12-02-2025, 07:21 AM
In Sydney right now, doctors are doing something that feels like science fiction.
[attachment=347]
They’re using an MRI-guided machine that targets a tumour…
freezes it from the inside…
and kills it — all without a single cut on the skin.
No incision.
No stitch.
No operating room.
Just real-time MRI imaging and a thin freezing probe that turns cancer cells into ice.
The patient walks in…
lies down…
doctors guide the probe with extreme accuracy…
freeze the tumour solid…
and the patient walks out the same day.
This is cryoablation.
A treatment so precise it destroys only the tumour and protects the healthy tissue around it — something surgery can’t always do.
For people who are too weak for major surgery, too old for long recovery, or have tumours in difficult locations, this isn’t just another option.
It’s a lifeline.
Fun fact: Cryoablation can drop tumour temperature to –40°C or lower, enough to burst cancer cells while leaving nearby structures unharmed.
Some breakthroughs don’t need bigger surgeries — just smarter ones.
Sources:
NSW Health
Sydney Adventist Hospital
Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)
[attachment=347]
They’re using an MRI-guided machine that targets a tumour…
freezes it from the inside…
and kills it — all without a single cut on the skin.
No incision.
No stitch.
No operating room.
Just real-time MRI imaging and a thin freezing probe that turns cancer cells into ice.
The patient walks in…
lies down…
doctors guide the probe with extreme accuracy…
freeze the tumour solid…
and the patient walks out the same day.
This is cryoablation.
A treatment so precise it destroys only the tumour and protects the healthy tissue around it — something surgery can’t always do.
For people who are too weak for major surgery, too old for long recovery, or have tumours in difficult locations, this isn’t just another option.
It’s a lifeline.
Fun fact: Cryoablation can drop tumour temperature to –40°C or lower, enough to burst cancer cells while leaving nearby structures unharmed.
Some breakthroughs don’t need bigger surgeries — just smarter ones.
Sources:
NSW Health
Sydney Adventist Hospital
Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)