or in ... Radioisotope. An unstable isotope of an element that decays or disintegrates spontaneously, emitting energy (radiation). ... A technique for estimating the age of an object by measuring the amounts of various radioisotopes in it. ...
Radioisotope Teletherapy Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Barium use Barium Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Bromine use Bromine ... Radioisotope Dilution Technic use Radioisotope Dilution Technique Radioisotope Dilution Technics use Radioisotope Dilution ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technic use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Technics use Diagnostic ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technique use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Techniques use Diagnostic ...
Radioisotope Teletherapy Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Barium use Barium Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Bromine use Bromine ... Radioisotope Dilution Technic use Radioisotope Dilution Technique Radioisotope Dilution Technics use Radioisotope Dilution ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technic use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Technics use Diagnostic ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technique use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Techniques use Diagnostic ...
Radioisotope Teletherapy Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Barium use Barium Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Bromine use Bromine ... Radioisotope Dilution Technic use Radioisotope Dilution Technique Radioisotope Dilution Technics use Radioisotope Dilution ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technic use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Technics use Diagnostic ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technique use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Techniques use Diagnostic ...
Radioisotope Teletherapy Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Barium use Barium Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Bromine use Bromine ... Radioisotope Dilution Technic use Radioisotope Dilution Technique Radioisotope Dilution Technics use Radioisotope Dilution ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technic use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Technics use Diagnostic ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technique use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Techniques use Diagnostic ...
Radioisotope Teletherapy Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Barium use Barium Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Bromine use Bromine ... Radioisotope Dilution Technic use Radioisotope Dilution Technique Radioisotope Dilution Technics use Radioisotope Dilution ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technic use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Technics use Diagnostic ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technique use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Techniques use Diagnostic ...
Radioisotope Identifier. *HPGe Detectors & Spectrometers. *High Purity Germanium Detector. *Gamma Spectrometry System ... Cobalt-60 Teletherapy Machines are used for the treatment of localized cancers. The number of teletherapy facilities in the ... The indigenous Cobalt-60 Teletherapy Machine has a capacity of 200 RMM source and its source to iso-centre distance is 80 cm. ...
Section B: Radioisotopes in Cancer Therapy. *McCoig AM, Henry CJ, Milner RJ, et al: Use of Samarium-153-EDTMP for the treatment ... Section A: External Beam Radiation Therapy (Teletherapy) and Brachytherapy. *Thames HD Jr, Withers WR, Peters LJ, et al: ...
Radioisotope Identifier. *HPGe Detectors & Spectrometers. *High Purity Germanium Detector. *Gamma Spectrometry System ... Cobalt-60 Teletherapy Machine. *Brachytherapy Systems. *Safety & Security *Fire Fighting. *Baggage and Freight X-ray Inspection ...
Solutions to this problem include radiation therapy (both brachytherapy and teletherapy) and surgery. ... or a radioisotope or an immune stimulating factor. Specially targeted delivery vehicles vary in their stability, selectivity ...
... ... 1959)‎. Joint IAEA/WHO Study Group on the Use of Radioisotope Teletherapy Units and Supervoltage Radiation in Radiotherapy: ...
Radioisotope Teletherapy/adverse effects*; Salivary Gland Neoplasms/radiotherapy; Urinary Bladder/drug effects*; Urine/cytology ...
Radioisotope Teletherapy Actions. * Search in PubMed * Search in MeSH * Add to Search ...
Radioisotope Teletherapy / adverse effects Actions. * Search in PubMed * Search in MeSH * Add to Search ...
Joint IAEA/WHO Study Group on the Use of Radioisotope Teletherapy Units and Supervoltage Radiation in Radiotherapy: report  ... Groupe Mixte AIEA/OMS dÉtude sur lEmploi en Radiothérapie de la Téléthérapie par Radio-isotopes et des Appareils à Haute ...
Complications of the static and movable radioisotope teletherapy of cancer of the cervix uteri].. Falileeva EP; Teleus TA; ...
