Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy (or radiotherapy) is the medical use of ionizing radiation as part of cancer treatment to control malignant cells (not to be confused with radiology, the use of radiation in medical imaging and diagnosis). Although radiotherapy is often used as part of curative therapy, it is occasionally used as a palliative treatment, where cure is not possible and the aim is for symptomatic relief. Other rare uses are to wipe out the immune system prior to transplant to reduce the incidence of tissue rejection, called total body irradiation (TBI); to calm hyperactive muscles—such as might cause twitchy eyes—with mild superficial treatments; and to form scar tissue around a stent to reinforce the vascular wall.
Kinds of radiation therapy
Three main divisions of radiotherapy are external beam radiotherapy (XBRT) or teletherapy, brachytherapy or sealed source radiotherapy and unsealed source radiotherapy. The differences relate to the position of the radiation source; external is outside the body, while sealed and unsealed source radiotherapy has radioactive material delivered internally. Brachytherapy sealed sources are usually extracted later, while unsealed sources may be administered by injection or ingestion. Proton therapy is a special case of external beam radiotherapy where the particles are protons.
Related Topics:
External beam radiotherapy - Teletherapy - Brachytherapy - Sealed source radiotherapy - Unsealed source radiotherapy - Proton therapy - Proton
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Roughly half of the 2500 worldwide radiotherapy clinics are in the US (as of 2001).
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