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Safety issues to your spouse after brachytherapy for prostate cancer |
Dear OncoLink "Ask The Experts,"
Richard Whittington, MD, Associate Professor of Radiation Oncology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, responds: Talk to the doctor that did the implant and they should be able to measure the amount of radiation at the skin and compare it to everyday events. We usually find that the initial dose at skin is less than 0.2 mrem/hour, which means that 250 hours is less than a chest x-ray, and the rate falls rapidly. There is no evidence that this radiation will reactivate a lymphoma, and by 4 weeks after the implant, we find the dose rate at skin is no different from 'background' radiation present in everyday life. |
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