Claims
        
                - 1. A method of forming a one-piece substantially spherical seamless multilayered radioactive seed, comprising the steps of: 
forming a central sphere having an outer diameter less than 1 millimeter; forming a layer section over said central sphere with no substantial voids between the central sphere and the layer section having an outside diameter larger than said central sphere but less than 1 millimeter, wherein said layer section includes at least an outer layer of non-radioactive material concentric with the central sphere; and including within said outer layer a therapeutic amount of radioactivity with a diffusion barrier separating said therapeutic amount of radioactivity and the outside surface of said outer layer, wherein said one-piece substantially spherical seamless multilayered radioactive seed may be directly implanted in contact with a patients tissue.
 
                - 2. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section includes the step of forming an optional special purpose spherical coat designed to enhance diagnostic imaging.
 
                - 3. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section includes the step of forming a spherical coat including a radionuclide with a weighted average gamma energy of less than 100 KeV, and with a half-life of less than 130 days, wherein a multilayer radioactive microsphere is a low energy permanent multilayered radioactive microsphere for permanent interstitial implantation into human tumor tissues.
 
                - 4. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section includes the step of forming a spherical coat including a radionuclide with a weighted average gamma energy of less than 100 KeV and with a half-life of less than 130 days, wherein the one-piece substantially spherical seamless multilayered radioactive seed is a high energy permanent multilayered radioactive microsphere for permanent interstitial implantation into human tumor tissues.
 
                - 5. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section includes the step of forming a spherical coat including a radionuclide with a weighted average gamma energy greater than or equal to 100 KeV and with a half-life of less than 15 to 20 days, wherein the one-piece substantially spherical seamless multilayered radioactive seed is a high energy permanent multilayered radioactive microsphere for permanent interstitial implanatation into human tumor tissues.
 
                - 6. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section includes the step of forming a spherical coat including a radionuclide with a weighted average gamma energy of less than 100 KeV and with a half-life greater than 130 days, wherein the one-piece substantially spherical seamless multilayered radioactive seed is a high energy permanent multilayered radioactive microsphere for permanent interstitial implantation into human tumor tissues.
 
                - 7. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section includes the step of forming at least one spherical coat by inserting the central sphere with a substrate to be coated exposed into a vacuum chamber; 
levitating the central sphere with the substrate to be coated; and applying material under vacuum to the substrate while the substrates are levitated.
 
                - 8. A method in accordance with claim 7 in which the step of forming a layer section further includes the step of applying a bias to avoid fusing the substrates to the levitating means.
 
                - 9. A method in accordance with claim 7 in which the step of levitating the central sphere includes the step of applying ultrasonic vibrations to the central spheres.
 
                - 10. A method in accordance with claim 9 in which the step of applying ultrasonic vibrations includes the step of applying ultrasonic vibrations at a frequency between 1 and 10 percent of the levitating means resonant frequency.
 
                - 11. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section further includes the step of forming a layer of a ferromagnetic alloy that is capable of being inductively heated in situ by applied radiofrequency radiation until it passes through a Curie transition at temperatures useful for clinical hyperthermia.
 
                - 12. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section further includes the step of dc sputtering material using a radioactive metal target.
 
                - 13. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section further includes the step of rf or magnetron sputtering using a radioactive dielectric target.
 
                - 14. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section further includes the step of a metal in the presence of a gaseous radionuclide such as a radioactive hydride gas or monoatomic gas wherein a radioactive metal compound coat is formed as the coat by combining the metal with the radioactive component of the gas.
 
                - 15. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section further includes the step of dc sputtering material using a radioactive metal target wherein a dielectric coated planar metal target is prepared by coating a metal planar substrate with a radioactive dielectric compound using a selected one of reactive dc, rf, and magnetron sputtering, reactive cathodic arc plasma deposition, reactive ion-beam sputtering and reactive ion plating in which the radioactive compound coat is produced from an excited radionuclide gas and a non-radioactive metal target, whereby a target may be prepared for any one of cathodic arc plasma deposition or, rf or magnetron sputtering, or ion plating, or ion beam sputtering.
 
                - 16. A method in accordance with claim 1 in which the step of forming a layer section further includes the step of laminating coats of low boiling point elements that are likely to vacuum weld with high boiling point elements that are unlikely to vacuum weld.
 
                - 17. An auto-feeding implantation gun for implantation of multiple multilayer radioactive microspheres comprising: 
a loading chamber having in inner diameter of less than 1 millimeter and a length of at least 10 millimeters; and means for ejecting radioactive spheres having diameters less than 1 millimeter, said means for ejecting radioactive spheres including at least one spring biased container for spheres and pin means for holding the spheres from ejection.
 
                - 18. A method for eliminating vacuum welding between levitated microspheres comprising the steps of: 
laminating coats of low boiling point elements that are likely to vacuum weld with high boiling point elements that are unlikely to vacuum weld; and biasing a levitating bouncing pan with an electric charge.
 
