13 research outputs found

    Beliefs and practices of patients with advanced cancer: implications for communication

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    The aim of this study was to investigate the beliefs that patients with advanced cancer held about the curability of their cancer, their use of alternatives to conventional medical treatment, and their need to have control over decisions about treatment. Of 149 patients who fulfilled the criteria for participation and completed a self-administered questionnaire, 45 patients (31%) believed their cancer was incurable, 61 (42%) were uncertain and 39 (27%) believed their cancer was curable. The index of need for control over treatment decisions was low in 53 patients (35.6%) and high in only 17 patients (11.4%). Committed users of alternatives to conventional medical treatments were more likely to believe that their cancer was curable (

    Dosimetric effects of a high-density spinal implant

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    In this study, a treatment plan for a spinal lesion, with all beams transmitted though a titanium vertebral reconstruction implant, was used to investigate the potential effect of a high-density implant on a three-dimensional dose distribution for a radiotherapy treatment. The BEAMnrc/DOSXYZnrc and MCDTK Monte Carlo codes were used to simulate the treatment using both a simplified, recltilinear model and a detailed model incorporating the full complexity of the patient anatomy and treatment plan. The resulting Monte Carlo dose distributions showed that the commercial treatment planning system failed to accurately predict both the depletion of dose downstream of the implant and the increase in scattered dose adjacent to the implant. Overall, the dosimetric effect of the implant was underestimated by the commercial treatment planning system and overestimated by the simplified Monte Carlo model. The value of performing detailed Monte Carlo calculations, using the full patient and treatment geometry, was demonstrated

    Restoration of tolerance to rat hepatic allografts by spleen-derived passenger leukocytes

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    The tolerance induced by orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) in certain combinations of rat strains can be prevented by total body irradiation (TBI) of the donor. We demonstrate here that the intravenous inoculation of splenic leukocytes into irradiated donors before OLT could re-establish tolerance in association with a state of microchimerism detected in the recipients. When donor DA (RT1(a)) strain rats were irradiated with 1000 rad 24 h before liver harvesting and subsequent liver implantation into PVG recipients, five out of six rats died from rejection in this normally tolerogenic OLT (DA-PVG) combination. Injection of 1.5 x 10(8) splenic leukocytes from naive DA rats into the irradiated DA donor rats 24 h before OLT restored the tolerogenic potential of the liver allografts. Immunofluorescence assay revealed an increased number of donor (DA) type cells in the PVG recipient bearing a repopulated DA liver, compared to the PVG recipient of an irradiated liver, These results suggest that passenger leukocytes reconstituted by splenic leukocytes have the capacity to protect liver allografts

    Structure of the elusive hydrido(methylcyclopentadienyl)dicarbonylmanganate(I) anion, [(η<sup>5</sup>-C<sub>5</sub>H<sub>4</sub>Me)Mn(CO)<sub>2</sub>H]-, as determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction

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    The structure of [K(18-crown-6)][(η5-C5H4Me)Mn(CO)2H] has been determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, and the anion is found to adopt a three-legged piano-stool geometry. Its structure is compared with those of related bridging hydride and σ-bond complexes

    Technical Note: Modeling a complex micro-multileaf collimator using the standard BEAMnrc distribution

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    Purpose: The component modules in the standard BEAMnrc distribution may appear to be insufficient to model micro-multileaf collimators that have tri-faceted leaf ends and complex leaf profiles. This note indicates, however, that accurate Monte Carlo simulations of radiotherapy beams defined by a complex collimation device can be completed using BEAMnrc's standard VARMLC component module.---------- Methods: That this simple collimator model can produce spatially and dosimetrically accurate micro-collimated fields is illustrated using comparisons with ion chamber and film measurements of the dose deposited by square and irregular fields incident on planar, homogeneous water phantoms.---------- Results: Monte Carlo dose calculations for on- and off-axis fields are shown to produce good agreement with experimental values, even upon close examination of the penumbrae.--------- Conclusions: The use of a VARMLC model of the micro-multileaf collimator, along with a commissioned model of the associated linear accelerator, is therefore recommended as an alternative to the development or use of in-house or third-party component modules for simulating stereotactic radiotherapy and radiosurgery treatments. Simulation parameters for the VARMLC model are provided which should allow other researchers to adapt and use this model to study clinical stereotactic radiotherapy treatments
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