In a patient with Morbus Hodgkin, structural aberrations of the chromosome type in peripheral lymphocytes were analyzed during radiation therapy (accumulated target dose 44.6 Gy: 22 fractions of 1.8 Gy each and 2 fractions of 2.5 Gy each at the end of the therapy). The blood was sampled about 5 min after a fraction and/or 24, 48, or 72 h thereafter. The frequency of dicentric chromosomes:acentric fragments:centric ring chromosomes is 37:14:1 throughout the therapy. Independent of the time of blood sampling after a fraction, the distributions of dicentrics and acentrics are overdisperse and represent negative binomial distributions. The yields from these aberrations, as determined during the course of radiotherapy, are best fitted to a linear-quadratic function with a negative quadratic term. The two dose-effect curves (blood sampling about 5 min and 24 to 72 h after a fraction) of dicentrics and acentrics do not differ significantly. Up to an accumulated target dose of about 20 Gy the percentages of cells with chromosome aberrations increase to about 48 to 65% and, at this level, remain constant until the end of therapy.
Because of the lower life expectancy the patient's risk for stochastic effect can be seen as minimal. No clinically relevant deterministic effects will occur. In the case of frequent interventions, the dose absorbed by the radiologist is likely to exceed the prescribed dose limit and to cause remarkable risk for stochastic and non-stochastic effects after many years.
A rare case of a 29-year old woman with aberrant right subclavian artery (A. lusoria) causing dysphagia is presented. This abnormality is generally silent and often an incidental x-ray finding. By means of a median thoracotomy the anomalous vessel was divided at its point of origin and an anastomosis to the ascending aorta with a graft was performed.
Deep and superficial body temperatures were measured by in vitro and in vivo experiments, using a fluoroptic procedure and a variety of magnetic and electromagnetic fields, in the course of magnetic resonance imaging (0.35 T; 1.5 T). In vitro experiments were performed to select and check the appropriate temperature method. Temperature measurements in the human body were carried out centrally (esophageal and rectal measurements). In vivo experiments in 30 volunteers showed no significant changes (p = 0.05) in central or peripheral temperatures resulting from the application of static or dynamic fields or radiofrequency.
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