Saturday, April 30, 2011

Google Alert - Mesothelioma

News5 new results for Mesothelioma
 
Mesothelioma sufferers remembered on Workers' Memorial Day
Mesothelioma.com
One such substance is asbestos, a carcinogenic mineral fiber that is known to cause lung cancer and mesothelioma, a rare cancer of the mesothelial membrane. Construction workers and firefighters are particularly at risk of asbestos exposure, ...
See all stories on this topic »
Study Shows Improved Peritoneal Mesothelioma Prognosis After Chemotherapy and ...
Asbestos.com
Chemotherapy is one of three commonly used treatments for mesothelioma. Typically used in conjunction with debulking surgery and/or radiation therapy, chemotherapy can increase the likelihood that all cancerous cells have been destroyed. ...
See all stories on this topic »
100 York Homes to Undergo Asbestos Removal Renovations This Summer
Asbestos.Net News
Living with the day-to-day hardships of mesothelioma - whether it is you or a loved one who has been diagnosed with the illness - is both emotionally and financially taxing for all who are involved. If you feel that a company or former employer may be ...
See all stories on this topic »
RELATIVES of men who have worked with asbestos are being warned to look out ...
Grimsby Telegraph
Susan Campbell, 60, died from the industry-related disease malignant mesothelioma, a condition caused by breathing in particles of the deadly insulation material, on November 15. A post mortem examination found her right lung was "completely ...
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A FORMER Royal Navy serviceman diagnosed with a deadly asbestos-related cancer ...
Plymouth Herald
The 69-year-old has developed mesothelioma, an aggressive cancer of the chest lining caused by exposure to asbestos. He told his story to mark Workers' Memorial Day, which took place this week. Legal experts are highlighting the potential problems ...
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Friday, April 29, 2011

Cytogenetics and Cancer Research

Cytogenetics and Cancer Research

Link to Cancer Research | Cytogenetics Cancer Research

The Sad Truth Regarding Cancer

Posted:

Our health is indeed our ultimate investment. Without a healthy body it would be impossible for us to finish and face our duties. It would also be impossible for us to reach our dreams if our body is not that strong enough. Nevertheless even though how hard all of us try to protect and nourish ours health, our bodies are still vulnerable to different kinds of diseases for example cancer. Cancer became the ultimate representation of bad luck and other [...]

The Sad Truth Regarding Cancer is a post from: Cytogenetics and Cancer Research


April Newsletter from Asbestos.com

Asbestos.com
APRIL 2011 NEWSLETTER
Asbestos.com Newsletter
Feature Story

Asbestos Awareness Week April 2011 

 

The annual National Asbestos Awareness Week kicked off on April 1 in Atlanta, Ga. with the Annual International Asbestos Awareness Conference. The conference was sponsored by the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO), a group committed to education, advocacy and support of mesothelioma patients and their families.

 

The ADAO's goal is to serve as the united voice for all asbestos victims and educate the public and medical community about asbestos-related diseases. They support research that leads to earlier detection, prevention and a cure for asbestos-related diseases.

 

Each year, the international conference strives to unite scientists and doctors with patients and their families to discuss new treatments for malignant mesothelioma and advocate ways to prevent further asbestos exposure. Asbestos exposure has been linked to mesothelioma, an uncommon and aggressive form of cancer that affects the vital linings of the lungs and abdomen.

 

Organizers believe that knowledge is power in spreading the global message to end asbestos disease. The conference, which ran from April 1-3, provides information and inspiration to those impacted by asbestos-related disease as well as others who advocate safe working environments. Topics addressed at the conference included advanced medical, occupational and environmental information to prevent home, school and work-related asbestos exposure.

 

The conference also honors the people who attempt to bring a higher level of awareness to the toxic effects of asbestos. This year, U.S. Senator Max Baucus will be honored for his steadfast commitment and determination to ban asbestos in the United States. Through Mr. Baucus' hard work, a resolution was passed to declare the first week of April as National Asbestos Awareness Week in order to "raise public awareness about the prevalence of asbestos-related diseases and the dangers of asbestos exposure."

 

In 2004, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimated that 10,000 people in the United States and 107,000 worldwide died from asbestos-related diseases. Organizations like the ADAO struggle to prevent the spread of asbestos around the world. Their continued efforts work to reduce the growing asbestos public health problem that affects families across the globe.

 

Additional information about mesothelioma and how you can help raise asbestos awareness may be found through the Mesothelioma Center.


Treatment Breakthroughs

New Mesothelioma Biomarker Emerges as Prime Target for Chemotherapy Drugs 

A 2010 study sponsored by the National Institute of Health and the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation identified a new biomarker that may make chemotherapeutic treatments for mesothelioma more effective.

