Guest guest Posted July 10, 2007 Report Share Posted July 10, 2007 May I Highly suggest reading this article as a primer on Cyberknife? http://www.usc.edu/uscnews/stories/9005.html Adler Jr., M.D., a Stanford University neurosurgeon and Apuzzo's colleague, created the device with input from his former mentor. Currently, the USC/Norris Cancer Hospital is one of only six U.S. hospitals to have the CyberKnife. some selected sections from the Website. (I hope they understand the important use of this here...) Physicians at the Keck School of Medicine of USC have added a weapon derived from military technology to their arsenal to bring the war home to cancers wherever they hide in the body. The tool is called the CyberKnife®. This stereotactic radiosurgery system uses a three-dimensional terrain mapping and localization technology. Physicians at the Keck School of Medicine of USC have added a weapon derived from military technology to their arsenal to bring the war home to cancers wherever they hide in the body. The tool is called the CyberKnife®. This stereotactic radiosurgery system uses a three-dimensional terrain mapping and localization technology. Apuzzo says this device offers patients the potential for a safe, noninvasive treatment of tumors anywhere in the body-a major improvement over previous systems that were restricted to treating tumors of the head. As a result, people with otherwise untreatable tumors MAY suddenly have a new weapon to fight their disease. Apuzzo says this device offers patients the potential for a safe, noninvasive treatment of tumors anywhere in the body-a major improvement over previous systems that were restricted to treating tumors of the head. As a result, people with otherwise untreatable tumors may suddenly have a new weapon to fight their disease. Adler Jr., M.D., a Stanford University neurosurgeon and Apuzzo's colleague, created the device with input from his former mentor. Currently, the USC/Norris Cancer Hospital is one of only six U.S. hospitals to have the CyberKnife. Physicians are working toward treating conditions beyond the head and spine to include certain tumors and lesions in the lungs, liver, pancreas and prostate. Please go to the web site to read all the important details. Only Facts based on the ETHICAL use of science shall be my guide in educating those who seek knowledge. ________________________________________________________________________________\ ____ TV dinner still cooling? Check out " Tonight's Picks " on Yahoo! TV. http://tv.yahoo.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 10, 2007 Report Share Posted July 10, 2007 Another good link Mel, thank you. One of the issues that always interests me is how to target the gland when radiating it so that the dose hits the gland and does not go beyond to damage other organs. I have read of various ways this is done – Loma I know use a balloon to stabilize the gland – hence the Brotherhood of the Balloon created by alumni from that institution. Other methods include implants into the gland that show up on MRI scans. In the piece you link to here, it is said: <snip> The CyberKnife, …. is the only stereotactic radiosurgery system that uses the body's skeletal structure as a reference point without the use of invasive restraints. Preoperative CT images are used to define the spatial relationship between the patient's bone structure and the lesion, creating the computerized 3-D maps that will guide the machine. " The tracking technology was modeled after the military technology of a cruise missile, ……. You make a map of the patient's anatomy, and the computer's robot drive compares that with real-time scans of the body during treatment to ensure that the beams hit only the target and nothing else. " Before radiation beams are delivered, the system's X-ray cameras take images to detect any patient movement. These radiographs will show any shifts in bony landmarks, which in turn are used to determine changes in the target location based on the landmarks' previous sites. Based on the computer's analysis of the X-ray images, the highly mobile and dexterous robotic arm automatically compensates for changes in target position during treatment to ensure accurate delivery of each radiation beam. <snip> And in the Q & A site, it is said <snip> The CK system using a unique robotic mechanism that allows for targeting of the prostate, even as it moves due to air in the rectum or urine filling the bladder. No other system has that capability and results in sub-millimeter accuracy. Jerome J. Spunberg, M.D., FACR, FACRO Cyberknife Center Of Palm Beach <snip> I wonder how well this works? On the one hand they say that the tracking system works by referring to the skeletal structure as a reference point and that’s fine for when there is a movement in the structure but but the gland moves relative to the structure – how is that tracked. To extend the comparison they make, a cruise missile may accurately hit a pre-programmed target (although there are some doubts about the accuracy level claimed but if the target is moving, I don’t think the cruise missile system tracks that. All the best Terry Herbert in Melbourne Australia Diagnosed ‘96: Age 54: Stage T2b: PSA 7.2: Gleason 3+3=6: No treatment. June '04: TURP. Jun '07 PSA 35.0 My site is at www.prostatecancerwatchfulwaiting.co.za It is a tragedy of the world that no one knows what he doesn’t know, and the less a man knows, the more sure he is that he knows everything. Joyce Carey From: ProstateCancerSupport [mailto:ProstateCancerSupport ] On Behalf Of Mel Sent: Tuesday, 10 July 2007 9:36 PM To: ProstateCancerSupport Subject: CyberKnife : http://www.usc.edu/uscnews/stories/9005.html May I Highly suggest reading this article as a primer on Cyberknife? http://www.usc.edu/uscnews/stories/9005.html Adler Jr., M.D., a Stanford University neurosurgeon and Apuzzo's colleague, created the device with input from his former mentor. Currently, the USC/Norris Cancer Hospital is one of only six U.S. hospitals to have the CyberKnife. some selected sections from the Website. (I hope they understand the important use of this here...) Physicians at the Keck School of Medicine of USC have added a weapon derived from military technology to their arsenal to bring the war home to cancers wherever they hide in the body. The tool is called the CyberKnife®. This stereotactic radiosurgery system uses a three-dimensional terrain mapping and localization technology. Physicians at the Keck School of Medicine of USC have added a weapon derived from military technology to their arsenal to bring the war home to cancers wherever they hide in the body. The tool is called the CyberKnife®. This stereotactic radiosurgery system uses a three-dimensional terrain mapping and localization technology. Apuzzo says this device offers patients the potential for a safe, noninvasive treatment of tumors anywhere in the body-a major improvement over previous systems that were restricted to treating tumors of the head. As a result, people with otherwise untreatable tumors MAY suddenly have a new weapon to fight their disease. Apuzzo says this device offers patients the potential for a safe, noninvasive treatment of tumors anywhere in the body-a major improvement over previous systems that were restricted to treating tumors of the head. As a result, people with otherwise untreatable tumors may suddenly have a new weapon to fight their disease. Adler Jr., M.D., a Stanford University neurosurgeon and Apuzzo's colleague, created the device with input from his former mentor. Currently, the USC/Norris Cancer Hospital is one of only six U.S. hospitals to have the CyberKnife. Physicians are working toward treating conditions beyond the head and spine to include certain tumors and lesions in the lungs, liver, pancreas and prostate. Please go to the web site to read all the important details. Only Facts based on the ETHICAL use of science shall be my guide in educating those who seek knowledge. __________________________________________________________ TV dinner still cooling? Check out " Tonight's Picks " on Yahoo! TV. http://tv.yahoo.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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