So my uncles rad-onc told him that he should proton therapy for his brain mass but I'm wondering how this shit works that makes it "better" than standard x-rays.
The only thing I can think of is that since protons, unlike photons, have mass, one can better control the proton beam's flux.
Thoughts?
Michael Martinez
basically with x-ray you have to go all or nothing almost. Which means you can destroy too much surrounding stuff, or not do enough damage.
With protons, as you said, they have mass and charge so you can give them a specific energy to start with, which determines how deep they go. They won't stop before, they won't stop after. Just at the right depth (relatively of course).
Evan Cook
Are protons themselves more radioactive than photons?
William Allen
It's quite expensive if you're not insured.
But neutron therapy is free of charge.
Dylan Torres
>paying for cancer treatment LAND OF THE FREE, HOME OF THE BRAVE.
Elijah Campbell
kek'd some
Aiden Gomez
I'm a radiation biologist.
It depends what kind of tumor you have and where it sits. Different kind of irradiation causes different kinds of damage. With protons it's like a trajectory of DNA damage in the nucleus. With x-rays it's all over the nucleus, but random.
As stated, it depends on the kind of tumor etc. which one is better, so the doctor is probably right in suggesting it.
Ryan Wright
> paying for other people's cancer treatment.
William Nguyen
kek'd
Luis Gutierrez
>not just enslaving the entire medical profession and forcing them to work at gunpoint
Hunter Davis
>not helping other people who will help you in need
Grayson Mitchell
>anyone who gets cancer before making their fortune deserves to die anyway
Adam Powell
...
David Turner
Amoral asshole detected.
Jace Cook
> giving the plebian class free stuff, so that they become your power base, so you can seize power from the aristocracy, name yourself dictator perpetuo and rule all of Rome
Connor Taylor
Just this
William Hill
this shit is so cool went to TRIUMF in BC and they talked about how they use the cyclotron to shoot protons into peoples eyes to kill tumors, they said it was safe ass shit with like 96% survival which was more than just removing the eye and you kept the eye.
Julian Cruz
protons have shorter (and finite) ranges in matter xrays interact probabilistically so their ranges are less defined (not at all actually) and stochastic. so proton beams can deliver larger doses to tumors and lower doses to surrounding tissue
source: pic related
Gabriel Kelly
they dont all penetrate exactly the same distance, because of the beam distribution and chemical variation of the target, but yes, it's much more defined and "pinpoint" than an xray treatment
Kayden Walker
not everyone studies physics. what the fuck am I looking at here?