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Archive for July 28th, 2012


Cervical Cancer Vaccine PSA

If you’re old enough to be watching R-rated movies, you’re old enough to ask your doctor about the cervical cancer vaccine. Visit www.swhr.org to learn more and to support women’s health research.

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How to Prepare for a Colonoscopy Procedure

Dr. Monica Borkar discusses a lower GI endoscopy procedure: when should you get a colonoscopy, what should you do to prepare for it, and what the procedure is actually like. To learn more about the colonoscopy prep process and what to expect, visit www.northshore.org

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New device destroys breast tumors with extreme cold

Cryoablation, a process which uses extreme cold to freeze and destroy diseased tissue, has been used by medical experts for years to treat both malignant and benign tumors, mostly in the kidneys and prostate.

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Donate through October to fight breast cancer

STERLING – Cartridge World North America is working with the National Breast Cancer Foundation to raise funds for breast cancer awareness.

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Small-Cap Adjuvants For Cancer Treatment

Cancer treatment advances in the last decade have been significant and offer more hope in curing the disease than in any other point in our history.

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Americans Indians aim to fight cancer through art

The problem is cancer, the leading cause of death among all South Dakotans and a greater menace to Indians in particular.

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Reverse the Damage – Lung Cancer 30 sec

8 hours after you quit smoking, your blood oxygen level returns to normal. In 3 months your lung function improves. Quit smoking today. For help, call 311 or visit nyc.gov .

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How is Ovarian Cancer Diagnosed?

To view the next video in this series, please click here: www.monkeysee.com

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Ovarian Cancer Risk Factors and Prevention

To view the next video in this series, please click here: www.monkeysee.com

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Vaccines Targeting Breast and Ovarian Cancer

Research over the last decade has demonstrated that human tumors are immunogenic and that cancer patients can have immune responses specific for their tumors. At the same time, many mechanisms have been identified that act to limit the tumor specific immune response. Cancer vaccines may have the potential to stimulate tumor immunity to levels that have an impact on tumor growth. The development and testing of cancer vaccines may lead someday to the ability to use the immune system to prevent the first development of cancer or of relapse in patients who have been previously treated. To see more videos from the University of Washington visit uwtv.org.

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