|
What
is radiation therapy?
Radiation
is a special kind of energy carried by waves or a stream of particles.
It can come from special machines or from radioactive substances.
Many years ago doctors learned how to use this energy to see inside
the body and find disease. You've probably seen a chest X-ray or
X-ray pictures of your teeth or your bones. When radiation is used
at high levels (many times those used for X-ray exams) this energy
can be used to treat cancer and other illnesses. Special equipment
is used to aim the radiation at tumors or areas of the body where
there is disease. The use of high-energy rays or particles to treat
disease is called radiation therapy. Sometimes it's called radiotherapy,
X-ray therapy, cobalt therapy, electron beam therapy, or irradiation.
How
does radiation therapy work?
High
levels of radiation can kill cells or keep them from growing and
dividing. Radiation therapy is a useful tool for treating cancer
because cancer cells are growing and dividing more rapidly than
many of the normal cells around them. In addition, most normal cells
appear to recover more fully from radiation effects than cancer
cells. Doctors carefully limit the intensity of treatments and the
amount of normal tissue being treated so that the cancer will be
harmed more than you will.

What
are the benefits of radiation therapy?
Radiation
therapy is an effective way to treat many kinds of cancer in almost
any part of the body. Half of all people with cancer are treated
with radiation, and the number of cancer patients who have been
cured is rising every day. For many patients, radiation is the only
kind of treatment needed. Thousands of people are free of cancer
after having radiation treatments alone or in combination with surgery,
chemotherapy, and biological therapy.
Doctors
can use radiation before surgery to shrink a tumor. After surgery,
radiation therapy may be used to stop the growth of any cancer cells
that remain. In some cases, instead of surgery, doctors use radiation
along with anticancer drugs to destroy the cancer.
Even
when curing the cancer is not possible, radiation therapy can still
bring relief. Many patients find the quality of their lives improved
when radiation therapy is used to shrink tumors and reduce pressure,
bleeding, pain, or other symptoms of cancer. This is called palliative
treatment.

Are
there risks involved?
As
with many other treatments for disease, there are risks for patients
who are receiving radiation therapy. The brief, high-level doses
of radiation that damage or destroy cancer cells can also hurt normal
cells. When this happens, the patient has side effects. The risk
of side effects is usually less than the benefits of killing cancer
cells.
Your
doctor will not advise you to have any treatment unless the benefits—control
of disease and relief from symptoms—are greater than the known
risks. Although it will be many years before scientists know all
of the possible risks of radiation therapy, they now know that it
can control cancer and help prevent its spread throughout the body.

How
is radiation therapy given?
Radiation
therapy can be in either of two forms: external or internal. Some
patients have both forms, one after the other.
Most
people who receive radiation therapy for cancer have the external
type. It is usually given during outpatient visits to-a hospital
or treatment center. In external therapy, a machine directs the
high-energy rays or particles at the cancer and a margin of normal
tissue near it.
One
type of machine that is used for radiation therapy is called a linear
accelerator. This machine uses the effects of electricity on subatomic
particles to produce high-energy radiation for treatment. High-energy
rays may also come from a machine that contains a radioactive substance
such as cobalt-60.
The
various machines used for external radiation work in slightly different
ways. Some are better for treating cancers near the skin surface;
others work best on cancers deeper in the body.
When
internal radiation therapy is used, a radioactive substance, or
source, is sealed in small containers such as thin wires or tubes
called implants. The implant is placed directly into a tumor or
inserted into a body cavity. Sometimes after a tumor has been removed
by surgery, implants are put into the area around the incision to
kill any tumor cells that may remain.
Another
type of internal radiation therapy uses unsealed radioactive sources.
The source is either taken by mouth or is injected into the body.
If you have this type of treatment, you will probably need to stay
in the hospital for several days.

What
is radiation simulation?
Before
you receive your first radiation treatment, your treatment will
be planned in the radiation treatment center. This planning is called
a Simulation." The simulation makes sure that the radiation
will treat exactly the parts of the body where the cancer tumor
is. The simulation also makes sure areas of the body that do not
need radiation will be protected.
The
doctor will decide where you are to receive the radiation. He or
she will decide what kind of radiation will be used. Your skin will
be marked with small ink dots or even a tattoo so the doctor will
know exactly where to direct the radiation. A block or shield will
be placed on the radiation machine to keep the radiation from treating
normal tissue that needs to be protected. Finally, you will be positioned.
It is very important that your body be in the same position every
time Plaster casts and other devices may be used to hold you in
place. This will allow the exact same areas to be treated every
time you receive radiation.
The
simulation is a practice run for your first radiation treatment.
After the simulation is finished, everyone will be ready to start
the treatment.
Notes:
Source:
Radiation Therapy and You. ~ Guide to Sell-Help During Treatment,
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Public Health Service,
National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute. 1992.
Source:
Copyright 2001, Aspen Publishers, Inc.

|