“Curves joins Breast Cancer Awareness campaign - Deming Headlight” plus 4 more |
- Curves joins Breast Cancer Awareness campaign - Deming Headlight
- Cancer-stricken Dame Maggie Smith has vowed to "stagger through" the ... - Transworld News
- Researchers fine-tune diffuse optical tomography for breast cancer ... - Science Centric
- Chemo cocktail blocks breast cancer spread - New Kerala
- Novel breast tissue feature may predict woman's cancer risk - Science Centric
Curves joins Breast Cancer Awareness campaign - Deming Headlight Posted: 06 Oct 2009 10:57 PM PDT DEMING - The probability of a woman being diagnosed with invasive breast cancer during her life is about one in eight. And, the probability of dying from breast cancer is about one in 35, according to the American Cancer Society. Breast cancer death rates are going down, the Association says, which is probably a result of finding the cancer earlier and receiving improved treatment. That is why Curves' locations, including the one located at 1407-A Columbus Highway in Deming, are encouraging women to get annual mammograms and perform monthly breast self-exams during National Breast Cancer Awareness Month this October. Women who bring in a mammogram, performed within the last year, or make a $25 donation to the American Cancer Society will be waived from paying a service fee when they join Curves during one of the last three weeks of October. Also, participating Curves locations will make available a unique home breast self-exam kit called the Liv Aid, which makes the breast self-exam process more sensitive for detecting unusual lumps. For every Liv Aid kit sold, Curves will donate one to another woman who can't afford one. "Breast cancer is by far the most common cancer among women worldwide, and National Breast Cancer Awareness Month is a perfect opportunity for us to emphasize ways of prevention," says Barbara Reedy of the Deming Curves. "Not only are we rewarding women for having mammograms and encouraging them to perform breast-exams, we are also educating Deming-area community members about the disease and how they can significantly reduce their risk through diet and exercise." Based on recent information released about breast cancer, Reedy has provided the following advice for local women regarding breast self-exams: • How can women exercise good breast health? • Most women who think of screening for breast cancer think of mammograms, but there are three ways to screen for breast cancer: mammography, clinical breast exam by a healthcare professional and breast self-exams. • When combined, they offer the best opportunity to detect the disease at its earliest, most treatable stages. How important is early detection? Early detection means the availability of more treatment options. More than 95 percent of women whose breast cancer is caught in its earliest stages are more likely to be healthy and disease-free five years after their diagnosis and treatment, Reedy said. How important are breast self-exams? Breast self-exams catch a significant number of breast cancers, some 15 to 20 percent, that otherwise might have gone undetected for possibly up to a year between doctor visits, Reedy said. And, about 80 percent of breast cancers not discovered by mammography are found by women themselves. Through breast self-exams, women are in the position to detect subtle changes in their breast tissue. Recent research has linked obesity and excess weight with an increased risk for various cancers, including breast cancer. According to Reedy, Curves has been a long-committed partner in the fight against cancer, raising millions of dollars annually for research, treatment, and recovery programs. The company has helped millions of women around the world lose millions of pounds and move away from all types of diseases. "When women understand that one-third of all breast cancer can be related to lack of exercise and poor diet, they'll see that they have the opportunity to have much more control over their cancer risk," Reedy said. "We want to encourage women to learn more about the impact wellness has on preventing cancer." For more information about Curves of Deming or what week in October it's waiving the service fee, contact Barbara Reedy at 575-544-8899 or 97OVCDIO@curvesmail.com. |
Cancer-stricken Dame Maggie Smith has vowed to "stagger through" the ... - Transworld News Posted: 06 Oct 2009 09:13 AM PDT London, UK 10/06/2009 04:17 PM GMT (TransWorldNews)
The Oscar-winning actress who plays Professor McGonagall in the hit boy wizard series has vowed to complete her scenes in the big screen adaptation of 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows' despite her "hideous" illness. The 74-year-old star told Britain's The Times newspaper: "If there's work to do I'll do it. I've still got to stagger through the last 'Harry Potter'. The cancer was hideous. It takes the wind out of your sails and I don't know what the future holds, if anything. "You feel so ghastly, you wouldn't mind dying a lot of the time. The last couple of years have been a write-off, though I'm beginning to feel like a person now. My energy is coming back. S**t happens. I ought to pull myself together a bit." Maggie was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2007. She had chemotherapy immediately, leaving her struggling to cope with the filming schedule for 'Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince'. She explained: "I was hairless. I had no problem getting the wig on. I was like a boiled egg. The chemotherapy made me feel horribly sick. I was holding onto railings, thinking, 'I can't do this.' " 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows' - the seventh and final book in the series written by J.K. Rowling - is being made into two movies.
