放射治疗的皮肤和其他反应——皮肤反应的临床表现和放射生物学。

Wolfgang Dörr
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Skin and other reactions to radiotherapy--clinical presentation and radiobiology of skin reactions.
The skin represented the dose-limiting organ in radiotherapy over long periods of time. In the first third of the 20th century, radiotherapy was associated with deposition of significant radiation doses in the superficial compartments of the skin. Therefore, all major radiobiological principles, such as effects of fractionation on radiation sensitivity or volume/area effects, were initially based on observations in epidermal radiation reactions. The development of radiation sources producing mega-voltage X-rays resulted in translocation of dose maxima into the subcutaneous soft tissue. With this, and with the introduction of multiple-field irradiation techniques, severe radiation effects in the skin were almost completely prevented. However, skin reactions are still relevant to critical skin areas, such as intertriginous regions. Also, the treatment of skin tumours, which requires high skin doses, is associated with substantial skin effects. Combinations of radiotherapy, e.g. with chemotherapy or UV exposure, can significantly aggravate skin effects. Moreover, accidental radiation exposure is frequently associated with significant skin doses. Therefore, early and late reactions of the skin must still be considered clinically relevant.
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Advances in the planning and delivery of radiotherapy: new expectations, new standards of care. The expanding roles of stereotactic body radiation therapy and oligofractionation: toward a new practice of radiotherapy. Stereotactic body radiation therapy: normal tissue and tumor control effects with large dose per fraction. Stereotactic body radiation therapy for thoracic cancers: recommendations for patient selection, setup and therapy. Stereotactic body radiation therapy for gastrointestinal malignancies.
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