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Breaking News
cancer
Stories 1041 - 1060 |
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Five Common Mistakes About Cancer
Aug 30, 2007 1:54 PM CDT
Five Common Mistakes About Cancer
Awash in information, many remain dangerously misinformed
(Newser)
- An American Cancer Society survey of 1,000 adults, as reported in
Time,
determined five major misconceptions about the disease.
The risk of dying from cancer in the United States is increasing.
Living in a polluted city is a greater risk for lung cancer than smoking a pack of cigarettes
...
Cancer Can Wait; Botox Doesn't
Aug 29, 2007 3:00 PM CDT
Cancer Can Wait; Botox Doesn't
New study says medical patients wait longer than cosmetic patients
(Newser)
- Patients have a better chance of seeing their dermatologists if they want Botox than if they want a potentially cancerous mole examined, a new study finds. Researchers, posing as patients in a dozen cities, faced a typical wait of eight days for cosmetic procedures and 26 days to test a...
Cancer Cures Hiding in Poisonous Lake
Aug 28, 2007 6:47 PM CDT
Cancer Cures Hiding in Poisonous Lake
Scientists fish new microbes out of a toxic soup that kills
(Newser)
- Two scientists may be fishing cancer cures out of an abandoned, poisonous lake,
Wired
reports. Don and Andrea Stierle are finding microbes in the green goup of an old Montana pit lake that don’t exist anywhere else – and happen to make compounds that inhibit a lung cancer and...
Alcohol May Lower Risk of Kidney Cancer
Aug 25, 2007 5:48 PM CDT
Alcohol May Lower Risk of Kidney Cancer
Still probably bad for your liver, though
(Newser)
- Adding to the cacophony of conflicting recommendation about alcohol consumption, a new study finds that drinking two or more glasses of red wine might reduce your risk of kidney cancer. In a study comparing the drinking habits of kidney cancer patients to others, red-wine drinkers had 40% lower risk than...
Breast Cancer Vaccine Passes Safety Test
Aug 19, 2007 12:05 PM CDT
Breast Cancer Vaccine Passes Safety Test
18 patients treated without harm, some benefit seen in slowing disease
(Newser)
- A breast cancer vaccine is one step closer to FDA approval after a study found it produced no harmful effects in 18 women treated, and showed some signs of slowing tumors, Reuters reports. Neuvenge is meant to treat people who already have cancer by triggering the immune system to fight...
Diet Linked to Colon Cancer Survival
Aug 15, 2007 8:04 AM CDT
Diet Linked to Colon Cancer Survival
Deaths, recurrences triple in patients who eat "Western" diet
(Newser)
- A new study reconfirms the link between colon cancer and a diet rich in red meat, fat and sugar—this time focusing on the survival rate of those who've already been treated for colon cancer. Those who ate what researchers dubbed the "Western" diet were three times as likely...
Pavarotti Extends Stay
in Hospital
Aug 14, 2007 11:22 PM CDT
Pavarotti Extends Stay in Hospital
'Tranquil' tenor to remain a few more days
(Newser)
- Tenor Luciano Pavarotti has decided to extend his stay in the hospital a few more days, his wife said, saying the star feels “more tranquil” there and denying rumors that he had pneumonia. The opera luminary, who had surgery for pancreatic cancer in 2006, was hospitalized last week when...
MRIs Beat Mammograms at Spotting Earliest Breast Cancer
Aug 10, 2007 10:07 AM CDT
MRIs Beat Mammograms at Spotting Earliest Breast Cancer
Researchers urge switch to save lives
(Newser)
- MRIs significantly outperform mammograms in detecting pockets of abnormal cells that can lead to full-blown breast cancer, and the costly scans should be used routinely to save more women's lives, researchers say. A new study out today says MRIs detected 92% of the early lesions, called ductal carcinoma in situ,...
Cheap Flights:
a Ticket to
Skin Cancer
Aug 9, 2007 6:36 AM CDT
Cheap Flights: a Ticket to Skin Cancer
Rise in beach holidays blamed for increase in melanoma
(Newser)
- Doctors in Britain have blamed a 50% rise in the incidence of skin cancer on cheap flights to the beach, reports the
Independent
. Statistics from Cancer Research UK and the British travel agents' association confirm that easier access to sunny climates have made melanoma the nation's fastest-rising disease, particularly among...
Tommy Makem Dies at 74
Aug 3, 2007 4:19 AM CDT
Tommy Makem Dies at 74
(Newser)
- Tommy Makem, the great Irish singer and storyteller who, with the Clancy Brothers, led the revival in Irish folk music in the late 1950s and 1960s, died after a long battle with lung cancer yesterday. He was 74. "To hear Tommy Makem sing 'Four Green Fields,' " writes...
