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Re: Radioactive Seeds
Radsafers,
Why do not put it among with other medical applications in a TV infomercial
to help the cause?
I have seen the TV infomercial about "a product calls plastic", which saves
lives (Chemical Industry???).
Well, some of us do remember Union Carbide's Bhopal 1985-?.(5,000 instant
deaths)
Emil.
kerembaev@cs.com
In a message dated 2/5/00 12:19:11 Pacific Standard Time, NFRGTBLIS@aol.com
writes:
>>>
Melissa J. Engelhard
nfrgtblis@aol.com
Radioactive Seeds May Keep Arteries Open
February 1, 2000
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) — Temporarily placing tiny radioactive pellets in
a
heart artery that has just been unclogged during an angioplasty procedure can
safely prevent reblockage of the vessel over the next 3 years, the results of
a new study show.
During angioplasty, a balloon-tipped catheter is threaded into a blocked
artery and inflated, flattening fatty plaques against the artery wall and
allowing blood to flow more freely through the vessel. Since the artery often
becomes clogged again, surgeons sometimes implant a metal coil called a stent
to keep the artery open. But reblockage may still occur when scar tissue
builds up on the stent.
A technique that involves temporarily threading a ribbon containing
radioactive pellets into an artery has been successful in keeping arteries
open in the months after angioplasty, but the long-term effectiveness and
safety of the procedure has been unknown.
In the current study, a team of researchers led by Dr. Paul S. Teirstein, of
the Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, California, followed 55 people who had a
heart artery reclog after angioplasty. Some of the participants already had
stents, while some received the stents during the study. Twenty-six people
were picked at random to undergo the radiation treatment.
Three years later, the radiation group fared significantly better than the
group that did not receive the experimental treatment, Teirstein's team
reports in the February 1st issue of Circulation: Journal of the American
Heart Association. Arteries had reclogged in only about 15% of patients who
underwent radiation, compared with about 48% of those who had not. Also, the
combined rate of heart attacks, deaths and reblockages was around 23% in
those who underwent radiation, compared with about 55% of those who did not.
The researchers did not detect any harmful side effects caused by the
radiation.
In an editorial that accompanies the study, Drs. David O. Williams and Barry
L. Sharaf, of Brown University School of Medicine in Providence, Rhode
Island, point out that several questions remain about using radiation to keep
arteries from becoming blocked again.
For example, Williams and Sharaf note that it is important to determine if
the effect of radiation varies depending on whether or not a person has
already received a stent. In addition, they suggest that longer follow-up is
needed since it may take 5 to 15 years to detect some effects of radiation.
SOURCE: Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association
2000;101:350-351, 360-365.
Copyright 2000 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or
redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is
expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters
shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any
actions taken in reliance thereon.
>>>
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