Lecture 2 - Introduction to Radiation Biology and Physics

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  • Опубликовано: 28 июл 2024
  • Radiation Biology and Physics. From the Radiation Oncology Education Collaborative Study Group roecsg.uchicago.edu/
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26...

Комментарии • 19

  • @Lalamaziiing
    @Lalamaziiing 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for sharing. I'm in the process of becoming a radiation therapist.

  • @ashleyway3473
    @ashleyway3473 5 лет назад +5

    It’s to give you an idea of what radiation oncology is and the foundational principals that govern our treatments.

  • @georgen9755
    @georgen9755 19 дней назад

    General radiology

  • @adelisalndy
    @adelisalndy Год назад

    What course do you take in school

  • @TheVishu27
    @TheVishu27 7 лет назад

    Dr Dan Golden can you please explain that gq over eq concept???what is z and e???

    • @dangolden6423
      @dangolden6423  7 лет назад +1

      Z is the atomic number (number of protons) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_number and E is the energy of the photon en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photon_energy.
      Regarding gq/eq I'm unsure what you are referring to. If you mean EQ/D2 here is some more detailed info: goo.gl/Gfowoj.

    • @TheVishu27
      @TheVishu27 7 лет назад

      thanks dr dan.......

    • @abyvr490
      @abyvr490 5 лет назад

      @@TheVishu27 he meant to say z3 over e3 (cube) , not gq over eq .

  • @lakshmishreemahadevan5470
    @lakshmishreemahadevan5470 7 лет назад +1

    Does increased oxygenation make the DNA damage permanent?

    • @dangolden6423
      @dangolden6423  7 лет назад

      In short, yes. See en.m.wikibooks.org/wiki/Radiation_Oncology/Radiobiology/Hypoxia and en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxygen_enhancement_ratio.

  • @waleed90cmpunk
    @waleed90cmpunk 3 месяца назад

    i want the slides of this vedio plz

  • @adelisalndy
    @adelisalndy Год назад

    For this job

    • @dangolden6423
      @dangolden6423  Год назад +3

      It depends which job interests you. To be a radiation oncologist that sees the patients and prescribes the treatment, you go to medical school and then do a residency in radiation oncology -- or clinical oncology in certain countries. If you want to be the one delivering the treatments, you can be a radiation therapist (more info here: www.asrt.org/main/career-center/careers-in-radiologic-technology). You can also consider being a medical physicist. MPs are responsible for ensuring safe and effective delivery of radiation (w3.aapm.org/media/index.php#scope). Medical physicists obtain a college degree and then an advanced degree in medical physics along with completing a medical physics residency (at least in the United States). There are multiple paths to be a MP and I recommend contacting AAPM or your country's medical physics organization for more info. Finally, you could pursue a career as a radiation biologist. RBs are usually researchers with a research focus at the intersection of radiation and cancer biology. www.radres.org. Hope this helps!

    • @rangochu2713
      @rangochu2713 Год назад

      Hello! I’m wanting to be a radiotherapist but is this still applicable to me? I’m worried it would be too in depth! I’ll be starting uni soon :)

    • @Mr_Smackle
      @Mr_Smackle 11 месяцев назад

      @@rangochu2713 Radiotherapists do learn medical physics but just the basics and they get a ton of help and are not expected to do that stuff, that's what the MP and dosemietry do. Radio therapists need to be good with people more than good at physics haha. Good luck I'm applying to residency for radiation oncology next month!

  • @hpfan136
    @hpfan136 10 месяцев назад

    Why did this pop up in my recommended