Radiation therapy
Radiation can be given in small doses over a six-week period, or by a technique called stereotactic radiosurgery or gamma-knife radiation.
The Gamma Knife procedure, bombards lesions with enough radiation to destroy them even in the most critical, difficult-to-access areas of the brain without delivering significant does to healthy normal brain tissue.
The 201 individual beams simultaneously intersect with the accuracy of less than one-tenth of a millimeter (about the thickness of a sheet of paper). Referred to as "surgery without a scalpel," the Gamma Knife procedure does not require an incision or opening the skull.
Cons:
- One of the main drawbacks of radiation treatment is that it leads to delayed pituitary failure. This typically occurs several years after treatment, necessitating complete hormone replacement.
- Traditional radiation therapy side effects include fatigue, skin rashes during treatment, mouth and throat problems and possible sexual dysfunction.
- Radiation therapy is typically reserved for pituitary tumors that cannot be cured surgically and are not controlled with medical drug therapy.
- It’s an outpatient procedure which allows patients to go home in about half a day.
- Only a single treatment is needed. The Gamma Knife treatment itself takes about an hour on average.
- Patients can usually return to their normal routine within a day of the procedure.
- Over 95% of patients are treated on an ambulatory basis and do not require hospitalization.
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