1974
DOI: 10.1159/000251926
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Spätresultate von bestrahlten Plantarwarzen

Abstract: 100 of 250 patients treated for plantar warts with an irradiation dosage of 3–4 × 1000 r/ 50 kV/1.0 mm Al were reexamined after an average interval of 11.3 years. The following results were obtained in the 91 patients who were cured by this treatment: 7 patients showed serious post-irradiation damage; in 2 patients recurrence had taken place; 31 revealed slight X-ray changes of the skin, whereas in 51 patients no pathological changes by irradiation could be detected

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Cited by 11 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Recent publications state that side effects are practically absent following cautious radiotherapy of resistant plantar warts ,,,. Evaluation of late results in irradiated patients revealed that individual doses of 200 to 300 R, given at one to three week intervals up to a total dose of not more than 800 to 1000 R (Table ) are not followed by early or late sequelae, especially not chronic radiodermatitis.…”
Section: Plantar Wartsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent publications state that side effects are practically absent following cautious radiotherapy of resistant plantar warts ,,,. Evaluation of late results in irradiated patients revealed that individual doses of 200 to 300 R, given at one to three week intervals up to a total dose of not more than 800 to 1000 R (Table ) are not followed by early or late sequelae, especially not chronic radiodermatitis.…”
Section: Plantar Wartsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Faessler and Krebs 11 examined 100 patients with 157 plantar warts that had been treated three or four times an average of 11.3 years earlier using doses of 1000 r at 50 kV, 10 mA (HVL = 0.6 mm of Al). Of the 157 treatment sites, 45% could be recognized.…”
Section: Commentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…T he safety of radiation therapy for benign dermatoses has been challenged for over two decades. Cannon entitled his report of 1959 “Malignant Irradiation for Benign Conditions.” Subsequent and recent reports in the European literature (1967, 1972, 1974) recount an unacceptably high percentage of late sequelae in X‐ray‐treated plantar warts ,,…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%