On the ANworld mailing list, FSR is always understood to mean what Johns Hopkins and Lederman do: 4-5 sessions, low dose.
That explains a lot. I don't think that is generally understood to be the meaning of FSR, however. I would suggest not using the acronym, and being more explicit about what sort of treatment protocol you mean. "Low dose" is really a function of how many doses; it isn't linear, but there is a formula, such that the total effective dose is roughly the same. So I would assume that a 3-5 session protocol would use a dose smaller than a single GK shot, and larger than a 25 day FSR protocol. Just saying "3-5 fractions" is enough, and would be a lot clearer.
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For jd as well, on the swelling subject:
It seems to me that there are two kinds of swelling that occur. The first is swelling of surrounding normal tissue, along with the tumor, in an immediate response to the radiation. This kind of swelling can be reduced by fractionation, and also by taking a steroid during and just after treatment.
The second kind occurs later, perhaps 2-3 months, when the tumor begins to die off, and is undergoing necrosis. This swelling is a result of having had radiation damage to the tumor, and the treatment protocol doesn't really make any difference. Once you have received your full allotment of radiation, and the tumor begins to die from the damage it has sustained, it is a dying tumor, regardless of how it got that way.
The purpose of fractionation is to reduce the first kind of swelling, where healthy neighboring tissue can suffer, including the hearing nerve and cochlea. None of the treatments can do anything about the second kind. Tumor death is the goal, and the edema and swelling that often accompany it must simply be accepted, and treated with steroids when necessary. That is the reason that tumors over 3 cm are not good candidates for any kind of radiation - they can swell up too much when they start dying 3 months later.
That's the way I see it, anyway.
Steve