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Limits of radiobiology in conventional postirradiation of breast cancer

Abstract

The conventional postirradiation of breast cancer including radiation pneumonitis in relation to age and irradiation method, are discussed. The risk of radiation pneumonitis is with a single surface dose of 65 mC/kg higher than with 52 mC/kg. The dose at the chest wall is for the development of a radiation pneumonitis of lower importance than the dose at the supra- and intraclavicular field. At both these fields intersections of the cones of radiation in the lungs, which could cause dose peaks not possible to evaluate, must be taken into consideration. At the reported and wanted tumor dose of 1032 mC/kg at the deferent axillary lymph tracts a more indulgent method with a single dose of 65 mC/kg and with a prolongation by 3 series a pneumonitis could not be avoided in 30% of the irradiated women. Because of the harmless process one could answer for the risk of a radiation pneumonitis, if other therapeutic possibilities are not available. The age of the patients is not a special risk as to radiation pneumonitis.
Authors:
van der Wall, H [1] 
  1. Bezirkskrankenhaus Schwerin (German Democratic Republic)
Publication Date:
Aug 01, 1982
Product Type:
Journal Article
Reference Number:
AIX-14-731788; EDB-83-069662
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: Radiobiol., Radiother.; (German Democratic Republic); Journal Volume: 23:4
Subject:
62 RADIOLOGY AND NUCLEAR MEDICINE; 63 RADIATION, THERMAL, AND OTHER ENVIRON. POLLUTANT EFFECTS ON LIVING ORGS. AND BIOL. MAT.; CARCINOMAS; RADIOTHERAPY; MAMMARY GLANDS; PNEUMONITIS; RADIOINDUCTION; SIDE EFFECTS; AGE DEPENDENCE; COBALT 60; FIBROSIS; GAMMA RADIATION; IRRADIATION PROCEDURES; LUNGS; PATIENTS; RADIATION DOSES; X RADIATION; BETA DECAY RADIOISOTOPES; BETA-MINUS DECAY RADIOISOTOPES; BODY; COBALT ISOTOPES; DISEASES; DOSES; ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION; GLANDS; INTERMEDIATE MASS NUCLEI; INTERNAL CONVERSION RADIOISOTOPES; IONIZING RADIATIONS; ISOMERIC TRANSITION ISOTOPES; ISOTOPES; MEDICINE; MINUTES LIVING RADIOISOTOPES; NEOPLASMS; NUCLEAR MEDICINE; NUCLEI; ODD-ODD NUCLEI; ORGANS; PATHOLOGICAL CHANGES; RADIATIONS; RADIOISOTOPES; RADIOLOGY; RESPIRATORY SYSTEM; THERAPY; YEARS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES; 550603* - Medicine- External Radiation in Therapy- (1980-); 560151 - Radiation Effects on Animals- Man
OSTI ID:
6376995
Country of Origin:
Germany
Language:
German
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: CODEN: RDBGA
Submitting Site:
HEDB
Size:
Pages: 357-368
Announcement Date:
Mar 01, 1983

Citation Formats

van der Wall, H. Limits of radiobiology in conventional postirradiation of breast cancer. Germany: N. p., 1982. Web.
van der Wall, H. Limits of radiobiology in conventional postirradiation of breast cancer. Germany.
van der Wall, H. 1982. "Limits of radiobiology in conventional postirradiation of breast cancer." Germany.
@misc{etde_6376995,
title = {Limits of radiobiology in conventional postirradiation of breast cancer}
author = {van der Wall, H}
abstractNote = {The conventional postirradiation of breast cancer including radiation pneumonitis in relation to age and irradiation method, are discussed. The risk of radiation pneumonitis is with a single surface dose of 65 mC/kg higher than with 52 mC/kg. The dose at the chest wall is for the development of a radiation pneumonitis of lower importance than the dose at the supra- and intraclavicular field. At both these fields intersections of the cones of radiation in the lungs, which could cause dose peaks not possible to evaluate, must be taken into consideration. At the reported and wanted tumor dose of 1032 mC/kg at the deferent axillary lymph tracts a more indulgent method with a single dose of 65 mC/kg and with a prolongation by 3 series a pneumonitis could not be avoided in 30% of the irradiated women. Because of the harmless process one could answer for the risk of a radiation pneumonitis, if other therapeutic possibilities are not available. The age of the patients is not a special risk as to radiation pneumonitis.}
journal = []
volume = {23:4}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Germany}
year = {1982}
month = {Aug}
}