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I worked in an Outpatient Radiation Therapy Center for app. five years (1990-1995) and I'll give you some general bits and pieces of info I picked up during my tenure there...
Radiation Therapy works by basically dousing the cancerous area in radiation which kill the cancer cells. The downside is that the radiation does not hit only the cancerous cells, it also hits the surrounding healthy tissue. This is the major reason why the patient will begin to feel tired and lethargic after a period of treatment... the body is using higher amounts of energy to replace and heal the damaged, healthy tissue.
There is absolutely no pain at all during treatment. The patient will lay on a table in a treatment room surrounded (more often than not) by a machine that resembles half an MRI tube. The radiation may make the skin tissue rashy or tender-- talk to the Therapist about which lotions are o-kay to use to soothe the skin.
Most treatments are five days a week for six weeks, and the treatment itself will last app. 10 minutes. During treatment, she will have to lie perfectly still. Depending on the patient, there are various side-effects-- lethargy and nausea being the two most common. My (non-empirical) observations were that app. 50% of the patients suffer zero side effects, 30% suffer nausea, 15% suffer lethargy and 5% suffer both lethargy and nausea.
If there is nausea, Nutriment (or any other liquid-based food supplement) will be recommended. I will not recommend Marijuana simply because I have never met a patient that tried it (or admitted to trying it) so I have absolutely no idea if it is effective or not.
She will most likely be given temporary tattoo's used as targeting-aid's for the radiation machines. It's important she does not wash these off. The process to put them on (part of the dosimetry process) is lengthy and involved-- most patients don't want to go through it more than once as they have to lie perfectly still for app. two hours.
She will see the oncologist app. one time a week to check on her progress. At the end of the treatment period she may be given another dose or treatment or not, depending on how effective the first was.
From another, purely non-empirical viewpoint, I noticed one major thing while working there-- patients with a positive, upbeat attitude defeated the disease more often than not, regardless of disease progression. I was told this the first week I began working there and after a period of skepticism, it simply became an accepted fact that no therapist or oncologist could prove.
Please bear in mind, I worked at the Radiation Center almost ten years ago and there have been some changes more likely than not. Please feel free to PM me with question or comments. I was not an oncologist, nurse or rad therapist, but I picked up a lot of info working there...
My prayers to her, her family and you. O8)
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