While not everyone requires a port for chemotherapy, many patients find it beneficial. A port is an implanted device that provides easier and safer access to a vein for administering chemotherapy and drawing blood. It can reduce discomfort and the risk of vein damage from multiple needle insertions. Your healthcare provider will determine the best option based on your treatment plan and individual needs.
You can get a chemo port flushed at your oncologist's office, a cancer treatment center, or a hospital's outpatient infusion unit. Many healthcare facilities that provide chemotherapy services have trained staff who can perform this procedure. It's important to schedule an appointment in advance, as not all clinics may accommodate walk-in requests. Always check with your healthcare provider for specific recommendations based on your situation.
Because of the radiation
My recommendation is NO. If you have a cough stay home and call on the phone. When a person goes through chemo their immune system is compromised, colds and coughs are easy to catch something a chemo patient does not need.
Yes. Either when you land, when you arrive in port, or when you arrive via the chunnel.
You go through the forest and go to the port and get a boat.
3-port valves are what you put in a circite to let the air go through to what ever you have on the other side of the wire
After you land, on your port of destination.
You can't unless you have a port-hole to go through, and even then you might not end up in their world.
go through the pass at the port(docking area) and up the stairs!
Port Triggering opens a port when a PC on the network initiates communication through another port.
Port 3389 is the only port you need to open. Windows will attempt to stream sound through User Datagram Protocol (UDP) first. If no port is available for UDP, sound will stream through a virtual channel in Remote Desktop Protocol, which uses port 3389. http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/mobility/rdfaq.mspx
Chemo - comics - was created in 1962.