                - 19. A method of depositing radioactive material onto a substrate wire to form a multilayered seamless radioactive wire in such a manner that a therapeutic amount of radio activities are deposited in a controlled fashion comprising the steps of: 
coating a central wire section with a plurality of coats to form a layer section wherein at least one layer has a therapeutic amount of radioactivity and there is an outside diameter no greater than 1 millimeter; at least certain of said coats are applied to said wire substrate by one of sputtering, laser ablation deposition, ion plating, ion beam sputtering, or cathodic arc deposition and are spattered from a material that reacts chemically with the radioactive material and forms a mechanical barrier against diffusion of the radioactive material.
 
                - 20. A method of depositing radioactive material onto a substrate wire to form a multilayered seamless radioactive wire in such a manner that a theraputic amount of radioactivities are deposited in a controlled fashion comprising the steps of: 
differentially coating radioactive material onto said substrate wire to form a multilayered seamless radioactive wire in such a manner that variable activities are deposited per unit length in a controlled fashion; at least certain coats of said multilayered wire being applied to said wire substrate by one of sputtering, laser ablation deposition, ion plating, ion beam sputtering, or cathodic arc deposition and are spattered from a material that reacts chemically with the radioactive material and forms a mechanical barrier against diffusion of the radioactive material.
 
                - 21. A method of making an ocular applicator comprising the steps of coating a substrate with a material containing a therapeutic amount of radioactivity and a protective layer wherein radioactive multilayers in the layer section have a thickness no greater than 0.5 millimeters and are deposited on an active surface by means of sputtering, laser ablation deposition, ion plating, ion beam sputtering, or cathodic arc deposition and are spattered from a material that reacts chemically with the radioactive material and forms a mechanical barrier against diffusion of the radioactive material.
 
                - 22. A surgical technique for implantation of multilayer radioactive microspheres the steps of: 
selecting the half-life, energy, activity and field strength of the implant in accordance with the time of implantation; and implanting high energy microspheres wherein the high energy microspheres include high energy radioactivity with a half-life only long enough to destroy only neoplantic tissue and not long enough for the destruction of differentiated healthy cells according with the intensity, and low energy radioactivity with a long half-life.
 
                - 23. A surgical technique for implantation of ribbon-multilayer radioactive implants comprising the steps of: 
selecting a ribbon with the intensity, activity, energy and spacing of radioactive seeds appropriate for the tumor size and type; inserting the ribbon in a path covering the diseased tissue using a needle, catheter, tube, or cartridge-fed implantation gun, the step of inserting including the step of anchoring the ribbon by inserting beads connected thereto into said tissue.
 
                - 24. A surgical technique for temporary implantation of multilayered radioactive wire comprising the steps of: 
selecting a wire with the intensity, activity, and energy appropriate for the tumor size and type; and inserting the wire or multiple wires in a path covering the diseased tissue, and removing the wires after a therapeutic amount of time, the step of inserting including the step of anchoring the wire by inserting beads connected thereto into tissue.
 
                - 25. Apparatus for coating small substrates comprising: 
a vacuum chamber; substrate levitating means for levitating substrates to be coated; means for applying material under vacuum to the substrates while the substrates are levitated; and means for applying a bias to avoid levitating means.
 
                - 26. Apparatus for coating small substrates comprising: 
a vacuum chamber; substrate levitating means for levitating substrates to be coated; means for applying material under vacuum to the substrates while the substrates are levitated; said levitating means including an ultrasonic vibrator and means for driving the ultrasonic vibrator at a frequency between 1 and 10 percent of levitating means resonant frequency.
 
        
                
                        REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
        [0001] This application is a divisional of parent application Ser. No. 09/633,437 filed Aug. 7, 2000, which is a divisional of parent application Ser. No. 07/741,038 filed Aug. 6, 1991, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,099,457, which is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. application Ser. No. 07/565,714 for ENDOCURIETHERAPY filed by Roger R. Good on Aug. 13, 1990, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,342,283.
                
                
                
                        Divisions (2)
        
            
                
                     | 
                    Number | 
                    Date | 
                    Country | 
                
            
            
    
        | Parent | 
            09633437 | 
        Aug 2000 | 
        US | 
    
    
        | Child | 
            10652231 | 
        Aug 2003 | 
        US | 
    
    
        | Parent | 
            07741038 | 
        Aug 1991 | 
        US | 
    
    
        | Child | 
            09633437 | 
        Aug 2000 | 
        US | 
    
            
        
        Continuation in Parts (1)
        
            
                
                     | 
                    Number | 
                    Date | 
                    Country | 
                
            
            
    
        | Parent | 
            07565714 | 
        Aug 1990 | 
        US | 
    
    
        | Child | 
            07741038 | 
        Aug 1991 | 
        US |