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'''Diloxin therapy''' | '''Diloxin therapy''' is given as a [[Wikipedia:Cancer|cancer]] treatment option to President [[Laura Roslin]] by Dr. [[Cottle]] to battle her breast cancer. | ||
Diloxin therapy is likely a form of [[Wikipedia:chemotherapy|chemotherapy]]. President Roslin tells Dr. Cottle of having her mother endure two years of diloxin therapy as she wasted away, and therefore the President wanted to explore alternative treatments such as [[chamalla]]. | Diloxin therapy is likely a form of [[Wikipedia:chemotherapy|chemotherapy]]. President Roslin tells Dr. Cottle of having her mother endure two years of diloxin therapy as she wasted away, and therefore the President wanted to explore alternative treatments such as [[chamalla]]. | ||
Roslin's account of her mother's treatment suggests that the side effects of diloxin therapy (hair loss, nausea, muscle degeneration), like many chemotherapy options in the real world, may be just as debilitating and uncomfortable as the illness it is intended to cure ([[Act of Contrition]]). | |||
When Roslin's cancer returns after apparently having been cured, she takes diloxin treatments despite her earlier aversion to the drug ([[Crossroads, Part II]]). | |||
{{Drugs}} | {{Drugs}} |
Revision as of 10:12, 27 March 2007
Diloxin therapy is given as a cancer treatment option to President Laura Roslin by Dr. Cottle to battle her breast cancer.
Diloxin therapy is likely a form of chemotherapy. President Roslin tells Dr. Cottle of having her mother endure two years of diloxin therapy as she wasted away, and therefore the President wanted to explore alternative treatments such as chamalla. Roslin's account of her mother's treatment suggests that the side effects of diloxin therapy (hair loss, nausea, muscle degeneration), like many chemotherapy options in the real world, may be just as debilitating and uncomfortable as the illness it is intended to cure (Act of Contrition).
When Roslin's cancer returns after apparently having been cured, she takes diloxin treatments despite her earlier aversion to the drug (Crossroads, Part II).