Jesse, does she have Graves disease? They sometimes ablate (I think that's the word--kill) the thyroid, in Graves disease patients, and the patients are radioactive for a few days after, I think.
Yes, this is done. Often, they try to ablate only a portion of the thyroid for Grave's disease and try to keep some of it working, but it's tricksy.
After a major dose of radiation treatment, you are radioactive, to a degree, for up to 2-3 months. I was in isolation for 2 days and told to stay away from others for another week and babies/children/pregnant women for about 2-3 weeks.
After a major dose of radiation treatment, you are radioactive, to a degree, for up to 2-3 months. I was in isolation for 2 days and told to stay away from others for another week and babies/children/pregnant women for about 2-3 weeks.
So it does sound like this. Thanks.
Here is what I know: I heard through the family grapevine that my aunt had "something done," that she was fine, but radioactive enough that she had to stay home from work (at a school) for a week.
Sounds like Grave's disease to me. She was probably given a lower dosage of radiation than I was, but still not good to be around kids for a while.
Awfulplasticsurgery.com has put me off collagen lips FOREVER. They NEVER look good.
Also, DX answered the question, really: shotguns are less effective at killing people, since they're really used for small, moving targets (e.g., birds or clays) and have less range. As opposed to rifles, there aren't that many automatic shotguns out there since they're prone to jamming and have a crazy recoil. And it's just not useful for hunting.
Are they actually less regulated, bon?
I'm assuming there are good collagen lips, they just don't make it to that site.
I
assume.
Okay, launchcast taunted me with potential availability on the network. Pissers.
Are they actually less regulated, bon?
I don't really know, but the answer would probably go something like this: the potentially deadlier the gun, the more heavily regulated it is, and there are more deadly types of rifles than shotguns.
Are they actually less regulated, bon?
I don't think there's a difference in obtaining one. There is a difference in hunting regulations, at least on the very densely populated east coast. Hunting seasons tends to be shotgun only out here.
I don't know that rifles are more evil than shotguns. Rifles are more precise than shotguns. Once the shot leaves the muzzle of a shot gun it begins to fan out, which makes it more likely that at least part of the load will hit the target. OTOH, shotguns don't have the range of rifles.
If I'm not mistaken, there's also something about thinking about using the gun, loading it, using it, and possible reloading and the time it takes with a shotgun to do all of that.