RADIOISOTOPE TELETHER. Entry Term(s). Teleradioisotope Therapy Teletherapy, Radioisotope Therapy, Teleradioisotope Date ... Radioisotope Teletherapy Preferred Term Term UI T035018. Date01/01/1999. LexicalTag NON. ThesaurusID NLM (1966). ... Radioisotope Teletherapy Preferred Concept UI. M0018424. Scope Note. A type of high-energy radiotherapy using a beam of gamma- ... Teletherapy, Radioisotope Term UI T035017. Date03/30/1974. LexicalTag NON. ThesaurusID UNK (19XX). ...
RADIOISOTOPE TELETHER. Entry Term(s). Teleradioisotope Therapy Teletherapy, Radioisotope Therapy, Teleradioisotope Date ... Radioisotope Teletherapy Preferred Term Term UI T035018. Date01/01/1999. LexicalTag NON. ThesaurusID NLM (1966). ... Radioisotope Teletherapy Preferred Concept UI. M0018424. Scope Note. A type of high-energy radiotherapy using a beam of gamma- ... Teletherapy, Radioisotope Term UI T035017. Date03/30/1974. LexicalTag NON. ThesaurusID UNK (19XX). ...
Cobalt radioisotopes--therapeutic use.. Radioisotope teletherapy. National Library of Medicine Call No.: QZ 269 ... Cobalt-60 teletherapy : Cobalt-60 teletherapy : a compendium of international practice, a joint undertaking of the ...
Test Radioimmunotherapy Radioisotope Dilution Technique Radioisotope Renography Radioisotope Teletherapy Radioisotopes ... Childhood Lead Radioisotopes Leadership Learning Learning Curve Learning Disorders Leasing, Property Least-Squares Analysis ... Nervous System Mercury Radioisotopes Meridians Meristem Merkel cell polyomavirus Merkel Cells Mermithoidea Merozoite Surface ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Techniques, Respiratory System Diagnostic Techniques, Surgical Diagnostic Techniques, Urological ...
Radioisotope Teletherapy General WN 250.5.R3 For treatment of neoplasms QZ 269 ...
What does Cobalt-60-Teletherapy do?. Cobalt therapy is the medical use of gamma rays from the radioisotope cobalt-60 to treat ... Beginning in the 1950s, cobalt-60 was widely used in external beam radiotherapy (teletherapy) machines, which produced a beam ...
It produces a complete range of products such as teletherapy sources, high purity fluoride gases, cobalt sources and provides a ... wide selection of radioisotopes and radiochemicals for medical devices, calibration, clinical research, life sciences and ...
Approximately 5,000 natural and artificial radioisotopes have been identified. Some radioisotopes, such as Molybdenum-99, are ... Usually a sealed source of radiation used in teletherapy and industrial radiography, as a power source for batteries, or in ... Radioisotope. An unstable isotope of an element that decays or disintegrates spontaneously, emitting energy (radiation). ... A technique for estimating the age of an object by measuring the amounts of various radioisotopes in it. ...
Radioisotope Teletherapy Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Barium use Barium Radioisotopes Radioisotopes, Bromine use Bromine ... Radioisotope Dilution Technic use Radioisotope Dilution Technique Radioisotope Dilution Technics use Radioisotope Dilution ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technic use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Technics use Diagnostic ... Radioisotope Diagnostic Technique use Diagnostic Techniques, Radioisotope Radioisotope Diagnostic Techniques use Diagnostic ...
This risk is similar between radioisotopes, notched and non-notched plaque designs and if TTT is used or not. The high rate of ... In contrast to brachytherapy, the tumor height does not necessarily have to shrink as a result of teletherapy. Therefore, the ... there were no significant differences in the risk for tumor progression or lack of regression between radioisotopes and notched ... as a possible approach for monitoring the therapy response after teletherapy of choroidal melanoma. Materials and Methods: A ...
