£78.01

Springer Hyperthermia and the Therapy of Malignant Tumors: 104 (Recent Results in Cancer Research, 104)

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Last 638 days • 638 data points (No recent data available)

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£79.84 £71.90 £73.63 £75.36 £77.10 £78.83 £80.56 09 June 2024 15 November 2024 23 April 2025 29 September 2025 08 March 2026

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Price distribution over 638 days • 4 price levels

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Current Price
231 days 332 days 4 days · current 71 days 0 83 166 249 332 £73 £75 £78 £80 Days at Price

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Most common price: £75 (332 days, 52.0%)

Price range: £73 - £80

Price levels: 4 different prices over 638 days

Description

Tumour therapy depends essentially on being able to destroy the clonogenic activity of tumour cells while keeping the damage to the normal tissue low. Clinical experience shows that tumour response varies greatly even if tumours with the same localisation, clinical, and histopathological staging are compared. Some tumours appear to be resistant to conventional radiotherapy (X-rays, y-rays or fast electrons) or chemotherapy. In these cases new therapy modalities are necessary. Combined therapy modalities seem to have advan tages for some resistant tumours; one possibility of such a treatment is to combine radiotherapy or chemotherapy with hyperthermia. This means that the local tumour, the tumour region or even the whole body of the patient has to be heated to temperatures between 40° to 45° C (in case of whole body hyperthermia to 42° C maximal) for a certain time (usually 30-60 min are adequate). Hyperthermia has a long tradition in medicine as a treatment modality for various diseases. Inscriptions of the old Egyptians and texts of the Greeks have pointed out its importance. Usually whole body hyperthermia has been used by the induction of fever. Local hyperthermia began around 1900 when Westermark treated unre sectable cervix carcinomas with hot water in a metallic coil. By the beginning of this century an increase of radiation effects was hy pothesised with hypothermia and later observed. However, only in the 1960s and 1970s were systematic investigations started which showed radiosensitisation and chemosensitisation by hyperthermia in cells and tissues including tumours.

Product Specifications

Format
paperback
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
08 December 2011
Listed Since
13 July 2012

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