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scarbrtj

Eiskant believe this is true.

To you, and anyone else reading, typing "Cyberknife breast cancer" into Google *does not* equate to "4 or 5 places that are actively treating some types of breast cancer with Cyberknife." No one is *actively*(I'll define that as more than a few percent of patients) treating breast cancer patients with Cyberknife; the

Hey, I hear you. But "My mom died in a plane crash" is not a clear refutation of the claim that air travel is a safe and efficient means of transportation for most travelers, e.g.

If you want to dig further—actually talk to a board-certified radiation oncologist (like me, a Cyberknife user) for a more in-depth and nuanced explanation than a Google search can provide. And FWIW, research essentially equals treatment when it comes to using Cyberknife for breast cancer. The vast majority of any

Really! I was speaking in generalizations, however. So yes, there are some research protocols open looking at Cyberknife to treat (early-stage only) breast cancer. But, >99+% of all women receiving breast cancer radiotherapy will not be treated with Cyberknife (much less protons)... amongst other reasons for this,

No one is using protons or Cyberknife for breast cancer patients... yet. But IMRT, which is not conventional radiation, is used pretty routinely, however, for breast patients.

We don't necessarily "throw chemo" at all triple negative tumors. For example, a 70 year old breast cancer patient with a 1 cm tumor completely removed, no lymph nodes positive, and triple negative disease, would not receive chemotherapy most likely—just surgery and radiation. (Plus, radiation is pretty tolerable for

It's a very high energy light (X-ray) source. Since it's so high energy, the wavelength of the light is very, very small. Very small wavelength light is very good for imaging very small things, like molecules and atoms. This thing takes GREAT pictures of molecules and atoms (before destroying them!).

"Plus, if the functionality of the glasses is incredible, it won't matter one bit how they look."

Shot through the heart! And you're to blame. Darlin', you give rainbows...

Yikes!! This guy almost Gameel Al-Batouti-ed the whole plane.

And yet, if I see a boat, I might say, "She's a beautiful vessel." But the French word for boat is bateau, which is masculine. At the end of the day, "petite" is a loan word from French, of which our Germanic language of English has... a boat load. Yet English has no real grammatical gender rules, as you know, so your

Anti-cluster-of-differentiation (anti-CD) drugs are not new. Maybe the best known is the anti-CD-20 drug Rituxan, a very highly effective anti-lymphoma drug that has far, far fewer side effects than traditional chemotherapy. Rituxan has significantly improved cure rates for patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

"How long will this submarine stay submerged?"

Dang... pretty cool...

If a swordfish's sword bone can "pierce the skin" of a submarine... the next thing you know a guy can just strap wings on his back, flap them, and fly!

It's like house music for my retinas!