Radiological problems Flashcards
What is classified as an acute side effect of radiotherapy?
Within a few weeks of radiotherapy and is seen in tumours with high cell turnover
Eg. Skin erythema or oral mucositis
What is classified as a late side effect of radiotherapy?
Seen months or years after radiotherapy and is seen in tumour with low cell turnover
Eg. fibrosis, loss of function, dry mouth if salivary glands are treated
What are some side effects of pelvic radiotherapy?
Skin
- Erythema, desquamation, superficial ulceration
Bladder
- Early: mucositis – causing dysuria and frequency
- Late: chronic cystitis, haematuria
Bowel
- Early: diarrhoea
- Late: rectal bleeding, fibrosis, fistula
Uterus
Late: will not support pregnancy, endometrial lining ablated
Vagina
- Early – mucositis
- Late – stenosis
Ovaries
- Will fail – stop hormone and egg production
Bones
- Bone marrow – OK as not that much irradiated
- Small risk of pathological fracture
What are the common sites of bone metastesis?
spine, ribs, pelvis, shoulder girdle
Rare to get them below the knee
What are the red-flag symptoms for bone metastasis?
- severe progressive pain which is worse on movement or at night
- inability to bear weight
- signs of hypercalcaemia
- pain on direct palpation
What are some investigations for bone metastesis?
-X-ray
- Bone scan: 99mTc-methylene bisphosphonate often detects mets several months before radiological changes are evident
- Serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) usually raised. It reflects osteoblastic (healing) response to tumour destruction
How are bone metastasis treated?
- Analgesia
- Palliative radiotherapy - e.g. 8 Gy in 1#
- Bisphosphonates e.g. Zometa* pyrophosphate analogues → reduce bone turnover → helppain and may slow progression of bony mets
- Hormonal therapy if prostate or breast cancer
What medication is used to treat bony metastasis?
- Radioactive 223-Radium
Used for prostate cancer. It’s similar to Calcium so taken up by bone but emits alpha particles (2 protons/2 neutrons). Has a very short range – a few micrometres (stopped by paper) and a short half-life – 11.4 days so is well tolerated. Given as IV injection every 28 days - Denosumab
A monoclonal antibody, SC injection every 28 days. It targets protein called RANKL which controls osteoclast activity
-Chemotherapy
what is the treatment of a pathological fracture?
Anticipate and prevent it
If high risk of fracture: arrange prophylactic pinning and post-op RT
What is loperamide used for?
An anti-diarrhoea drug used in oncology