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E-raamat: Radiotherapy in Practice - Imaging [Oxford Medicine Online e-raamatud]

Edited by (Consultant in Clinical Oncology, Mount Vernon Cancer Centre, Middlesex, and Professor in Clinical Oncology, University College London, UK), Edited by (Consultant in Radiology, Paul Strickland Scanner Centre, Mount Vernon Hospital, Middlesex, UK)
  • Formaat: 352 pages, 140 black and white halftones, 2 black and white line drawings, and an 8 page colour plate section with various colour halftones and line drawings
  • Sari: Radiotherapy in Practice 4
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Jan-2010
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199231324
  • Oxford Medicine Online e-raamatud
  • Raamatu hind pole hetkel teada
  • Formaat: 352 pages, 140 black and white halftones, 2 black and white line drawings, and an 8 page colour plate section with various colour halftones and line drawings
  • Sari: Radiotherapy in Practice 4
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Jan-2010
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199231324
Imaging is a critical component in the delivery of radiotherapy to patients with malignancy, and this book teaches the principles and practice of imaging specific to radiotherapy. Introductory chapters outline the basic principles of the available imaging modalities including x-rays, ultrasound, CT, MR, nuclear medicine, and PET. Site specific chapters then cover the main tumour sites, reviewing optimal imaging techniques for diagnosis, staging, radiotherapy planning, and follow-up for each site. Chapters are co-authored by oncologists and radiologists specialising in a specific area to provide an authoritative view on the role of imaging in the patient's journey and examples of relevant images are provided throughout. The important areas of radiation protection, exposure justification, and risks, are also comprehensively covered, exploring issues such as balancing radiation exposure with long-term risks of radiation effects such as second cancer induction.

ABOUT THE SERIES Radiotherapy remains the major non-surgical treatment modality for the management of malignant disease, with over 50% of patients receiving treatment at some time during the management of their disease. It is based on the application of the principles of applied physics, radiobiology, and tumour biology to clinical practice. Volumes in this series take the reader through the basic principles of different types of radiotherapy or components of radiotherapy, and then develop this by individual sites. This series of practical handbooks are aimed at physicians both in training and practising radiotherapy, as well as medical physicists, dosimetrists, radiographers and senior nurses.
Contributors vii
Introduction
1(4)
Peter Hoskin
Vicky Goh
Principles of imaging
5(23)
Jonathan Liaw
Jane Taylor
Anthony Chambers
Bal Sanghera
Vicky Goh
Breast
28(16)
Steve Allen
Lung and thorax
44(17)
Noelle O'Rourke
Michael Sproule
Lymphoma
61(19)
Peter Hoskin
Charlotte Fowler
Oesophageal tumours
80(10)
R. Jane Chambers
Ian Geh
Gastric tumours
90(6)
Ben Miller
Ian Geh
Shuvro Roy-Choudhury
Hepatic and biliary tumours
96(9)
Ben Miller
Ian Geh
Shuvro Roy-Choudhury
Pancreatic tumours
105(10)
Ben Miller
Ian Geh
Shuvro Roy-Choudhury
Gastrointestinal stromal tumours
115(10)
Brinder Mahon
Beatrice Seddon
Ian Geh
Rectal Cancer
125(10)
Vicky Goh
Rob Glynne-Jones
Anal cancer
135(8)
Vicky Goh
Rob Glynne-Jones
Urological cancers
143(27)
Oliver Wignall
Vincent Khoo
S. Aslam Sohaib
Gynaecological cancers
170(19)
Guy Burkill
Kate Lankester
Head and neck cancers
189(16)
Wai-Lup Wong
Julian Kabala
Michele Saunders
Central nervous system
205(20)
Sara C. Erridge
Rod Gibson
David Summers
Connective tissue (soft tissue sarcoma)
225(17)
Derek Svasti-Salee
Eleanor Moskovic
Frank Saran
Endocrine tumours
242(9)
Yong Du
Jamshed Bomanji
Skeletal tumours
251(12)
Steven James
David Spooner
Paediatrics
263(26)
Paul Humphries
Francesca Peters
Mark Gaze
Imaging for common complications
289(18)
Charlotte Whittaker
Vicky Goh
Radiation protection issues when imaging patients for radiotherapy
307(22)
Jane Shekhdar
Edwin Aird
Index 329
Peter Hoskin qualified at the Royal Free Hospital and, after junior posts in general medicine in London, trained in clinical oncology at the Royal Marsden Hospital. He currently has a busy clinical practice focusing on urological and gynaecological malignancies and lymphomas. He also directs a research programme through UCL developing and evaluating functional imaging in oncological practice. Professor Hoskin is series editor of the OUP series, Radiotherapy in Practice.

Vicky Goh qualified in medicine at Cambridge and, after junior posts in general medicine, went on to train in radiology in London, and completed a fellowship in cross-sectional imaging in Toronto, Canada. She has a busy clinical practice with a special interest in imaging gastrointestinal and thoracic malignancies. Her area of research is on developing and evaluating functional imaging techniques.