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Image-Guided Radiotherapy of Lung Cancer

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  • Image-Guided Radiotherapy of Lung Cancer

Image-Guided Radiotherapy of Lung Cancer

By James D. Cox, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA; Joe Y. Chang, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA; Ritsuko Komaki, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA

$ 250.00
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This publication is available in both printed and electronic format:

    

Book Specifications

  • Available to Purchase
  • Published: September 2007
  • ISBN: 9780849387838
  • eISBN: 9780849387821
  • First Edition
  • 192 pages
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Size: 8.5" x 11"
  • 118 Black and White Illustrations
  • 47 Colour Illustrations

Quick Overview

This book is the only available source on the subject that emphasizes new imaging techniques, and provides step-by-step treatment guidelines for lung cancer.
$ 250.00
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Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States, but IGRT (image guided radiation therapy) offers the possibility of more aggressive and enhanced treatments.

The only available source on the subject that emphasizes new imaging techniques, and provides step-by-step treatment guidelines for lung cancer. This source helps clinicians locate and target tumors with enhanced speed, improve the accuracy of radiation delivery, and correctly target cancerous masses while avoiding surrounding structures.

Key Features:

  • Edited by radiation oncology experts from the renowned M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
  • focuses on novel approaches using IGRT, particularly PET/CT, SPECT, 4-D CT, stereotactic body radiation therapy, IMRT and proton radiotherapy, and offers expert guidance on the dose, fractionation, target volume delineation (including recommended margins with and without respiratory gating based on our new 4-D CT study), and normal tissue tolerancesstands as the first step-by-step guide for radiation oncologists to implement new image-guided techniques into their day-to-day clinical practice, and considers the practical issues of implementing these approaches into their routinehelps clinicians use imaging technologies to detect changes in tumor size, shape, position, or metabolism over a course of radiotherapy treatment