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SUMMIT, NJ--(MARKET WIRE)--Oct 7, 2005 --

Neurosurgeon, Beyerl, MD, and radiation

oncologist, Louis Schwartz, MD, at Atlantic Health

System's Overlook Hospital will treat a tumor on the

spine using the revolutionary CyberKnife® Radiosurgery

System, live on www.OR-Live.com on Thursday, October

20, 2005 at 1:00 pm ET (17:00 UTC).

Source: slp3D

The broadcast will feature a new and unique treatment

to a tumor on the lower spine using the CyberKnife --

the most advanced radiosurgery device used by

physicians today. The CyberKnife, known for its

sophisticated technology, exceptional accuracy and

non-invasive characteristics, will shrink the tumor on

the spine without using anesthesia and without causing

any pain to the patient. The CyberKnife is the latest

weapon in the medical arsenal to fight cancer and

benign tumors and enables patients to have successful

" surgery " without scalpels or blood.

On October 20th, Drs. Beyerl and Schwartz will treat a

46-year-old patient whose breast cancer has

metastasized to the thoracic spine. Since the

CyberKnife arrived at Overlook more than one year ago,

150 patients have been treated for tumors in the

brain, spine, lung, pancreas, pituitary, and adrenal

gland. The CyberKnife can also treat tumors in the

liver and prostate. Other conditions successfully

treated by the CyberKnife are arterial venous

malformations (groups of abnormal vessels in the

brain) and trigeminal neuralgia (intense facial nerve

pain). Most of these individuals had been told their

condition was inoperable until the CyberKnife

technology became available to them.

The CyberKnife surgery is gaining popularity -- though

only a handful of radiation oncologists and surgeons

in the country currently practice it. Overlook

Hospital in Summit, NJ was the first medical center in

the northeast with the CyberKnife technology.

" We see this opportunity to show radiosurgery online

as an exciting teaching tool for our medical staff,

and a compelling way for patients and their families

to learn more about their own health care and allay

any fears about a potential medical procedure, " said

Norman Luka, MD, medical director, clinical affairs,

Overlook Hospital.

The average CyberKnife treatment takes about an hour

and is completed in one session.

Visit http://www.or-live.com/overlook/1286 now to

learn more and view a program preview. VNR:

http://www.or-live.com/rams/ahs-1286-mkw-q.ram

Video-Link Available:

http://www.marketwire.com/mw/frame_mw?attachid=210252

Someone once gave me a $25.00 gift certificate to DR Kevorkian.

I wish I had kept it now!

Sam I Am

__________________________________

Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005

http://mail.yahoo.com

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