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Tom Scott

Recognizing Lung Cancer Awareness Month - 0 views

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    November is Lung Cancer Awareness Month and presents a chance to educate the public about one of the most deadly yet least funded forms of cancer.
Matti Narkia

Targeted Breast Cancer Drug Shrinks Tumors - Medscape - 2 views

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    "December 17, 2009 (San Antonio) - A new targeted cancer drug has been shown to shrink tumors in women with metastatic breast cancer after an average of seven other drugs, including Herceptin, failed. The new drug, called T-DM1, combines Herceptin with a potent chemotherapy drug. It's a Trojan horse approach, where Herceptin homes in on cancer cells and delivers the cancer-killing agent directly to its target. Tumors shrank in one-third of women with metastatic breast cancer given T-DM1, says Ian Krop, MD, of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. In another 12%, tumors stopped growing for at least six months. The women remained cancer-free for an average of seven months -- results unheard of in patients this sick, he says. All the women, who had breast tumors for an average of three years, had cancer that had metastasized, or spread to other parts of the body. They had been treated with an average of seven different therapies, including Herceptin, Tykerb, and Xeloda, and each had failed."
Matti Narkia

Whole Health Source: Cancer and the Immune System - 0 views

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    They found some important trends. Granulocytes from people over 50 years old had a reduced ability to kill cancer cells, as did granulocytes from people with cancer. This raises the possibility that cancer is not simply the result of getting too old, but a very specific weakening of the immune system. The most important finding, however, was that the granulocytes' kung-fu grip declined dramatically during the winter months. Here's Dr. Cui: Nobody seems to have any cancer-killing ability during the winter months from November to April.
Matti Narkia

A phase 2 trial exploring the effects of high-dose (10,000 IU/day) vitamin D(3) in brea... - 0 views

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    A phase 2 trial exploring the effects of high-dose (10,000 IU/day) vitamin D(3) in breast cancer patients with bone metastases. Amir E, Simmons CE, Freedman OC, Dranitsaris G, Cole DE, Vieth R, Ooi WS, Clemons M. Cancer. 2009 Nov 13. [Epub ahead of print] PMID: 19918922 DOI: 10.1002/cncr.24749 METHODS: Patients with bone metastases treated with bisphosphonates were enrolled into this single-arm phase 2 study. Patients received 10,000 IU of vitamin D3 and 1000 mg of calcium supplementation each day for 4 months. The effect of this treatment on palliation, bone resorption markers, calcium metabolism, and toxicity were evaluated at baseline and monthly thereafter. CONCLUSIONS: Daily doses of 10,000 IU vitamin D3 for 4 months appear safe in patients without comorbid conditions causing hypersensitivity to vitamin D. Treatment reduced inappropriately elevated parathyroid hormone levels, presumably caused by long-term bisphosphonate use. There did not appear to be a significant palliative benefit nor any significant change in bone resorption. Cancer 2010. © 2009 American Cancer Society.
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 !
Matti Narkia

Are sunlight deprivation and influenza epidemics associated with the onset of acute leu... - 0 views

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    Are sunlight deprivation and influenza epidemics associated with the onset of acute leukemia? Timonen T, Näyhä S, Koskela T, Pukkala E. Haematologica. 2007 Nov;92(11):1553-6. PMID: 18024404 doi:10.3324/haematol.10799 Month of diagnosis of 7,423 cases of acute leukemia (AL) in Finland during 1964-2003 were linked with data on influenza and solar radiation. Acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML) showed the highest risk in the dark season. During the light season, the incidence decreased by 58% (95% confidence interval, 16-79%) per 1,000 kJ/m2/d increase of solar radiation. Independent of solar radiation, AML increased by 9% (95% confidence interval, 0-19%) during influenza epidemics. Reoccurring at the same time annually, darkness-related vitamin D deficiency and influenza could cause successive and co-operative mutations leading to AL with a short latency.
Tom Scott

