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Breaking News
chemotherapy
Stories 81 - 92 |
<< Prev
Swayze: 'I'm Going
Through Hell'
Jan 6, 2009 2:29 PM CST
Swayze: 'I'm Going Through Hell'
(Newser)
- "Yeah, I'm scared. Yeah, I'm angry. Yeah, I'm all that stuff," Patrick Swayze tells Barbara Walters in a candid interview that airs tomorrow, the first since his pancreatic cancer diagnosis. "I'm going through hell, and I've only just seen the beginning of it." Swayze was determined...
Breast Cancer
May Vanish
Without Chemo
Nov 25, 2008 4:40 AM CST
Breast Cancer May Vanish Without Chemo
Fewer cancers found in women screened less often
(Newser)
- Breast cancer goes into spontaneous remission far more often than had been believed, a new study has discovered. Researchers found that a fifth more cancers were found in women screened every two years than in a group screened once in six years, leading them to conclude that many cancers may...
Kennedy Returns to Work
on Capitol Hill
Nov 17, 2008 1:38 PM CST
Kennedy Returns to Work on Capitol Hill
Senator anxious to pass stimulus, health care legislation
(Newser)
- Ted Kennedy returned to the US Senate today, having undergone 6 months of extensive treatment for a brain tumor, the
Boston Globe
reports. Accompanied by his wife, Vicki, and their dogs, Kennedy was greeted by applause from his family and staff in the Russell Caucus Room under a banner that...
Pesky Beetle Could Hold Cancer Key
Sep 1, 2008 1:03 PM CDT
Pesky Beetle Could Hold Cancer Key
Scientists crack code of enzyme that helps cells multiply limitlessly
(Newser)
- An insect that’s a scourge in Southern kitchens could help scientists develop drugs to treat human cancer, the
Philadelphia Inquirer
reports. In studying the red flour beetle, scientists were able to decode an enzyme called telomerase, which triggers a cell's ability to multiply timelessly, playing an active role in...
Kennedy Doing
Well, Wife Reports
Jul 7, 2008 4:05 PM CDT
Kennedy Doing Well, Wife Reports
Senator responding to cancer treatment
(Newser)
- Ted Kennedy is responding well to cancer treatment, according to his wife, Vicki. Although he's experiencing some fatigue—a “word that has never been in Teddy’s vocabulary before”—he is exercising every morning and sailing nearly every day. The venerable senator is halfway through 6 weeks of...
Melanoma Cured by Cloning Patient's Own Immune Cells
Jun 19, 2008 6:11 AM CDT
Melanoma Cured by Cloning Patient's Own Immune Cells
Immune system boost wipes out tumors
(Newser)
- Scientists eliminated a man's late-stage melanoma by giving the body's own defenses a massive boost,
Scientific American
reports. They removed infection-fighting white blood cells from the patient's body, cloned them in the lab until they numbered in the billions, and injected them back into the patient. He was tumor-free 2...
Swayze 'Thrilled' With Results in Cancer Battle
Apr 9, 2008 4:34 AM CDT
Swayze 'Thrilled' With Results in Cancer Battle
Star thanks fans, reveals 'excellent' response to treatment
(Newser)
- Actor Patrick Swayze is enjoying an "excellent" response to treatment for pancreatic cancer—and is thankful to friends and fans for their support, he and his wife told
People
. The
Dirty Dancing
star plans to continue with the same treatment at a California hospital, his doctor said. Swayze announced...
Study: Many Can Safely Skip Chemo for Breast Cancer
Dec 14, 2007 4:02 AM CST
Study: Many Can Safely Skip Chemo for Breast Cancer
Gene test predicts risk of recurrence
(Newser)
- Thousands of breast cancer patients could be spared the misery and expense of chemotherapy, or at least get a milder regimen than what's usually prescribed, according to a new study. A new genetic test that predicts women's risk of recurrence shows that up to 40% of patients with early stage...
Lab-Created Mice Resist Cancer
Nov 28, 2007 6:39 PM CST
Lab-Created Mice Resist Cancer
Enhanced activity of a certain gene produces selective cancer cell elimination
(Newser)
- A mouse seemingly invulnerable to cancerous tumors has been engineered,
Science Daily
reports. Researchers at the University of Kentucky introduced a more active version of the Par-4 gene—which appears able to differentiate cancer cells from healthy ones, then kills them—into mouse embryos. They found that the enhanced mice...
Taxol Found Ineffective in Many Breast Cancers
Oct 11, 2007 11:09 AM CDT
Taxol Found Ineffective in Many Breast Cancers
Some women could be spared side effects
(Newser)
- A widely prescribed chemotherapy drug isn't effective against the kind of breast cancer it's most commonly used to treat, new research has found. While Taxol worked well for women with overactive HER-2 genes, it didn't significantly help women with the most common form of the disease in which tumors are...
Cancer Patients Gain Fertility Hope
Jul 2, 2007 8:37 AM CDT
Cancer Patients Gain Fertility Hope
Eggs from girls as young as 5 can be frozen before chemotherapy
(Newser)
- Prepubescent girls with cancer do not have to give up the prospect of parenthood because of the effects of chemotherapy. Cancer patients as young as 5 can have their eggs removed and frozen before treatment, preserving their fertility, according to research by Israeli scientists. With childhood cancer survival rates climbing,...
Post-Chemo Memory Loss Isn't All in
the Head
Apr 29, 2007 8:00 AM CDT
Post-Chemo Memory Loss Isn't All in the Head
Doctors catch onto "chemo brain"
(Newser)
- Docs are finally cluing in to "chemo brain," the fuzzy-headed forgetfulness following treatment that cancer survivors have long suffered—and doctors long denied. The condition, suffered by roughly 15% of breast cancer survivors, refers to a laundry list of memory-loss issues that researchers think result from high levels...
Stories 81 - 92 |
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