Skip to main content
ad info

 
CNN.com
  health > cancer AIDS Aging Alternative Medicine Cancer Children Diet & Fitness Men Women
CNN.com EUROPE:
Editions|myCNN|Video|Audio|News Brief|Free E-mail|Feedback  
 

Search


Search tips
HEALTH
TOP STORIES

New treatments hold out hope for breast cancer patients

Parents to appeal order that Florida woman can die

Diabetic treatment may trigger lethal brain swelling

Gulf War illness answer eludes doctors

New gay AIDS infections rise sharply in San Francisco

Study shows rats dream about running mazes

(MORE)

TOP STORIES

India quake toll rising

Plea to delay climate talks

Global BSE warning issued

Cuba explains Czech arrests

(MORE)

 MARKETS    1613 GMT, 12/28
5217.4
-25.00
5160.1
+42.97
4624.58
+33.42

 
SPORTS

(MORE)

 All Scoreboards
WEATHER
European Forecast

 Or choose another Region:
EUROPE

WORLD

TECHNOLOGY

ENTERTAINMENT

  IN OTHER NEWS

U.S.

TRAVEL



(MORE HEADLINES)
EDITIONS:
CNN.com U.S.:
*

LOCAL LANGUAGES:



MULTIMEDIA:

CNN WEB SITES:

CNN NETWORKS:
CNN International

TIME INC. SITES:

SITE INFO:

WEB SERVICES:

Radioactive "seed" treatment no threat to others

CHICAGO, Illinois (Reuters) -- Radioactive "seeds" used to treat prostate cancer in men pose no radiation risk to their wives or families, who would absorb more radiation simply living in the high-altitude city of Denver, researchers said Monday.

"We can now tell a woman, 'The amount of radiation you will get from your husband in one year is less than you would get from living in Denver for three or four months,"' said Jeff Michael, a radiation oncologist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri.

Researchers affixed badges that measure radiation exposure on the skin of the wives, children and even pet dogs of 40 men who underwent prostate cancer treatment with the seeds -- radioactive material encased in a metal tube smaller than a rice grain.

At most, spouses received radiation of 14 millieme, compared to the 50 to 85 millieme absorbed by a Denver native or the 20 millieme received on a round-trip flight between New York and Tokyo, according to the study presented at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America.

People living at high altitudes or traveling in planes absorb more radiation because there is less of the protective atmosphere to shield them from solar radiation.

The average person is exposed to between 200 and 400 millieme a year, and experts say annual exposure from nonmedical or occupational sources should be limited to not more than 500 millieme.

In the treatment, called radiotherapy, about 100 of the radioactive seeds are implanted to bombard the cancerous cells.

One in four men whose diagnosis shows his prostate cancer has not spread opts for this style of treatment, which studies have shown has a 78 percent success rate after 10 years.

This year, about 180,000 U.S. men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer, the second-leading cause of cancer death in U.S. men after lung cancer. But in 80 percent of cases the disease is diagnosed before it has spread beyond the prostate.

Copyright 2000 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



RELATED STORIES:
Study examines side effects of two types of prostate cancer care
October 4, 2000
Prostate screening benefits younger men, too
September 22, 2000
Panel issues new guidelines on prostate cancer diagnosis
February 21, 2000
Selenium: New entry in fight against prostate cancer
June 17, 1999

RELATED SITES:
Radiological Society of North America
Washington University School of Medicine
The American Brachytherapy Society
American Cancer Society
Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.

 Search   

Back to the top   © 2001 Cable News Network. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.