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Fourteen Simple Things You Can Do To Reduce Your Risk for Breast Cancer

1. Increase your consumption of fresh, organic fruits and vegetables.2....
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Can You Reduce Your Risk of Breast Cancer?

We hear it all the time?lose weight for your health....
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Breast Cancer Screening

Breast cancer is the second most common cancer women face...
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A Tool for Early Breast Cancer Screening

Who isn't familiar with the expression, "early detection is the...
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Your Risk of Cancer Can Increase With Weight Gain!

We hear it all the time?lose weight for your health....
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Finding Your Spiritual Strength in the Midst of Your Emotional Turmoil

There were so many emotions that I experienced in 2003...
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The News You Dont Want To Hear: Youve Got Breast Cancer

For many people being told that they have cancer is...
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Naural Self-Defense Against Breast Cancer - Learning to Cope Successfully with Organochlorine Pollut

What are organochlorines?Organochlorines are chemicals found in some herbicides and...
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Breast Cancer - 101

The cancer is a term for diseases in which abnormal...
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My First Thermographic Experience

I had been a bit nervous all day wondering what...
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The Insidiousness of Breast Cancer and Its Current Treatment

In our modern world, the benefits that today's manufacturing and...
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Finding the Spirit - Identifying the Enemy

In the daily fight for survival our vision is blurred...
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Do You Know Some Nutrients Help Prevent Breast Cancer?

Breast cancer today is one of the most threatening conditions...
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Screening For Breast Cancer With No Compression And No Radiation

Who would have thought that a technology for detecting breast...
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Antiperspirants And Breast Cancer

Most underarm antiperspirants contain as the active ingredient, Aluminium Chlorohydrate,...
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New Advances In Early Breast Cancer Detection

In November 2003, the American Cancer Society stated that breast...
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Recommendations For Early Breast Cancer Screening

Women need to empower themselves about the benefits and risks...
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Breast Cancer for Beginners

Introduction Because of the social changes, which has brought increased...
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Are Obese Women Getting Short-Changed By Chemotherapy Treatments?

How much chemotherapy does an obese woman need? Typically an...
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Breast Cancer Awareness and Prevention Tips

October is Breast Cancer Awareness month. Men and women can...
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Breast Cancer Statistics ? How Breast Cancer Survival Rates Increased 50%

Breast cancer statistics show that over 1.2 million persons will...
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Gift Giving for Breast Cancer Patients and Their Families

Did you know that each year, 182,000 women are diagnosed...
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Breast Cancer Detection Unit for the Home

Detecting Breast Cancer early is a key step in protecting...
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Digital Infrared Thermal Imaging In Medical Therapy

Digital technology now makes Digital Infrared Thermal Imaging available to...
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Passive Smokers Can Get Breast Cancer! Learn How?

US scientists have claimed that secondhand smokers are at higher...
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Colorectal Cancer Treatment Costs Vary Widely - Washington Post

Fresh News

Colorectal Cancer Treatment Costs Vary Widely
Washington Post, United States - 10 hours ago
"The cost of treating colorectal cancer has skyrocketed. We have seen similar trends in terms of rapidly rising costs of drug development in breast cancer ...
Threat of breast cancer The Punch
Significant Reduction in Breast Cancer Recurrence and Mortality ... Medscape
Designer Drug For Cancer WFtv.com
Borders Today - HollandSentinel.comall 545 news articles

Breast Cancer Screening

Breast cancer is the second most common cancer women face second only to lung cancer, however it is the most feared cancer or disease for most women. It occurs in about 12% of women who will live to the age of 90. Several well established factors increase the risk of breast cancer and they include family history, nulliparity (not having had children), early menarche (starting menstrual cycles early), advanced age and a personal history of breast cancer. Other risks include exposure to environmental toxins such as tobacco smoke that increase the chance for cancer growth. October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. The American Cancer Society has many activities this month to bring this to the public attention.

Early education on self-breast exam and early screening is extremely important in achieving good outcomes. Self-exam and physician examination will detect cancer at a rate between 70 ? 80%. Adding screening mammography (mammograms) will increase detection to 96 ? 98%. It has been shown that early detection through clinical exam and mammography can reduce breast carcinoma mortality by 20 to 30%. Today's gold standard for screening (mammograms) will still miss between 10 and 15% of neoplasm.

Therefore, if a clinically noted mass is followed by a negative mammogram the work up should then include a breast ultrasound and/or a fine needle aspiration cytology and close interval examinations. The modality of Magnetic Resonance Imagining (MRI) is a method of examining the breasts that is far more sensitive in picking up smaller tumor than Mammogram. MRI is widely used in Europe but has not taken on in the US yet. It is more expensive as a screening tool in the USA, but since it is so widely used in Europe it is actually less expensive there. Even with open biopsies of suspicious masses the diagnosis of a malignancy is one in about five biopsies performed. This may seem costly but the morbidity and mortality of missing a malignancy is even more so.

