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GRENZ RAY (SUPERSOFT ROENTGEN RAY) THERAPY OF CUTANEOUS DISEASES

SEYMOUR L. HANFLING, M.D.
Arch Derm Syphilol. 1948;58(4):390-397. doi:10.1001/archderm.1948.01520230035005.
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THREE groups of patients with various dermatoses treated with grenz rays (supersoft roentgen rays) are presented in order to compare results with those obtained with conventional, superficial (low voltage) roentgen radiation.1

Fifty-eight patients were treated with 76 series of irradiations. A series of irradiations is the exposures given to one patient during any given period. Thirteen patients received more than one series of treatments when first one area and later a second or more areas were irradiated. In these 76 series of treatments, 29 resulted in clearing; 30, in considerable improvement, with almost complete cure; 8 in improvement; 3, in only slight improvement, and 6, in no change (table 1).

The grenz irradiation was produced in a self-rectifying vacuum tube with a thin window of pyrex glass. The electric potentials used were 12 and 14 kilovolts. In grenz ray therapy, however, the thickness of the window acting as a

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