Advantages and Disadvantages of a Pleurectomy Decortication for Pleural Mesothelioma 

A 2011 review of 11 previously published papers concluded that in the treatment of malignant pleural mesothelioma, surgical removal of the tumors may be more effective at extending a patient's life span than palliative care.
Mesothelioma Research

Mesothelioma Study Reveals Chemical Processes Triggered by Asbestos 

As an established carcinogen, asbestos poses a number of serious health risks. While it is a prominent factor in asbestosis, one of the most aggressive illnesses associated with the mineral is pleural mesothelioma, a cancer that develops in the lining of the lungs. An Italian study led by Lorella Pascolo implemented synchrotron soft X-ray imaging and X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) microscopy to examine the chemical makeup of the affected area. The study also revealed potential ways these chemicals could dictate the body's reaction to foreign asbestos fibers.

Mesothelioma Incidence Found to be Higher in Industrialized Countries 

According to research conducted by the University of Occupational and Environmental Health, more than 125 million people around the world come into contact with asbestos on the job each year. This carcinogen causes over 90,000 yearly fatalities, and incidence rates are far higher in industrialized countries.
Diagnosis Developments

New Diagnostic Test Facilitates Earlier Detection in Pleural Mesothelioma Patients 

On April 4 in Orlando, Fla., a research team led by Dr. Harvey Pass discussed the results of a novel test used to detect pleural mesothelioma in its early stages. These researchers believe the incidence of pleural mesothelioma in the United States is approximately 3,000 new cases per year and is not expected to peak until about 2030.

Mesothelioma Screening Using Plasma Samples May Increase Accuracy of Diagnosis 

Biomarkers are one of the most relevant tools for the early diagnosis of mesothelioma. Although the cancer is typically not detected until its later stages, new screening tests look for the presence of these proteins in a patient's blood or tissue samples to detect mesothelioma.
Mesothelioma & Veterans

Mesothelioma Risk from Asbestos on World War II Ships 

Asbestos has been used around the world for decades to prevent fire in cities and ships. The advanced weaponry that was created during World War II required nations and militaries around the world to develop new techniques of preventing damage from fire.
Mesothelioma in the Media

Mesothelioma Events Bring Attention to the Cancer 

This May, the Pacific Meso Center will receive funds through Angen's Breakaway from Cancer Grand Prix Fundraiser, which will be applied to their various research attempts. Additionally, the center will be holding a conference to discuss its unique approach to mesothelioma treatment. Advocacy projects like these are bringing light to the cancer and striving to construct a brighter future for mesothelioma patients.

Home | Mesothelioma | Mesothelioma Treatments | Asbestos Cancer  |
Navy Veterans & Mesothelioma |
Asbestos Exposure | Legal Options
In This Issue
Asbestos Awareness Week
Mesothelioma Research
Diagnosis Developments
Mesothelioma in the Media
Asbestos Awareness Wristbands

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Armadillos Spread Leprosy

A Nine-banded Armadillo in the Green Swamp, ce...Image via Wikipedia

Armadillos have never been among the cuddly creatures routinely included in petting zoos, but on Wednesday federal researchers offered a compelling reason to avoid contact with the armored animals altogether: They are a source of leprosy infections in humans.

Using genetic sequencing machines, researchers were able to confirm that about a third of the leprosy cases that arise each year in the United States almost certainly result from contact with infected armadillos. The cases are concentrated in Louisiana and Texas, where some people hunt, skin and eat armadillos.

Leprosy, also known as Hansen’s disease, is an ancient scourge that has largely disappeared, but each year about 150 to 250 people in the United States and 250,000 in the world contract the illness. As long as the disease is identified relatively quickly, treatment with antibiotics — a one- to two-year regimen with three different drugs — offers an effective cure. But every year dozens of people in the United States do not recognize their skin lesions for what they are early enough and suffer lifelong nerve damage as a result.

Part of the problem is that doctors sometimes fail to consider leprosy in patients who have not traveled to parts of the world where the disease is endemic, like India, Brazil, Africa, the Philippines and other islands in the Western Pacific. Two-thirds of leprosy patients in the United States are people who have either lived or worked in such places before coming down with the illness.

But in a given year, about 50 to 80 people who have symptoms consistent with leprosy tell their doctors that they have not traveled to such areas or had any contact with someone with a leprosy infection. And in these patients, doctors may mistakenly dismiss consideration of a leprosy infection.

“These patients have always been a puzzle,” said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Now researchers are hoping that their study leads doctors to ask one more question of patients who have skin lesions that are numb in the center: Any armadillos in your life?

