Numerous studies have demonstrated the normal tissue-sparing effects of ultra-high dose rate ‘FLASH’ irradiation in vivo, with an associated reduction in damage burden being reported in vitro. Towards this, two key radiochemical mechanisms have been proposed: radical–radical recombination (RRR) and transient oxygen depletion (TOD), with both being proposed to lead to reduced levels of induced damage. Previously, we reported that FLASH induces lower levels of DNA strand break damage in whole-blood peripheral blood lymphocytes (WB-PBL) ex vivo, but our study failed to distinguish the mechanism(s) involved. A potential outcome of RRR is the formation of crosslink damage (particularly, if any organic radicals recombine), whilst a possible outco...
PURPOSE: One of the main limitations to anticancer radiotherapy lies in irreversible damage to healt...
A reemergence of research implementing radiation delivery at ultra-high dose rates (UHDRs) has trigg...
PURPOSE: One of the main limitations to anticancer radiotherapy lies in irreversible damage to healt...
OBJECTIVE: FLASH irradiation reportedly produces less normal tissue toxicity, while maintaining tumo...
OBJECTIVE: FLASH irradiation reportedly produces less normal tissue toxicity, while maintaining tumo...
Purpose: FLASH (ultra-high dose rate) radiotherapy spares normal tissue while keeping tumor control....
In radiotherapy, oxygen acts as strong radiosensitizer and alters cellular response to radiation dra...
Current radiotherapy facilities are standardized to deliver dose rates around 0.1-0.4 Gy/s in 2...
Background: Irradiation with ultra-high dose rate (FLASH) has been shown to spare normal tissue with...
Background and purpose: Recent observations in animal models show that ultra-high dose rate (“FLASH”...
Background: Irradiation with ultra-high dose rate (FLASH) has been shown to spare normal tissue with...
Background and purpose: Recent observations in animal models show that ultra-high dose rate (“FLASH”...
BackgroundIrradiation with ultra-high dose rate (FLASH) has been shown to spare normal tissue withou...
PURPOSE: One of the main limitations to anticancer radiotherapy lies in irreversible damage to healt...
PURPOSE: One of the main limitations to anticancer radiotherapy lies in irreversible damage to healt...
PURPOSE: One of the main limitations to anticancer radiotherapy lies in irreversible damage to healt...
A reemergence of research implementing radiation delivery at ultra-high dose rates (UHDRs) has trigg...
PURPOSE: One of the main limitations to anticancer radiotherapy lies in irreversible damage to healt...
OBJECTIVE: FLASH irradiation reportedly produces less normal tissue toxicity, while maintaining tumo...
OBJECTIVE: FLASH irradiation reportedly produces less normal tissue toxicity, while maintaining tumo...
Purpose: FLASH (ultra-high dose rate) radiotherapy spares normal tissue while keeping tumor control....
In radiotherapy, oxygen acts as strong radiosensitizer and alters cellular response to radiation dra...
Current radiotherapy facilities are standardized to deliver dose rates around 0.1-0.4 Gy/s in 2...
Background: Irradiation with ultra-high dose rate (FLASH) has been shown to spare normal tissue with...
Background and purpose: Recent observations in animal models show that ultra-high dose rate (“FLASH”...
Background: Irradiation with ultra-high dose rate (FLASH) has been shown to spare normal tissue with...
Background and purpose: Recent observations in animal models show that ultra-high dose rate (“FLASH”...
BackgroundIrradiation with ultra-high dose rate (FLASH) has been shown to spare normal tissue withou...
PURPOSE: One of the main limitations to anticancer radiotherapy lies in irreversible damage to healt...
PURPOSE: One of the main limitations to anticancer radiotherapy lies in irreversible damage to healt...
PURPOSE: One of the main limitations to anticancer radiotherapy lies in irreversible damage to healt...
A reemergence of research implementing radiation delivery at ultra-high dose rates (UHDRs) has trigg...
PURPOSE: One of the main limitations to anticancer radiotherapy lies in irreversible damage to healt...