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Pharmacy & Health News

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News category: General News Posted on Wednesday, February 28th, 2007
What Is Wilms’ Tumor?
Wilms’ tumor is also known as nephroblastoma. It is the most widespread type of kidney cancer affecting children. Wilms’ tumor develops in the situation when cancerous (malignant) kidney cells multiply uncontrollably, and finally mold a firm, grayish or tan mass (tumor). This mass is normally smooth and fairly round. When it enlarges, Wilms’ tumor modifies the typical shape and appearance of the kidney. Moreover, it may devastate areas of normal kidney tissue, and can lead to bleeding into the urine. Sometimes, the tumor finally becomes so huge that it is noticeable as a firm, smooth lump in a child’s side or abdominal area. Without appropriate treatment, Wilms’ tumor is likely to spread outside the kidney, most frequently to the lungs and the liver.

News category: General News Posted on Tuesday, February 27th, 2007
You have some Sex Problems? Don’t Blame Your Age for that!
Tick tock, tick tock, tick tock. You are staring in the dark at the numbers glaring back at you on your alarm clock. It is 3 a.m., and this is your another night of interrupted sleep and frustration. If you are wondering what is wrong with you, consider this: Maybe everything depends on the things or activities you do in the course of the day, and that’s bringing about insomnia at night.

News category: General News Posted on Monday, February 26th, 2007
According to the latest research, patients suffering from prostate cancer who are overweight or obese are more likely to die of their disease.
Nevertheless, the scientists didn’t manage to find any association between obesity and developing the prostate cancer in the first place.
"Although we didn’t discover that obesity increases the risk of experiencing prostate cancer, we managed to find that it does actually increase the risk of dying from it. Therefore, this research truly sheds more light on the obesity connection," said lead author of the study, Margaret E. Wright, a research fellow with the division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics at the National Cancer Institute.

News category: General News Posted on Friday, February 23rd, 2007
Vulvar cancer appears in the vulva, that is in the external genital area of a woman’s reproductive system. Vulvar cancer may affect any part of the vulva, together with the labia, the mons pubis (the skin and tissue covering the pubic bone), the clitoris, or the vaginal or urethral openings. Most frequently, it has an effect on the inner edges of the labia majora or labia minora.

News category: General News Posted on Thursday, February 22nd, 2007
Vaginal cancer is the unrestrained enlargement of abnormal cells inside the vagina, which is also known as the birth canal.
Cancer beginning in the vagina is known as primary vaginal cancer. This disease occurs very seldom and represents only about 2 per cent of cancers affecting the female reproductive system. It is more frequent that cancer cells discovered inside the vagina originated from cancer that began in another area, such as the cervix. There are two major kinds of primary vaginal cancer:

News category: General News Posted on Wednesday, February 21st, 2007
Uterine cancer constitutes the most widespread cancer of the female reproductive tract and represents 13 percent of all cancers experienced by women. We can distinguish two main kinds of uterine cancer.

News category: General News Posted on Tuesday, February 20th, 2007
A recently introduced test can help be helpful in identifying which people who have had one blood clot in a vein will be likely to have another one.
According to the scientists, this discovery could help people at low risk avoid anticoagulant therapy, which can bring about serious side effects, whilst ensuring that patients at high risk who require the treatments receive them.

News category: General News Posted on Monday, February 19th, 2007
According to the latest research conducted by American and German scientists, tea extracts are helpful in reducing skin damage caused by cancer radiation therapy.

News category: General News Posted on Friday, February 16th, 2007
Studies on mice indicate that neural stem cells can be more successful in repairing damaged brain tissue than it was believed in the past, a finding that could bring about new methods of treatment for stroke and other brain trauma in humans.

News category: General News Posted on Thursday, February 15th, 2007
According to the scientists at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, adult stem cells discovered in the bulge of hair follicles may ensure an alternative to embryonic stem cells.
Like embryonic stem cells, these epidermal neural crest stem cells show a high degree of plasticity, may be isolated at high levels of purity, and then can be expanded in culture, the scientists explained.

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