Leprosy now joins a host of other infectious diseases — including flu, H.I.V./AIDS and SARS — that are known to have jumped from animals to humans. Flu is thought to have first crossed to humans from migratory waterfowl several hundred years ago. H.I.V./AIDS first crossed from a chimpanzee about 90 years ago.

Dr. Fauci said that about 70 percent of new emerging infectious diseases were known to have animal origins.

But one of the interesting aspects of leprosy is that transmission seems to have gone in both directions. Leprosy was not present in the New World before Christopher Columbus, and armadillos are indigenous only to the New World.

“So armadillos had to have acquired it from humans sometime in the last 400 to 500 years,” said Dr. Richard W. Truman, a researcher at the National Hansen’s Disease Program in Baton Rouge, La., and an author of the armadillo study, which was published Wednesday in The New England Journal of Medicine.

Some studies have shown that as many as 20 percent of armadillos in some areas are infected with leprosy.

Armadillos now range from Colorado to North Carolina and have a similar habitat to opossums. Few armadillos live long enough in the wild to be seriously affected by the infection, Dr. Truman said, but those in laboratories suffer many of the same problems as humans and eventually die of liver and kidney failure.

The microbe that causes leprosy, Mycobacterium leprae, is a fragile one. It does not grow in laboratory petri dishes, and survives only a week or two in moist soil. Indeed, the only animals in which it is known to flourish are humans and armadillos, and researchers have long used armadillos to grow the disease, although its presence in armadillos predates such research.

Because of this, researchers have speculated that some share of human leprosy cases reported in the United States and other parts of the Americas resulted from contact with armadillos, but there has not been definitive proof until this study.

The fragility of the leprosy bacterium suggests that infections result from something more than casual contact with an armadillo, Dr. Truman said.

“The important thing is that people should be discouraged from consuming armadillo flesh or handling it,” Dr. Truman said.

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Google Alert - Mesothelioma

News8 new results for Mesothelioma
 
Japan Battles with the Risk of Mesothelioma Post-Tsunami
French Tribune
It seems that the persistent issue of mesothelioma caused by the exposure of asbestos has raised its ugly head once again. After battling the twin disaster of earthquake and tsunami on March 11, Japanese government is struggling to draft a mechanism to ...
See all stories on this topic »

French Tribune
Family & friends of Fishtown man felled by mesothelioma will run to raise ...
Philadelphia Daily News
By MARY MAZZONI After spending 35 years as an insulator, beloved Fishtown fixture James "Chalk" Thompson lost his battle with mesothelioma in March, less than a year after being diagnosed. Now his family and friends are trying to fulfill his last wish ...
See all stories on this topic »
Japanese tsunami cleanup presents significant asbestos health hazard ...
Mesothelioma.com
The presence of this hazard is now threatening those contributing to the cleanup efforts, as prolonged asbestos exposure can cause any number of serious diseases, such as asbestosis, lung cancer and mesothelioma, a rare cancer of the protective lining ...
See all stories on this topic »
South Korean Researchers Identify Fungus that May Prevent Metastasis in ...
MesotheliomaHelp.net (blog)
While many cancers have a point of origin, such as pleural mesothelioma that originates in the lining of the lungs, cancerous cells can travel through the blood or lymphatic system spreading the cancer throughout the body making treatment difficult. ...
See all stories on this topic »
Pathologist links housewive's mesothelioma to husband's work with asbestos
Mesothelioma & Asbestos Awareness Center
This highly toxic mineral fiber that was used in several industries up until the 1980's is known to cause several illnesses, such as asbestosis, lung cancer and mesothelioma, a rare cancer of the lining of the lungs and other organs. ...
See all stories on this topic »
NJ Court: $7M Judgement in ExxonMobil's 'Take Home' Asbestos Case Stands
TopWireNews (press release)
Bonnie Anderson, whose husband was an electrician at Exxon's Linden Bayway Refinery from 1975 to 1986, claimed she contracted mesothelioma-an aggressive, incurable cancer that is almost always caused by asbestos exposure-after washing her husband's ...
See all stories on this topic »

TopWireNews (press release)
Fallen workers honoured at Day of Mourning
Sarnia Observer
TYLER KULA/ THE OBSERVER/ QMI AGENCY By TYLER KULA, The Observer John Swart says he sees cases of asbestosis and mesothelioma all the time. The 52-year-old Sarnia man, a heat and frost insulator, was one of 200 people gathered at Centennial Park for ...
See all stories on this topic »
Sause had a gift to connect with others
NorthJersey.com
BY KARTHIK AGGARWAL Mary Sause, a pastoral associate at St. Joseph's Parish, passed away April 12 from mesothelioma, a cancer caused by exposure to asbestos. A lifelong Teaneck resident, Sause, 59, was beloved by the church community. ...
See all stories on this topic »

