so, i may be a little confused, please help clear me up, on FSR . . .
a) my impression is that gamma knife is a one shot proposition, and as such, is considered radio surgery.*(see ps, below)
b) same with SINGLE-dose cyberknife, etc.
c) however, if cyberknife, (or novalis, or accukinfe, etc.), are divided into 2, 3, 5, or twenty-something treatments, . . . then it becomes FSR(T).
with a higher total dose, but a smaller dose-per-treatment day (and hopefully less side-effects/damage to good tissue)
i found a case study, of a lady whose case EXACTLY mirrors mine, and she had 30 stereotactic doses at mayo, and a great outcome. it was an accuknife, i believe)
i recently saw a different neuro-otologist, who dismissed the article as irrelevant, saying it was NOT stereotactic, and i was comparing apples to oranges.
unfortunately, since it had been about 6 weeks since i read it, i assumed he was right, and thought, well, i'll just do a single dose of something (gamma, or cyber) and be done
this MD was saying it was something totally different from cyberknife, (without having looked at or read the 2007 article), he said it sounded like she received external beam radiation(which is NOT stereotactic))
of course, once i got home, and RE-reviewed it, it was indeed stereotactic, and the article was even from the "journal of STEREOTACTIC radio surgery"
the neurosurgeon i am fixing to see, says perhaps 5 doses of cyberknife, is what he'd recommend, if thats what i want
(i know treatment courses seem to be becoming shorter and shorter than what they were, years ago)
so i guess i am looking to see if my understanding of FSRT, as i wrote up top is correct?
or is FSRT totally different from multi-dose cyber knife.
thanks,
jesse
ps,
yes, i know that they can now fractionate gamma knife treatments, with a different kind of frame, and positioned which goes in your mouth and gets suctioned up to the hard palate