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Matti Narkia

fieldsofhope : Living with Cancer - 0 views

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    Description Where there is Life..there is hope! A safe place to share hope for families and friends who are dealing with cancer. Discussions to encourage sharing and caring. New medicines...new therapies and new hopes! Also to discuss the use of DCA in cancer treatments...could this be the new hope for cancer patients and their families?
Matti Narkia

High-dose vitamin C therapy: Renewed hope or false promise? -- Assouline and Miller 174... - 0 views

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    High-dose vitamin C therapy: renewed hope or false promise?\nAssouline S, Miller WH.\nCMAJ. 2006 Mar 28;174(7):956-7. \nPMID: 16567756
Joseph Reynolds

Clinical Trial & Study of New Medicine for Mesothelioma Treatment - 0 views

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    The National Cancer Institute is sponsoring a clinical trial of a new medicine in hopes that it will help mesothelioma patients whose cancers have been unresponsive to chemotherapy.
Matti Narkia

Cannabis compound slows lung cancer in mice - health - 18 April 2007 - New Scientist - 0 views

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    The active compound in marijuana, THC, can slow the growth of lung tumours and reduce the spread of the cancer in mice, a preliminary study reveals. Human lung cancer tumours grew less than half as fast in mice that received moderate doses of the compound, the researchers reveal. They hope that drugs mimicking the apparent anti-cancer effects of tetrahydrocanabinol (THC) could one day help treat patients. The team strongly discourage people from self-medicating by smoking marijuana, noting that doing so could potentially encourage tumour growth.
Matti Narkia

Wine Won't Cut Breast Cancer Risk - 0 views

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    March 9, 2009 -- Red or white wine with dinner? A new study suggests a woman's wine choice should be based on personal preference rather than any hope that a wine's color may affect its breast cancer-fighting ability. "We found no difference between red or white wine in relation to breast cancer risk. Neither appears to have any benefits," researcher Polly Newcomb, PhD, MPH, head of the Cancer Prevention Program at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, says in a news release.
Matti Narkia

Briefing: Cannabis compounds fight prostate cancer - health - 19 August 2009 - New Scie... - 2 views

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    "Compounds similar to those found in cannabis have been shown to stop prostate cancer cells from multiplying. Two cannabinoid compounds, JWH-015 and MET, stopped prostate tumour growth in human prostate cells in Petri dishes and also in mice with the disease. They halted the cell-division cycle and killed the cancer cells, and had the greatest effect on aggressive prostate cancer cell types, which do not respond to hormone treatments. Some 192,000 men in the US alone are diagnosed with prostate cancer each year, and researchers Inés Díaz-Laviada Marturet at the University of Alcalá, Spain, and her colleagues say the results could offer hope to those affected. But before you go looking for a dealer, New Scientist answers a few questions"
Matti Narkia

Don't cure cancer, stabilize it: Scientific American Blog - 0 views

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    What if we didn't try to cure cancer, but simply kept tumors from growing too big? That's what radiologist Robert Gatenby of the Moffitt Cancer Center proposes this week in the journal Nature. Gatenby argues that high doses of powerful chemotherapies wreak havoc on a patient's immune system and foster the rapid regrowth of chemoresistant cancers that doctors have no hope of fighting.  So instead of curing cancer, he suggests doctors aim to stabilize the tumor at a tolerable size. In practice, this would mean that doctors identify a target size for an individual tumor that gives the patient the best quality of life.  Then, they will regularly monitor the tumor's growth with medical imaging equipment like a PET/CT scanner (see photo), and regulate doses of anticancer drugs to maintain it at a precise volume.
Matti Narkia

DCA, Dichloroacetate for Cancer - Dr. Weil - 0 views

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    DCA is an organic compound, and a byproduct of TCE (trichloroethylene), a chemical that has been a concern in the development of cancer. In January 2007, researchers at the University of Alberta published a study in the journal Cancer Cell suggesting that DCA showed promise in shrinking tumors in lab rats as well as inhibiting growth of cultured human cancer cells. They hypothesized that DCA may be able to change cancer cells back to normal ones by switching them from the aberrant energy pathways they rely on to those used by normal cells.
Final Duties

Flower found that can kill tumors in 1 hit! - 1 views

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    proven to kill cancer tumors in mice in 1 hit, They have said 18 months in the daily mail to start clinical trials, Why then fecikn wait that long!Its a bloody flower!! The government have no intention on curing cancer and never will have! ''conspiracy'' how much money would they lose if the cured it! billions, greedy wankers... why give people hope just another load of bollocks.. Just like that guy on the run who proved that cannabis cures cancer in oil form, why's he on the run? from curing people of cancer,......... after watching my dad the last 6 months suffer going through endless chemo sessions i get so angry when i see stuff like this say 18 months before clinical trials start and 7-8 years b4 it comes out!! although it has proven results! 100's of thousands of terminal cancer patients will be dead before they pull there greedy fat cat fingers out there arses, sorry rant over just makes me so angry! my dad and my best friend both suffering and they say 7-8 years b4 it will even be realised with a proven record of killing 90% of most tumors !
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