Screening should start with a baseline mammogram at age 35, or younger if there is a strong family history. Annual examinations should be performed once a woman reached 40 years of age, and self examination should be encouraged monthly starting at the age of twenty. Disease prevention & early screenings is the mainstay of a preventive medical practice despite the somewhat conservative recommendations made by medical specialty societies and the managed care industry. Oftentimes the risk-benefit ratio for cancer screening has the dollar as it's bottom line, but if you are the unfortunate patient to have a cancer that was not detected early, then all the statistics in the world will not matter to you. My philosophy is to pay a little more in time and money upfront to assure a disease free state.

An important thing for women to remember is a positive family history alone increased lifetime risk of cancer to about 25%, that is double the incidence of no such history. Recently the interest has focused on cancers associated with germ line (inherited) genetic mutations. While approximately 5 ? 10% of all breast cancer sufferers have a mutation in BRCA1 gene (located on chromosome 17) and BRCA2 gene (located on chromosome 13), this type of screening should only be done when a first degree relative with know cancer and a positive mutation is detected or whether a women falls into a certain ethnic group. Women who have inherited a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation have a relatively high lifetime risk of breast cancer (about 50-85%). Risk for cancer in the opposite breast of a woman with a BRCA1 mutation is about 25%. In such cases genetic screening may be advocated. Once a tumor is detected important prognostic determiners as stage of the disease, histology and nuclear grade, estrogen and progesterone receptor status and HER2/neu gene amplification tests are advisable.

For more information on Breast Cancer the following websites are helpful: http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/cancernet/ and www3.cancer.org/cancerinfo. Also a call to the American Cancer Society at (800) ACS-2345 can be of help. To conclude, it is extremely important for women to maintain annual physical exams and aggressive cancer screening regiments. There are means to help prevent cancer in those women who seem predisposed. Screening is one thing, but taking measures to help prevent cancer growth is yet another. There are things women do on a daily basis that can increase their chances for breast cancer (and other cancers) that they are not aware. The programs advocated at my center are based on lifestyle modification, prevention, early detection, natural hormone replacement and nutritional medicine. Women should take a proactive approach to the breast cancer issue, for it may save their lives. This topic is one that is close to my heart, as my ex-wife is a breast cancer survivor.

Breast Cancer Screening and Prevention
By JP Saleeby, MD

JP Saleeby, MD is Assistant Medical Director of the Emergency Room at LRMC, Hinesville, GA. He hold adjunct professorship in the School of Nursing at Georgia Southern University. He performs online telemedicine consultation via http://www.saleeby.net

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Laura Bush is in Panama to fight breast cancer (AP via Yahoo! News)
Laura Bush is in Panama to promote breast cancer research. Tanger Outlets Raise $1-Million Dollars For Breast Cancer Research (NBC 17 Raleigh)
Tanger Outlet Centers recently completed its 2008 Breast Cancer Awareness campaign raising a record setting $1 million in a month. Researchers find no link between IVF and breast cancer (Guardian Unlimited)
Fertility treatment does not increase a woman's risk of developing breast cancer, according to a study of more than 25,000 women in the Netherlands. The large study will help to reassure patients concerned that the powerful hormone doses that are part of fertility treatment might put them at risk of developing the disease in the future. At the beginning of an IVF treatment cycle, women are ... Laura Bush is in Panama to fight breast cancer (WBAY Green Bay)
Associated Press - November 20, 2008 5:23 PM ET PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) - Laura Bush is in Panama to promote breast cancer research. The U.S. Family History Raises Breast Cancer Risk Despite Absence Of BRCA Mutations, Study Finds (Medical News Today)
Women with a strong family history of breast cancer have a four times greater risk for the disease than women in the general population, even if they do not carry a mutation of the BRCA gene, according to a study presented Monday at the American Association for Cancer Research's annual International Frontiers in Cancer Prevention Research meeting in Washington, D.C., HealthDay/U.S. Laura Bush is in Panama to fight breast cancer (WHBF-TV Quad Cities)
PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) - Laura Bush is in Panama to promote breast cancer research. The U.S. first lady arrived Thursday afternoon for a 2-day visit. Breast Cancer Drug Raises Blood Clot Risk, Should Have 'Black Box' Warning, JAMA Study Says (Medical News Today)
Genentech's cancer drug Avastin -- which FDA approved in February for treatment of advanced breast cancer -- increases a patient's risk of developing blood clots in veins, a condition known as venous thromboembolism, or VTE, according to a study published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, HealthDay News/U.S. News and World Report reports. According to HealthDay News/U. European patent office restores breast cancer gene patent (AFP via Yahoo! News)
The European Patent Office on Wednesday restored on appeal a controversial patent for a breast cancer gene that had been withdrawn from a US biotech firm, but granting it in a more restricted form than before. Two New Compounds Show Promise For Eliminating Breast Cancer Tumors (Science Daily)
Two new compounds show early promise for destroying breast cancer tumors. Researchers have observed no negative side effects so far. The compounds disrupt bonding of a cancer-related protein. Randomized Phase 2 Study Of IMC-A12 For HER2-Expressing Advanced Breast Cancer Commences Patient Enrollment (Medical News Today)
ImClone Systems Incorporated (NASDAQ: IMCL), a global leader in the development and commercialization of novel antibodies to treat cancer, today announced that its disease-directed randomized Phase 2 clinical trial of IMC-A12 in patients with previously treated HER2-expressing locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer has commenced patient enrollment.
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