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Researchers fine-tune diffuse optical tomography for breast cancer ... - Science Centric Posted: 07 Oct 2009 07:18 AM PDT Clemson University researchers in collaboration with researchers at the University of Bremen, Germany, are working to make the physical pain and discomfort of mammograms a thing of the past, while allowing for diagnostic imaging eventually to be done in a home setting. The group is fine-tuning Diffuse Optical Tomography (DOT) to create high-resolution images from a scattering of infrared and visible light for the early detection of breast cancer. While the method is less expensive, safer and more comfortable than X-rays used in mammograms, the problem has been generating a strong enough resolution to detect smaller breast cancers. Mathematical sciences professors Taufiquar 'T.K.' Khan of Clemson and Peter Maass of the University of Bremen are developing mathematical models to improve resolution. 'The problem with DOT is that it is a 3-D method where photon density waves launched from a source travel in a banana-shaped path due to multiple scattering, whereas X-rays follow straight lines which make the mathematical problem more manageable and the resolution of the image sharper.' said Khan. 'With DOT, near-infrared or near-visible photons make the process safer for the body than with the radiation of X-rays, but they are difficult to track because of the scattering and absorption. So we are coming up with equations that will help get us from capturing cancers that are 4 millimetres in size, down to capturing those as small as 1 millimetre.' Khan says benefits of DOT include the elimination of harmful radiation to the body as well as false positives and negatives caused by mammography X-rays. He adds there are no harmful side effects to DOT, and some version of DOT eventually could be administered in a do-it-yourself setting at home within the next decade. In addition to breast screening, he says it eventually maybe used as part of other diagnostic procedures such as ultrasound. 'Even if it does not replace mammography, the results of our research are applicable across various areas of biomedical imaging. I envision that someday there will be machines based on these methods that everyone can use at home,' Khan said. Source: Clemson University |
Chemo cocktail blocks breast cancer spread - New Kerala Posted: 07 Oct 2009 01:34 AM PDT Washington, Oct 7 : A new study has revealed that breast cancer drug, when combined with another drug used to treat leukaemia, can help stall the spread of cancer to organs.
When breast cancer spreads or metastasizes, it crashes through the body''s protective fences. The disease becomes fatal when it travels outside the mammary ducts, enters the bloodstream and spreads to the bones, liver or brain. Currently, there are only drugs that try to stem the uncontrolled division of cancer cells within the ducts. Researcher Seth Corey, M.D. from Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine has shown that the potent new chemotherapy cocktail helps prevent breast cancer cells from invading. "This is an entirely new way of targeting a cancer cell," said Corey. During the study, Corey found that when the leukemia drug dasatinib is combined with the breast cancer drug doxorubicin, the potent mix inhibits breast cancer cell invasion by half. Dasatinib targets an enzyme called the Src kinase, which is believed to play a key role in breast cancer invasion and metastases. "Perhaps this drug could be given to prevent invasion from happening in the first place," said Corey. "This might keep the disease in check and prevent it from progressing," Corey added. The study appears in British Journal of Cancer. --ANI
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Novel breast tissue feature may predict woman's cancer risk - Science Centric Posted: 06 Oct 2009 02:00 PM PDT Mayo Clinic researchers have found that certain structural features within breast tissue can indicate a woman's individual cancer risk. The findings appear online today in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. The study shows that acini, the small milk-producing elements in breast lobules, can be counted in sample biopsies. The percentage of acini present per lobule at a given age indicates cancer risk. Researchers say this method is more accurate in predicting risk for an individual than the Gail model (see National Cancer Institute). 'Aside from the predictors of heredity, there is no effective independent predictor of risk of breast cancer,' says Lynn Hartmann, M.D., Mayo Clinic oncologist and senior author of the study. 'This risk estimate model based on novel tissue in each individual may provide a reliable strategy.' Researchers studied the tissue structures in 85 patients with breast cancer and examined earlier, noncancerous breast biopsies from the same women. They compared them to 142 age-controlled samples from Mayo's Benign Breast Disease Cohort, a bio repository of benign biopsy tissues. Then, researchers developed the model and tested a risk prediction for each patient. For the same women, they used the existing Gail model to make five-year risk predictions for the same women. While helpful in determining increased risk in groups of women, the Gail model is only slightly better than a guess when it comes to predicting cancer for an individual, the researchers say. 'Women who were more likely to develop breast cancer had larger lobules with more acini,' explains Dr Hartmann. As women age, especially as they approach menopause, the risk of breast cancer declines because the lobules and acini disappear. This natural process, called involution, is at the core of this risk factor. Dr Hartmann says if the lobules aren't largely gone by the time a woman is 55, her risk of breast cancer triples. By looking closely at the structures in a large sample of benign tissues, the researchers were able to note standard measurements for lobule size and number of acini in the lobules. This twofold approach led to development of accurate metrics on which to base individual risk. The team hopes this new model, combined with other patient information and assessments, will greatly improve a physician's ability to predict cancer risk for individual patients. Source: Mayo ClinicThis posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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