A new imaging technique pin-points the exact location and size of prostate cancer
Published:
18 June 2001 y., Monday
A new imaging technique that pin-points the exact location and size of prostate cancer could help hundreds of thousands of men worldwide. Other types of cancer could also be targeted.
The technique combines two existing imaging technologies, computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), to target radiotherapy to the cancer cells and not surrounding healthy tissue.
CT scans are used to plan radiotherapy for most cancers, as the bone structure is easily visible. "The problem with CT, though, is that it doesn't give us detail of the soft tissues," says Peter Hoskins from Mount Vernon Hospital in Middlesex. All radiotherapists see is a "blob".
On the other hand, MRI can define tumours and soft tissue very clearly, but is less good at revealing the bone position. This means there is no "map" for use on directing the radiation.
The software developed at King's College London and the Royal Marsden Hospital now allows the soft tissue information to be transposed from the MRI to the CT scan. They plan to use this composite imaging in applying brachytherapy, where a series of radiation sources are focused directly into the walnut-sized prostate gland.
Radiotherapists must treat the entire tumour, but do not want to irradiate healthy tissue. Side-effects of such damage include diarrhoea, impotence and incontinence. The new imaging technique is expected to be validated later in 2001. The team believes it could avoid normal tissue damage in any cancer where MRI currently gives better images than CT scanning, such as brain tumours.
Šaltinis:
newscientist.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The concept that each person on the planet is just six handshakes removed from every other person has frightening implications
more »
The World Health Organization, WHO, says it is starting a special fund to combat SARS, primarily in mainland China and Hong Kong
more »
European countries are to step up checks on air passengers arriving from countries affected by the Sars virus
more »
Kazakh Prime Minister during a government session on 29 April ordered that a special program of urgent measures be drawn up to prevent the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome
more »
The secret to a long life
more »
Fear of SARS led to the headmistress of Harrogate Ladies’ College yesterday locking herself in a boarding house with 43 of her pupils
more »
Some of the starkest early reports about the deadly SARS pneumonia came not from health authorities, but from Internet discussions in which emergency-room physicians swapped details about the start of the epidemic
more »
Officials say 53 now have died; WHO experts study possible animal link to mystery disease
more »
The construction of the Yuri Gagarin Space Station would require 3-3.5 years
more »
Three Taiwan public health experts have traveled to mainland China to join their counterparts from other countries in surveying the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) there
more »