The ability to speak, swallow, masticate, taste food, and maintain a healthy oral cavity is heavily reliant on the presence of saliva, the hugely important effect of which on our everyday lives is often unappreciated. Hyposalivation, frequently experienced by people receiving radiation therapy for head and neck cancers, results in a plethora of symptoms whose combined effect can drastically reduce quality of life. Although artificial lubricants and drugs stimulating residual function are available to ameliorate the consequences of hyposalivation, their effects are at best transient. Such management techniques do not address the source of the problem: a lack of functional saliva-producing acinar cells, resulting from radiation-induced stem c...
The most significant long-term complication of radiotherapy in the head-and-neck region is hyposaliv...
SummaryHyposalivation often leads to irreversible and untreatable xerostomia. Salivary gland (SG) st...
Each year, 500,000 patients are treated with radiotherapy for head and neck cancer, resulting in rel...
The ability to speak, swallow, masticate, taste food, and maintain a healthy oral cavity is heavily ...
The ability to speak, swallow, masticate, taste food, and maintain a healthy oral cavity is heavily ...
Hyposalivation underlying xerostomia after radiotherapy is still a major problem in the treatment of...
The human salivary gland (SG) has an elegant architecture of epithelial acini, connecting ductal bra...
Xerostomia is an important complication following radiotherapy (RT) for head and neck cancer. Curren...
BACKGROUND: The most manifest long-term consequences of radiation therapy in the head and neck cance...
Dysfunction of the salivary gland and irreversible hyposalivation are the main side effects of radio...
Hyposalivation often leads to irreversible and untreatable xerostomia. Salivary gland (SG) stem cell...
Yearly, worldwide more than 500.000 new head and neck cancer patients are treated with radiotherapy....
The most significant long-term complication of radiotherapy in the head-and-neck region is hyposaliv...
SummaryHyposalivation often leads to irreversible and untreatable xerostomia. Salivary gland (SG) st...
Each year, 500,000 patients are treated with radiotherapy for head and neck cancer, resulting in rel...
The ability to speak, swallow, masticate, taste food, and maintain a healthy oral cavity is heavily ...
The ability to speak, swallow, masticate, taste food, and maintain a healthy oral cavity is heavily ...
Hyposalivation underlying xerostomia after radiotherapy is still a major problem in the treatment of...
The human salivary gland (SG) has an elegant architecture of epithelial acini, connecting ductal bra...
Xerostomia is an important complication following radiotherapy (RT) for head and neck cancer. Curren...
BACKGROUND: The most manifest long-term consequences of radiation therapy in the head and neck cance...
Dysfunction of the salivary gland and irreversible hyposalivation are the main side effects of radio...
Hyposalivation often leads to irreversible and untreatable xerostomia. Salivary gland (SG) stem cell...
Yearly, worldwide more than 500.000 new head and neck cancer patients are treated with radiotherapy....
The most significant long-term complication of radiotherapy in the head-and-neck region is hyposaliv...
SummaryHyposalivation often leads to irreversible and untreatable xerostomia. Salivary gland (SG) st...
Each year, 500,000 patients are treated with radiotherapy for head and neck cancer, resulting in rel...