Lung cancer still one of the most deadly, least funded cancers - 0 views

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    November is Lung Cancer Awareness Month and clearly there is still much work to be done to beat this devastating disease.
Matti Narkia

New data on link between cancer and nutrition discussed at European symposium - 0 views

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    European experts in cancer and nutrition are meeting in Zurich, Switzerland late this month to discuss cutting-edge research in one of the most important and fiercely debated topics in cancer prevention: the link between diet and cancer. There is growing evidence that many cancers may be prevented through healthy lifestyle, including a nutritionally balanced diet. In addition, nutritional problems can also have a negative impact on cancer management and the lives of patients. Other presentations will include new data on topics such as: Childhood nutrition and later breast cancer risk The anti-tumour effects of green tea Malnutrition and patient distress in cancer Possible anti-tumour effects of soy extracts in mice Estrogens in beef and cancer risk
Matti Narkia

Four times current vitamin D doses needed for winter levels: Study - 0 views

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    Maintaining adequate levels of vitamin D during winter months requires a daily dose of 20 micrograms, four times the current recommended dose, says a new study. The study, led by Susan Sullivan from the University of Maine, has important implications for ongoing consultations on vitamin D recommendations, with the current level of five micrograms (200 International Units) seen by many as insufficient.
Matti Narkia

Dichloroacetate (DCA) as a potential metabolic-targeting therapy for cancer - British J... - 1 views

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    Dichloroacetate (DCA) as a potential metabolic-targeting therapy for cancer. Michelakis ED, Webster L, Mackey JR. Br J Cancer. 2008 Oct 7;99(7):989-94. Epub 2008 Sep 2. Review. PMID: 18766181 doi:10.1038/sj.bjc.6604554 The unique metabolism of most solid tumours (aerobic glycolysis, i.e., Warburg effect) is not only the basis of diagnosing cancer with metabolic imaging but might also be associated with the resistance to apoptosis that characterises cancer. The glycolytic phenotype in cancer appears to be the common denominator of diverse molecular abnormalities in cancer and may be associated with a (potentially reversible) suppression of mitochondrial function. The generic drug dichloroacetate is an orally available small molecule that, by inhibiting the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase, increases the flux of pyruvate into the mitochondria, promoting glucose oxidation over glycolysis. This reverses the suppressed mitochondrial apoptosis in cancer and results in suppression of tumour growth in vitro and in vivo. Here, we review the scientific and clinical rationale supporting the rapid translation of this promising metabolic modulator in early-phase cancer clinical trials More than 40 nonrandomised trials of DCA in small cohorts of patients have been reported, but the first two randomised control trials of chronic oral therapy with DCA in congenital mitochondrial diseases were reported in 2006. In the first, a blinded placebo-controlled study was performed with oral DCA administered at 25 mg kg-1 day-1 in 30 patients with MELAS syndrome (mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes) (Kaufmann et al, 2006). Most patients enrolled in the DCA arm developed symptomatic peripheral neuropathy, compared with 4 out of 15 in the placebo arm, leading to the termination of the study. Seventeen out of 19 patients had at least partial resolution of peripheral neurological symptoms by 9 months after discontinuation of DCA. This neurotoxicity res
MrGhaz .

A Life After Death: The Bequest of Henrietta Lacks - 0 views

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    Cells from a suspicious purplish spot on her cervix were analyzed and identified as cancerous. They multiplied so quickly that, despite treatment, Mrs. Lacks died eight months later, at the age of 31…Today, however, her cells are still alive and are being used to help combat a wide variety of diseases all over the world.
Matti Narkia

Does vitamin D protect against cancer? « Cancer Research UK - Science Update - 0 views

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    This month, the authoritative International Agency for Research into Cancer (IARC) have weighed in on the issue. By gathering a group of expert scientists, they have looked at all the available evidence and published a detailed report on vitamin D and cancer. The massive tome weighs in at 465 pages, but we'll take a look at the key points in the first of two posts looking at the vitamin D debate. It is impossible for us to get more than about five percent of the vitamin D we need from our diet - unless, like Eskimos, we eat oily fish three times a day.
Matti Narkia

