Damage to the nervous system due to radiation therapy


  • Radiation therapy is one component in the treatment of tumors of the nervous system. It is directed at the general area (such as the whole head) when people have several tumors or a tumor that does not have distinct borders. When the tumor has distinct borders, therapy can be directed specifically at the tumor.
    Radiation from these treatments sometimes damages the nervous system, despite the best efforts to prevent damage.
    Whether damage occurs and how severe it is depend on several factors:

    How much radiation is given over the entire course of treatment (total cumulative dose)
    How much radiation is given in each dose
    How long the treatments are given
    How much of the nervous system is exposed to radiation
    How susceptible the person is

    Giving radiation therapy each day tends to increase its effectiveness and to reduce damage to normal tissue.
    Symptoms of radiation damage may be

    Acute: Occurring in the first few days
    Early-delayed: Occurring in the first few months of treatment
    Late-delayed: Occurring several months or years after treatment

    Symptoms can remain the same or worsen and can be temporary or permanent.
    Acute encephalopathy can result from radiation to the brain. Fluid temporarily accumulates within the cells of the brain, causing the entire brain to swell (called cerebral edema). Symptoms include headaches, nausea, vomiting, drowsiness, and confusion. Acute encephalopathy usually begins shortly after the first or second dose of radiation is given. Usually, symptoms diminish as radiation treatments continue. Corticosteroids such as dexamethasone may help prevent or reduce cerebral edema.
    Early-delayed radiation damage can cause symptoms similar to those of acute encephalopathy. Symptoms of early-delayed damage may develop in children when whole-brain radiation therapy is used to treat leukemia. These symptoms usually diminish on their own over several days to weeks, sometimes more rapidly if corticosteroids are used.
    If radiation is directed at the spine in the neck or upper back, early-delayed radiation myelopathy may develop. This disorder sometimes causes a sensation similar to an electric shock. The sensation begins in the neck or back, usually when the neck is bent forward, and shoots down to the legs. Early-delayed radiation myelopathy usually resolves without treatment.
    Late-delayed radiation damage causes symptoms many months or years after radiation therapy. This type of damage develops in many children and adults who receive whole-head brain radiation therapy if they survive long enough. The most common cause in children is radiation therapy to prevent leukemia or to treat a type of brain tumor called medulloblastoma. Symptoms include progressively worsening dementia, memory loss, difficulty thinking, personality changes, and, in adults, unsteadiness in walking.
    Radiation directed at tumors near the spine may damage the spinal cord itself. When it does, late-delayed myelopathy may develop. This disorder causes weakness, loss of sensation, and sometimes the Brown-S


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