|
|
#280506 - 09/05/08 03:38 AM
Re: Inoperable Malignant Brain Tumors
[Re: Bad Bird]
|
Administrator
Registered: 09/01/97
Loc: CT, US
|
"Gamma Knife" is a marketing phrase, no actual knife-cutting is involved. It is actually focused radiation treatment on tumors or other unhealthy tissue within the brain that makes it possible to deliver extremely high does of radiation to focii deep within brain tissue that would be destroyed by conventional surgery when accessed with scalpels. The gamma radiation kills the tissue it is aimed at with very little damage to surrounding brain tissue. Scalpel surgey, in comparison, wrecks ruin and havoc on healthy grey and white matter no matter how skilled the neurosurgeon is, as he cuts a path through healthy tissue to the place where the bad gunk needs to be excised, it's unavoidable.
Gamma radiation is focused on various locations within and surrounding the area of the malignancy, and the patient (who is usually awake for the painless procedure) is strapped and immobilized on a table which is electronically moved beneath the gamma beam. Destruction of healthy tissues is kept to a minimum this way, although there is some resultant swelling and inflamation following the procedure, as one might expect from radiological burning. After the procedure, the patient walks out, no hospitalization required.
This type of bloodless surgery has had, in certian types of conditions and cancers, high rates of success, but not every condition lends itself to this treatment. Epileptics are another class of sufferers who have found gamma knife surery a terrific boon, it isn't only for tumors.
I don't know too much about this new laser surgery yet, but I'm interested in finding out more.
_________________________
Helice
Nemo me impune lacesset. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Of all the tyrannies that affect mankind, tyranny in religion is the worst; every other species of tyranny is limited to the world we live in; but this attempts to stride beyond the grave, and seeks to pursue us into eternity."
-- Thomas Paine
|
|
Top
|
Reply
Quote
Quick Reply
Quick Quote
|
|
|
|
#280593 - 09/05/08 05:42 PM
Re: Inoperable Malignant Brain Tumors
[Re: Helice]
|
experienced member
Registered: 02/17/08
Loc: WA, USA
|
Gamma radiation is focused on various locations within and surrounding the area of the malignancy, and the patient (who is usually awake for the painless procedure) is strapped and immobilized on a table which is electronically moved beneath the gamma beam. Destruction of healthy tissues is kept to a minimum this way, although there is some resultant swelling and inflamation
I don't know too much about this new laser surgery yet, but I'm interested in finding out more. Gamma and laser surgery are really quite similar as they both use radiation focused on the cancer. As understand it, the laser surgery is more narrowly focused (both in beam size and in heating effects on surrounding tissue). The gamma surgery, however, is totally non-invasive, while the laser surgery involves positioning a very fine fiber-optic cable right at the cancer. Both use the same technology of CAT-scans and MRIs with external positioning "cages" to know exactly where the cancer is. (Similar to what has been discussed in the "Essential Tremor" thread.) The Gamma Knife technique requires repeatedly 'zapping' the tumor from many directions so that the tissue killed is the tissue that has received the most radiation; the focal point. To do this the patient is repeatedly repositioned under computer control. In the Laser technique, the fiber optic cable is inserted through a small hole in the skull until the end is right at the tumor, which has been dyed (via the bloodstream) with a chemical that is attracted to cancer and reactive to the laser wavelength used. In my layman's opinion: I would go with the laser process because it sounds like it is much more focused. Positioning errors and beam dispersion could mean more adjacent tissue damage from the gamma knife process. The laser positioning process is becoming quite common and physically correct positioning can be verified once, whereas the gamma knife beam accuracy not only cannot be positively verified, but it must be verified for each position. AGAIN: I'm not a doctor and should you have a brain tumor SEE YOUR DOCTOR AND DISREGARD ANYTHING THAT I MAY HAVE SAID! One source of additional information is: http://tinyurl.com/6zvqa3
_________________________
Bad Bird
|
|
Top
|
Reply
Quote
Quick Reply
Quick Quote
|
|
|
|
|
8558 Members
35 Forums
11692 Topics
243896 Posts
Max Online: 2631 @ 03/18/08 12:30 AM
|
|
|
|