Cancer Growth
Cancer Growth - most related articles:
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Breast cancer risk increases with high hormone levels - 3.7
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Pregnancy hormone may prevent breast cancer - 3.4
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HER growth proteins do not predict outcome of herceptin treatment breast cancer patients - 3.3
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Social interaction or isolation affects breast cancer - 3.2
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Green tea may reduce lung cancer risk in smokers - 3.1
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Carbohydrate restriction may slow prostate tumor growth - 3.1
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Researchers identify protein that fuels ovarian cancer - 2.9
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Noscapine may reduce tumor growth in prostate cancer patients - 2.9
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Low carbohydrate, high protein diets may reduce cancer risk - 2.8
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Green tea slows prostate cancer progression - 2.7
Cancer Growth articles
Breast cancer risk increases with high hormone levelsEight different sex and growth hormones may rise the risk of breast cancer, each elevated hormone level increase risk by 16% in post-menopausal women.
Low carbohydrate, high protein diets may reduce cancer riskEating a low-carbohydrate, high-protein diet may reduce the risk of cancer and slow the growth of tumors already present, according to a study published in Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. The study was conducted in mice, but the scientists involved agree that the strong biological findings are definitive enough that an effect in humans can be considered.
Obese men face higher risk of prostate cancer progressionEven when treated with hormone therapy to suppress tumor growth, obese men face an elevated risk of their prostate cancer worsening, researchers at Duke University Medical Center have found.
Potential target identified for therapy for prostate cancerA monoclonal antibody targeting a well known cell surface protein inhibited prostate cancer growth and metastasis in an aggressive form of the disease that did not respond to hormone therapy.
Type 2 diabetes increases cancer risksCancer and diabetes – are risk factors the same for these two diseases? Or does diabetes cause processes in the body which promote the onset or growth of cancer? It is still unclear why diabetics have a higher rate of cancer than people who are not affected by this metabolic disorder.
Sulforaphane in broccoli may limit breast cancer cellsA compound derived from broccoli could help prevent or treat breast cancer by targeting cancer stem cells -- the small number of cells that fuel a tumor's growth -- according to a new study from researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Noscapine may reduce tumor growth in prostate cancer patientsNoscapine, cough medicine ingredient, can be used as a prophylactic treatment for prostate cancer. The new study shows that noscapine inhibited tumor growth in mice and also limited the spread of tumors without causing any side effects.
Omega 3 curbs precancerous growths in those prone to bowel cancerA purified form of an omega 3 cuts the number and size of precancerous bowel growths (polyps) in people whose genetic make-up predisposes them to bowel cancer, finds research published ahead of print in the journal Gut.
Pomegranates may prevent breast cancer growthEating fruit, such as pomegranates, that contain anti aromatase phytochemicals reduces the incidence of hormone-dependent breast cancer, according to results of a study published in the January issue of Cancer Prevention Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
Pain relief drugs may encourage cancer growthOpiate-based painkillers like morphine can stimulate the growth and spread of cancer cells, revealed by researchers.
How diarrheal bacteria cause some colon cancers revealedJohns Hopkins scientists say they have figured out how bacteria that cause diarrhea may also be the culprit in some colon cancers. The common Bacteroides fragilis (ETBF) dupe immune system cells into permitting runaway colon tissue inflammation, a precursor for malignant growth.
Advance in bowel cancer test research - gene expression biomarkersAustralian researchers have developed gene expression biomarkers which can accurately discriminate pre-cancerous and cancerous colorectal growths from non-cancerous controls.
Carbohydrate restriction may slow prostate tumor growthRestricting carbohydrates, regardless of weight loss, appears to slow the growth of prostate tumors, according to an animal study being published this week by researchers in the Duke Prostate Center.
Cancer drugs may treat alcoholismA class of drugs already approved as cancer treatments might also help to beat alcohol addiction. That's the conclusion of a discovery in flies of a gene, dubbed happyhour, that has an important and previously unknown role in controlling the insects' response to alcohol.
Breast cancer linked to inherited high breast densityA unique mother-daughter study that used magnetic resonance to measure breast density in younger women shows that percent of breast water could be linked to the risk of breast cancer in middle age and older.
Statins reduce inflammation in prostate tumorsCholesterol lowering drugs called statins may reduce inflammation in prostate tumors, possibly hindering cancer growth, according to a study led by investigators in the Duke Prostate Center.
Chemotherapy target found for leukemiaCancer researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have discovered a promising new chemotherapy target for a deadly form of leukemia. Their discovery hinges on a novel "double agent" role for a molecular signal that regulates cell growth.
17 Cancer Growth articles listed above.