I just wanna share and write. Apologies for this. I've had bulimia for about 25 years now. It's not "active" all the time, but it's always in the background. Some days, weeks, months or years are good and some are bad. My other MH issues have usually been more interesting to professionals than my ED, as I've never been underweight. For most of my bulimia history I've managed to keep things nice and secret, even though in the past 5-6 years I've made an effort to be more open, both with family and friends, and with professionals. There have been the odd side effects, of course. You don't have bulimia for 25 years without issues. I've been meticulous with my teeth, doing as much damage limitation as I can, but one particularly bad period in my early 30s did a number on those. There have been several endoscopies to check that the blood I keep vomiting isn't anything to urgently worry about. I'm on proton-pump inhibitors, probably for good. I get issues with salivary glands, which can be pretty painful.
Marjiuana helped me find a new perspective, although at times it was very difficult. This is how I've integrated it into my life. : Psychonaut
Proton therapy a treatment for tumours | Open Medscience
With proton therapy, all energy has been released by the time it reaches the tumor site, so there is no dose beyond that point. This can help to reduce side effects. Proton therapy typically involves the same number of treatments and the same session times as conventional radiation therapy. Because the proton beams do not penetrate beyond the tumor, proton therapy reduces the risk of treatment-related side effects due to radiation damage to normal tissues. Proton therapy may also allow the use of a higher radiation dose to the tumor, maximizing the chance of destroying it. Proton therapy is available at a limited number of locations in the United States. MSK doctors deliver the therapy at the New York Proton Center, a state-of-the art facility on 126 th St. in upper Manhattan. MSK radiation oncologists have vast experience in using proton therapy. Over the last five years, our specialists have used proton therapy to treat more than 2, 000 MSK patients with a range of cancers. This is far more than anyone else in the New York City region.
Proton therapy history project
Proton Therapy History
This page is a work in progress. Meanwhile, here is a link to an account of proton therapy history from another source:
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Our other websites are also of interest:
(A list of proton therapy centers in the U. S. )
(Our proton therapy blog. ) Back to HOME PAGE
Proton therapy history.html
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- Cancer Treatments: What Is Proton Therapy? | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
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Proton therapy, also referred to as proton-beam therapy, is the most common type of particle therapy. It represents one of the highly conformal radiation therapy techniques that, differing from the other external-beam photon therapies, uses the proton particle properties to minimize the toxic effects over normal surrounding tissues. The advantage of proton therapy is the reduction in beam entry and exit dose due to the physical properties of the Bragg peak. This allows higher dose gradients to be delivered and thus can increase tumor dose while reducing dose to adjacent organs at risk (OARs) 1, 2. Therefore, it can be applied to tumors close to critical organs such as the esophagus, spinal cord, head, and brachial plexus 2. Proton therapy systems use cyclotrons which are an order of magnitude more expensive than megavoltage linear accelerators (linacs). Hence, proton therapy is generally reserved for only the most critically conformal treatments such as 1, 2:
pediatric cancers
re-treatment of previously irradiated tumors
I hope I don't have to, but just wanted to plan ahead.