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Archive for July 18th, 2012


Useful Tips About Squamous Cell Carcinoma Skin Cancer

You never noticed it before, but now you have a mole on your arm that seems to be changing color. When you touch it, it has a scaly surface and it’s unlike any other moles on your body. This could be squamous cell carcinoma skin cancer. How will this kind of cancer appear? Squamous cell [...]

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Nanomedicine: Bringing brighter light into living bodies

Fluorescent dyes with aggregation-induced emission provide new probes for cancer diagnosis and therapy.

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New cancer treatments fight to survive

Immunotherapy aims to use the body’s immune system against tumours, but a struggle to find funding might hamper this cutting edge research.

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Fortis – IBN TissueBank working on improved colorectal cancer treatment

SINGAPORE: Doctors and researchers of the Fortis-IBN TissueBank are working to speed up translational research to improve the diagnosis and treatment of colorectal cancer.

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Anonymous 20m donation to cancer research

A HUGE A 20m anonymous donation is to help ground-breaking Hampshire scientists carry out pioneering research into new ways of beating cancer.

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UCSF study finds deadly liver cancer may be triggered by cells changing identity

A rare type of cancer thought to derive from cells in the bile ducts of the liver may actually develop when one type of liver cell morphs into a totally different type, a process scientists used to consider all but impossible. UCSF researchers triggered this kind of cellular transformation — and caused tumors to form in mice — by activating just two genes. Their discovery suggests that drugs that are able to target those genes may provide a way to treat the deadly cancer, known as cholangiocarcinoma.

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Stanford researchers calculate global health impacts of the Fukushima nuclear disaster

Radiation from Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster may eventually cause anywhere from 15 to 1,300 deaths and from 24 to 2,500 cases of cancer, mostly in Japan, Stanford researchers have calculated. The estimates have large uncertainty ranges, but contrast with previous claims that the radioactive release would likely cause no severe health effects. The numbers are in addition to the roughly 600 deaths caused by the evacuation of the area surrounding the nuclear plant directly after the March 2011 earthquake, tsunami and meltdown. Stanford University is home to the Stanford Cancer Institute.

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If RDA For Vitamin C Is Increased, Incidence Of Heart Disease, Stroke, Cancer May Be Reduced

The recommended dietary allowance, or RDA, of vitamin C is less than half what it should be, scientists argue in a recent report, because medical experts insist on evaluating this natural, but critical nutrient in the same way they do pharmaceutical drugs and reach faulty conclusions as a result…

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Cells Changing Identity May Trigger Deadly Liver Cancer

A rare type of cancer thought to derive from cells in the bile ducts of the liver may actually develop when one type of liver cell morphs into a totally different type, a process scientists used to consider all but impossible. UCSF researchers triggered this kind of cellular transformation – and caused tumors to form in mice – by activating just two genes…

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Liver Cancer Risk May Be Reduced By Vitamin E

High consumption of vitamin E either from diet or vitamin supplements may lower the risk of liver cancer, according to a study published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Liver cancer is the third most common cause of cancer mortality in the world, the fifth most common cancer found in men and the seventh most common in women…

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