. The American journal of roentgenology, radium therapy and nuclear medicine . /•^\?-J i3t«:<;-?^i-^s%.. Fig. 7. C~ node treated %vitli buried radiumemanation and removed two months later. and lyiii]>liocytic infiltration. In common with all intraoral car-cinomas, the treatment of those arisingin the floor of the mouth should be con-sidered In two parts: First, treatment ofthe primary lesion; second, treatment ofthe cervical nodes. In treating the primary growth weemploy unliltered tubes of radium ema-nation buried uniformly throughout thein\()l\ed area, being espec


. The American journal of roentgenology, radium therapy and nuclear medicine . /•^\?-J i3t«:<;-?^i-^s%.. Fig. 7. C~ node treated %vitli buried radiumemanation and removed two months later. and lyiii]>liocytic infiltration. In common with all intraoral car-cinomas, the treatment of those arisingin the floor of the mouth should be con-sidered In two parts: First, treatment ofthe primary lesion; second, treatment ofthe cervical nodes. In treating the primary growth weemploy unliltered tubes of radium ema-nation buried uniformly throughout thein\()l\ed area, being especially careful toplace them well to the limits of the pal-pable infiltration. A description of theseunliltered radium emanation tubes, theirmethod of distribution, method of esti-mating dosage and acKantages o\er in- terstitial use of needles containing radiumclement, can be found in previous publica-tions. These tubes should be placedso that there is, as nearly as possible,one tube per cubic centimeter of tumortissue. This of course varies with thesize and shape of the neoplasm. Thepreferable strength


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Keywords: ., bookauthoramerican, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookyear1906