Home arrow Bone Cancer arrow Causes of Bladder Cancer Friday, 21 November 2008



 
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Cancer / Oncology News From Medical News Today
Latest Cancer / Oncology News From Medical News Today.
  • Man Says His Dog Detected His Skin Cancer
    A man from Banbury near Oxford, England, said his dog sniffed out his skin cancer, reminiscent of reports of trials that have shown dogs can detect cancer, in some cases even when screening tests can't. Chris Tuffrey told the BBC yesterday that his pet Rottweiler, called Beamish, kept nuzzling and licking him and trying to get him to lift his arm.
  • Scientists Honored For Contributions To Cancer Fight
    The American Cancer Society - the nation's leading voluntary health organization and largest non-governmental funder of cancer research and discovery - will present its highest honor, the Medal of Honor, to four Americans who have made outstanding contributions to the fight against cancer. This year's winners, who will receive their awards at a ceremony during the American Cancer Society's annual meeting in New York City, are: The Honorable Edward M.
  • Tumors Fuelled By Lactic Acid
    A team of researchers at Duke University Medical Center and the Université catholique de Louvain (UCL) has found that lactic acid is an important energy source for tumor cells. In further experiments, they discovered a new way to destroy the most hard-to-kill, dangerous tumor cells by preventing them from delivering lactic acid.
  • Tumor Formation May Be Spurred By The Misreading Of Damaged DNA
    The DNA in our cells is constantly under assault from oxygen, the sun's radiation and environmental stresses. Most of the time, our cells can repair the damage before it gets copied into a permanent mutation that could lead to cancer. Adding a wrinkle to our understanding of how cancers begin, scientists have found that cells can turn on tumor-promoting growth circuits as a result of misreading damaged DNA without copying it: a process called "transcriptional mutagenesis.
  • Survival Of Melanoma Cells Promoted By Gene Required For Radiation-Induced Protective Pigmentation
    Scientists have new insight into the response of human skin to radiation and what drives the most aggressive and deadly form of skin cancer. The research, published by Cell Press in the November 21st issue of the journal Molecular Cell, may be useful in the design of new strategies for prevention of malignant melanoma. The process of tanning involves synthesis of the pigment melanin by skin cells known as melanocytes.