Scientists hail the first effective treatment for skin cancer victims - Hea... - 0 views

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    Scientists have developed the first "personalised" drug shown to be effective against advanced melanoma, the deadliest type of skin cancer which is on the rise in Britain. Warnings about the risks of melanoma were heightened this weekend as the fine weather drew thousands to sunbathe outdoors, putting them at increased risk. "Binge tanning", where sunbathers allow their skin to burn in their eagerness to get a tan, is a key cause of the cancer. Melanoma, which starts as a blemish or change to a mole on the skin, is treatable in its early stages but once it has spread to other organs such as the lungs and liver there are no treatment options. Patients with melanoma that has spread usually die within months
Matti Narkia

Millions of Needless Deaths - Life Extension - 0 views

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    A large number of new vitamin D studies have appeared in the scientific literature since I wrote my plea to the federal government. These studies don't just confirm what we knew 16 months ago-they show that optimizing vitamin D intake will save even more lives than what we projected. Vitamin D More Effective Than Previously Known For instance, a study published in June 2008 showed that men with low vitamin D levels suffer 2.42 times more heart attacks. Now look what this means in actual body counts.
Matti Narkia

Oral sex blamed for throat cancer rise - Health - Life & Style Home - theage.com.au - 0 views

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    For five gruelling months in 2006 and 2007, Carol Kanga suffered through treatment for a life-threatening case of throat cancer linked to an unlikely source: a sexually transmitted viral infection. Kanga's treatment was successful, but the virus that struck her is causing increasing concern among some researchers who think it is causing a small-scale epidemic of throat cancer. That virus, scientists have proved only in the last two years, is human papillomavirus, or HPV - the same virus that's behind most cases of cervical cancer.
Matti Narkia

Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D and colon cancer: eight-year prospective study. - [Lancet. 19... - 0 views

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    Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D and colon cancer: eight-year prospective study. Garland CF, Comstock GW, Garland FC, Helsing KJ, Shaw EK, Gorham ED. Lancet. 1989 Nov 18;2(8673):1176-8. PMID: 2572900 Blood samples taken in 1974 in Washington County, Maryland, from 25 620 volunteers were used to investigate the relation of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OHD) with subsequent risk of getting colon cancer. 34 cases of colon cancer diagnosed between August, 1975, and January, 1983, were matched to 67 controls by age, race, sex, and month blood was taken. Risk of colon cancer was reduced by 75% in the third quintile (27-32 ng/ml) and by 80% in the fourth quintile (33-41 ng/ml) of serum 25-OHD. Risk of getting colon cancer decreased three-fold in people with a serum 25-OHD concentration of 20 ng/ml or more. The results are consistent with a protective effect of serum 25-OHD on colon cancer.
Child Therapy

Child Therapy Works - 3 views

I have the chance of asking professional help for my kid who has been depressed for the past few weeks. We did not know what the reason was and so we asked help from NLP4Kids a reputed therapy orga...

Child therapist Therapy for children

started by Child Therapy on 24 Feb 12 no follow-up yet
Vortege Ville

Jill Biden and Jennifer Aniston help recognize Breast Cancer Awareness - 0 views

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    Second lady Jill Biden, actress Jennifer Aniston and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius toured a breast cancer center Monday in recognition of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
Vortege Ville

Women with advanced breast cancers feel left out, forgotten - 0 views

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    Like many women with an advanced form of the disease, Lange says she feels alienated from the larger breast cancer community, and out-of-place at the countless events held each October for breast cancer Awareness Month.
Vortege Ville

Steve Jobs's Cancer Choices - 0 views

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    When doctors discovered a tumor on Steve Jobs's pancreas, he chose nine months of alternative therapies before undergoing surgery. Did he make the right decision?
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