Several dozen cases of mesothelioma with radiation therapy for Hodgkin's disease has been found. A
2005 study entitled "Clinical Course of Thoracic Cancers in Hodgkin's
Disease Survivors" (P. Das, AK Ng, MA Stevenson, and PM Mauch) exactly
establish that patients with Hodgkin's disease who were treated with
radiation therapy have a higher risk of disease mesothelioma.
Specifically,
this study followed 33 patients with Hodgkin hospitalized Harvard and
has grown mesothelioma lung cancer small cell. Of the participating patients, 88 percent had a history of radiotherapy to the thorax as a treatment for their disease. Some patients have suffered from breast cancer in just over a year after being treated for Hodgkin's disease. Whereas other patients contracted Hodgkin mesotheliokma after more than two decades later. Like
most patients with mesothelioma, most patients diagnosed with
mesothelioma when it reached stage III or IV and the prognosis is very
difficult. The survival rate average is only 9 months.
In some cases, peritoneal mesothelioma has also been associated with
radiation therapy for breast cancer or other cancers that do to the
chest area
Other
studies have found a relationship between mesothelioma and thorium
dioxide, which is a radioactive substance that is used in conjunction
with conventional x-ray to diagnose certain conditions. Thorium dioxide is widely used from the 1920s until the 1950s.
Atomic Radiation and Mesothelioma
In
1995, the first case has been diagnosed with mesothelioma and believed
to be associated with the incidence of the atomic bomb on Nagasaki. A
report in this case, written by Masami Mizuki, Keiko Yukishige,
Yasuharu Abe, and Tomiyasu Tsuda published in the journal Respirology in
September 1997. They argue that the combination of exposure to atomic
radiation and asbestos (patient worked for 2 years as a shipbuilder in a
ammunition factory) was associated with an increased incidence of mesothelioma.
The doctors who wrote the study found, "If the pleural thickening or
pleural effusion was found in the atomic bomb survivors, malignant
mesothelioma should be considered as an option in the differential
diagnosis, even though the atomic bomb attacks several decades ago."
Atomic Energy workers and Mesothelioma
It seems that there is a potential connection to the occurrence of mesothelioma in place with radiation exposure. Over
the past few decades, few people currently or previously worked on
atomic energy plant have been diagnosed with a rare cancer. In this case thought to be caused by constant exposure to radiation in low levels. (Ionizing
radiation: A risk factor for cancer; JE Goodman et al, 2009) It is
important to note is the authors concluded that given the low rate of
mesothelioma in the general population as well as an increased risk of
disease on individuals exposed to radiation, including those working in atomic power plants.
Relationship Between Radiation and Mesothelioma
Knowing
about the relationship between radiation and mesothelioma is one of the
measures for speeding up diagnosis and saved many people who have been
identified as potential victims of mesothelioma. Anyone
who has been exposed to radiation in any form, either regularly in the
workplace or through x-ray or through therapy for other cancers chest,
should always tell their doctor about medical history and history of
work despite the radiation exposure occurred a few years earlier. Therefore,
if the symptoms include chest pain, shortness of breath, and coughing
can be determined relationship with a medical history and a history of
the patient work can then be made the correct diagnosis and treatment of
mesothelioma begin as soon as possible.
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