H.6 Radioisotope release monitoring and containment (if applicable). Exhaust ventilation from hot cells, the radioisotope ... a radioactive source teletherapy machine;. *a particle accelerator that is capable of producing nuclear energy and has a beam ... If the radioisotopes produced by the accelerator are to be shipped to and processed at a site independent from the accelerator ... If the facility is expected to process more than 1015 Bq of radioisotopes per year, it qualifies as a Class IB nuclear facility ...
Bone-seeking radioisotope: Radioisotopes that target bones for imaging and therapy.. Adverse Effects and Side Effects. * ... Teletherapy1. by photon. *Superficial X-rays. *Orthovoltage X-rays. *Megavoltage X-rays ...
But Wall Street needed a union when the radioisotopes replaced no new concours on when emergency sue to meddle its labour of ... Teletherapy. Dautres concepts know les women, N? Educacion IFPIeIE Aulas de verano. Revista de documents departments, epub ...
Radioisotope source for radiotherapy 100,000,000 million Bq. N.B. Though the intrinsic radioactivity is the same, the radiation ... The teletherapy source contained 93 grams of caesium-137 (51 TBq) encased in a shielding canister 51 mm diameter and 48 mm long ...
As the user moves to other PET radioisotopes, the energy offers adequate production yields of radioisotopes such as 18F ( ... Teletherapy Machines. *Patient Immobilization. *Serial Tomotherapy. *Medical Physics Accessories. *Radiotherapy Simulators. * ...
Teletherapy radionuclide contour detection system (physical object) {466260005 , SNOMED-CT } Teletherapy radionuclide system ( ... Radioisotope calibration system (physical object) {463800007 , SNOMED-CT } Radionuclide neutron activation system (physical ...
They supplied equipment and so forth for radioisotope work..0 I inaugurated [tracer17 work] down there. Then I came back to the ... cobalt teletherapy 84--as youve already mentioned, some high-voltage therapies were being developed. And you were looking for ...
Uveal Melanoma with Thickness between 4 and 6 mm Treated with two Different Radioisotopes (I125 or Ru106): Single Institution ... of tissue compensator and investigation of resultant dose distribution effects on treatments performed with Co-60 teletherapy ...
  • External beam radiation therapy or teletherapy. (anavara.com)
  • This feature makes it more preferred than external beam radiation therapy (teletherapy). (anavara.com)
  • Unsealed source radiotherapy, also called a systemic radioisotope. (anavara.com)
  • Scavengers broke into an abandoned medical clinic and stole a disused teletherapy machine. (fas.org)
  • The cobalt-60 was reportedly from an old teletherapy machine. (fas.org)
  • A fresh cobalt-60 source for a teletherapy machine could contain upwards of ten thousand Curies. (fas.org)
  • The indigenous Cobalt-60 Teletherapy Machine has a capacity of 200 RMM source and its source to iso-centre distance is 80 cm. (healvitagroup.com)
  • The effects could have been worse, but an extensive cleanup effort, costing tens of millions of dollars, captured about 1200 Curies of the estimated 1350 Curies of radioactivity in the disused teletherapy source. (fas.org)
  • For an in-depth assessment of the radioisotopes of security concern and the commercial radioactive source industry, see the January 2003 report "Commercial Radioactive Sources: Surveying the Security Risks," by myself, Tahseen Kazi, and Judith Perrera. (fas.org)
  • Cobalt-60 Teletherapy Machines are used for the treatment of localized cancers. (healvitagroup.com)
  • Cobalt-60 teletherapy : a compendium of international practice, a joint undertaking of the International Atomic Energy Agency and the World Health Organization / compiled by Montague Cohen and Joseph S. Mitchell. (who.int)
  • Cobalt radioisotopes--therapeutic use. (who.int)
  • It produces a complete range of products such as teletherapy sources, high purity fluoride gases, cobalt sources and provides a wide selection of radioisotopes and radiochemicals for medical devices, calibration, clinical research, life sciences and industrial applications. (insurances.net)
  • A type of high-energy radiotherapy using a beam of gamma-radiation produced by a radioisotope source encapsulated within a teletherapy unit. (nih.gov)