Bad Plastic:
It's Practically Everywhere
Aug 2, 2007 1:59 PM CDT
Bad Plastic: It's Practically Everywhere
And it's linked to infertility, obesity, cancer—you name it
(Newser)
- It's in everything from baby bottles to coffee makers to CDs, and research is accumulating, as Salon's Elizabeth Grossman puts it, that it's a major health hazard. Bisphenol A is a key ingredient of the lightweight plastics now ubiquitous in consumer products, and it's been variously linked to reproductive health,...
Drinking Coffee May Fight
Colon Cancer
Aug 1, 2007 11:36 AM CDT
Drinking Coffee May Fight Colon Cancer
Japanese study finds benefits of 3 cups a day apply only to women
(Newser)
- Drinking three or more cups of coffee a day can cut the risk of colon cancer in half—but the benefit manifests itself only in women. What's more, Reuters reports, the research was conducted in Japan, where men drink and smoke so much that scientists had trouble controlling for those...
'GMA' Host Has Breast Cancer
Jul 31, 2007 3:56 PM CDT
'GMA' Host Has Breast Cancer
Roberts says she'll have surgery, urges viewers to undergo screening
(Newser)
-
Good Morning America'
s Robin Roberts revealed she has breast cancer today and will be undergoing surgery shortly and follow-up treatment in the coming months. After filming a special about colleague Joel Siegel's battle with cancer, she told ABC News, "I went to bed, I did a self breast exam...
Peppy Combo May Battle Skin Cancer
Jul 31, 2007 1:53 PM CDT
Peppy Combo May Battle Skin Cancer
Caffeine and exercise show promise in prevention
(Newser)
- A 1-2 punch of caffeine and exercise may help prevent skin cancer. Hairless mice fed caffeinated water who worked out on a running wheel showed an increase in destruction of skin cells damaged by UVB rays, the AP reports, and the secret appears to be the combination. Researchers caution, however,...
Lifting That Glass Boosts Cancer Risk
Jul 31, 2007 9:13 AM CDT
Lifting That Glass Boosts Cancer Risk
Single large glass of wine a day ups colon cancer odds by 10%
(Newser)
- What's a bloke to do? After the reassuring news that a glass of red wine a day helps fend off heart disease, now comes a British study that one large glass—or a pint of beer—increases the risk of colon cancer by 10%. ""The research shows quite...
Tobacco Used in Cancer Vaccine
Jul 30, 2007 11:21 AM CDT
Tobacco Used in Cancer Vaccine
Scientists who developed HPV vaccine work on a cheaper version—±±
(Newser)
- The same researchers who developed Gardasil—the vaccine that can prevent cervical cancer—have genetically engineered tobacco plants to produce a cheaper version of the vaccine. The new drug, designed for distribution in India and other poor countries, would cost $3 for three doses, as opposed to $360 for Gardasil,...
Cholesterol Drop May Boost Cancer Risk
Jul 24, 2007 4:56 PM CDT
Cholesterol Drop May Boost Cancer Risk
Study doesn't prove cause-and-effect relationship, docs say
(Newser)
- Artificially reducing cholesterol to very low levels may slightly increase the risk of cancer, but that doesn't mean heart patients should go off their meds. One extra cancer case occurred in each 1,000 patients using statin drugs in an analysis of 23 different trials, Reuters reports; researchers hastened to...
Mouth Cancer Strikes Top Chicago Chef
Jul 24, 2007 10:38 AM CDT
Mouth Cancer Strikes Top Chicago Chef
Alinea master gourmet Achatz may lose taste from treatment
(Newser)
- Award-winning Chicago chef Grant Achatz, owner and head chef of top-rated restaurant Alinea, has a squamous cell carcinoma in his mouth, he announced yesterday. While doctors believe his long-term prognosis is good, it is possible that the chemotherapy necessary to treat the cancer will deprive Achatz of his sense of...
Extra Fruits, Veggies Don't Stall Breast Cancer
Jul 18, 2007 7:33 AM CDT
Extra Fruits, Veggies Don't Stall Breast Cancer
Docs weigh focus on weight and exercise
(Newser)
- Loading up on fruits and vegetables doesn't stop breast cancer from returning, a 7-year study shows, causing researchers to mull switching focus to exercise and weight. The 3,000-woman study found no benefit to those who scarfed down extra servings of fruits and veggies—a relief to women who worry...
Gene Doesn't Alter Cancer
Survival Rates
Jul 12, 2007 5:13 PM CDT
Gene Doesn't Alter Cancer Survival Rates
Breast cancer triggered by BRCA1 and BRCA2 no more lethal than other forms
(Newser)
- Women who carry one of the two known breast-cancer-causing genes—BRCA1 and BRCA2—are more likely to be diagnosed with the disease before 50, but they're not more likely to die from it than other breast-cancer patients, a new study concludes. Tracking the 10-year survival rates of women in 22...
Stories 1041 - 1060 |
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