Neurosurgeons Use MRI-Guided Lasers To Destroy Tumors
breadboy21 writes "In the seemingly perpetual battle to rid this planet of cancer, a team of neurosurgeons from Washington University are using a new MRI-guided high-intensity laser probe to 'cook' brain tumors that would otherwise be completely inoperable. According to Dr. Eric C. Leuthardt, this procedure 'offers hope to certain patients who had few or no options before,' with the laser baking the cancer cells deep within the brain while leaving the good tissue around it unmarred. The best part, however, is that this is already moving beyond the laboratory, with a pair of doctors at Barnes-Jewish Hospital using it successfully on a patient last month. Regrettably, just three hospitals at the moment are equipped with the Monteris AutoLITT device, but if we know anything about anything related to lasers, it'll be everywhere in no time flat."
this text is better in that it explains that first, a hole is drilled in the scull, then MRI is used to image the brain and these images help to insert a probe that's similar to a pencil in shape into the tumor through the brain, so it looks like this will go through other brain tissue first, and then this device discharges what basically amounts to heat and cooks the tumor.
You can't handle the truth.
Many heart problems can be solved through prevention; sadly, the same cannot be said for many neurological conditions.
There've been experimental uses of this kind of thing since the 1990s. The AutoLITT system mentioned in this mini-article, and Visualase are two commercial systems. There've been some preliminary clinical trials as well.
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
Yes, coronary disease is a big problem and yes it's the major killer in the US but it isn't the major killer worldwide, just in developed nations. You'll notice on the first link that cancer is still way up on causes of death in the US and, despite your claims to the contrary, I can assure that now in my second year of medical school that coronary syndromes are a major focus in medical education and research.
The work these scientists did is certainly not the first implementation of this idea but it's quite worth the investment. Stenting is not a miracle cure and likely wont ever be; it's just delaying the inevitable. The only powerful approach to reducing heart related deaths is prevention and education; even then, most deaths due to 'old age' are written up as heart related deaths so they'll keep going up as we get better at fighting the world's real number one killer: simple infections.
Then again, I'm an idiot ......
...... and idiots rule the world....
Many heart problems can be solved through prevention; sadly, the same cannot be said for many neurological conditions.
That's right. Just stop the smoking, drinking heavily, stop the junk food and get out and get some moderate exercise would prevent many if not most of the heart disease (and stroke) in the World. Not smoking would also prevent a lot of impotence too. It would be much more cost effective to spend a fraction of the money on education than whiz bang, usually obscenely expensive, gadgetry.
RIP America
July 4, 1776 - September 11, 2001
Have you ever read the Slashdot summaries? I'm pretty sure most of them are just excerpts from the articles put through a few online translators.
I put the 't' in electrical engineering.
but it isn't the major killer worldwide,
Yeah, that's why in the very last paragraph of the linked page you provided it's listed as the #1 killer worldwide.
As a second year med student please take some advice from this attending physician: while there are certain ways in which the data is sliced demographically that ends up presenting other pathologies as number one, the overall aggregate data clearly states that heart disease is #1 worldwide with 7.2 million cases per year. Right there at the bottom of the page where it says "World". Picking and choosing data is an error that is committed very often nowadays - people try to create "meta-analyses" that demonstrate their pet theory but conveniently leave out all the studies that fail to support their theories. This is bad science. Don't do it. Either look at all of the data, or make sure that have have the right tools to evaluate your special subset of data in the context of the big picture.
I agree that stenting is a stop-gap at best, and long term patient compliance with CAD medications will always be a challenge. The future, as you say, lies in prevention and raising awareness of the real causes of CAD: Smoking, sedentarism/obesity, diet and lastly genetics.
Good luck in your studies.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
Sir, your opinion is both ugly and wrong.
Cancer is not a simple disease caused by a damage of a single gene. There are too many genes that can, under "proper" circumstances, cause or promote cancer. In most cases, this is not a type of one genetic damage but a complex structure of various events, some of them external. Even with the hardest eugenics, you won't be able to eradicate, or even limit, this type of disease; in fact, you will probably end with the contrary. The risk of malignant growth is too intertwined with the very basical functioning of cells themselves; there is always a need for creation of new cells, and always there is a risk of a runaway loop.
Secondly, if a young person is diagnosed with a type of cancer that is known to be hereditary, he or she is informed by the doctor and probably will decide either not to try having his/her own children, or take special care to minimize the risks.