Web2 new results for Mesothelioma
 
Treatment Options of Stage 2 Mesothelioma | Request a FREE Booklet
Stage 2 Mesothelioma is considered an advanced form of cancer. This indicates that the disease has spread beyond the original location to adjacent areas in ...
www.mesotheliomaresourceonline.com/mesothelioma-stage2/
Smoking and Its Effects on Mesothelioma
Learn how an outside factor like smoking can negatively contribute to the recovery of Mesothelioma victims. Mesothelioma is a type of cancer caused by ...
ezinearticles.com/?Smoking-and-Its-Effects-on...id...


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Thursday, April 28, 2011

When Are You Most Likely To Overeat?

A Chinese buffet restaurant in the United Stat...Image via Wikipedia
(CNN) -- If you're trying to lose weight, close your eyes for a minute and imagine the moments that make you fat.

Think through your day, and you'll see them, as big and obvious as a hot fudge sundae sitting right in front of you. You've been good all day, and wham, your friends suggest you go to a buffet for dinner; or you've diligently worked out and wham, you end up at a cocktail party with an array of the most killer desserts ever.

Don't rely on your willpower to get you through these tough times, advises James Hill, executive director of the Anschutz Health and Wellness Center at the University of Colorado.

"Willpower is not inexhaustible," he says. "You only have a certain amount of it, and it's gone."
The key is to accept the fact that your willpower will run out at some point, and plan strategies to get you through fattening situations. Here are the top five moments that make you fat, and what you can do to outwit them.

On vacation

The problem: You're on vacation and you want to kick back, relax, and enjoy the local cuisine -- but you don't want to come home with pounds to shed.

The solution: "Go for it," advises Frances Largeman-Roth, a registered dietitian and senior food and nutrition editor at Health magazine. But share with others. If you're in Paris, for example, don't skip a visit to the bakery -- that would be tres triste -- but share the goodies with friends.

After a break-up

The problem: You want to bury your sorrows in a pint of ice cream.

The solution: "Instead of meeting your friend for a drink to dish about your ex, meet up for a power walk or run," Largeman-Roth advises. Also, sign up for a team that is training for a 5K or some other race to distract your self and meet new people.

A party with fabulous food

The problem: You're at a party and everything looks delicious. It's free, it's in front of you, and no one's stopping you.

The solution: Don't arrive famished, says Dr. Melina Jampolis, CNNHealth's diet and fitness expert. Eat a small protein snack before the party, such as a few slices of turkey, a half a cup of low-fat cottage cheese, or half a protein bar.

Also, limit your alcohol, and not just because it's caloric, but because if it's hard to control yourself while you're sober, imagine how much harder it is while tipsy.

Watching TV

The problem: You want to plop in front of the television with a high-fat snack.

The solution: Use a small bowl, Largeman-Roth says, or snack on frozen grapes or veggies with a yogurt-based dip.

At a buffet, or a restaurant with enormous portions

The problem: Buffets offer limitless amounts of food, and much of it has tons of calories. Restaurants with big portions of delicious foods make it hard to push the plate away.

The solution: Simply don't go to buffet restaurants, Hill advises. But if you really have to, sit at a table where you can face away from the buffet -- Jampolis says studies show people who face away tend to eat less -- and load up initially on fruits, vegetables, and lean proteins so (at least hopefully) you won't have enough room for the bad stuff. At the end of the meal, she suggests having everyone at the table get just one dessert and share, so you get a little taste of lots of things.

As for big portion restaurants, the trick is to get the doggy bag at the front end, not the back end. Hill suggests when you order your meal, ask for half of your dinner to be brought to you on a plate, and the other half in a to-go box.
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Living With Cancer Newsletter

Living With Cancer
header_shadow April 28, 2011  
Newsletter supported by Chemotherapy.com
Relaxation can help relieve stress of having cancer
Find a relaxation technique that helps you relieve the stress of having cancer.
Preserve your fertility before cancer treatment
Wonder how cancer treatment could affect your fertility? Understand what you can do to preserve your fertility before starting treatment.
Sweet-potato waffles with blueberry syrup
Sweet-potato waffles with blueberry syrup — one of many healthy recipes from Mayo Clinic.
Mayo Clinic Family Health Book, Fourth Edition
This comprehensive resource to general health in every stage of life is your owner's manual for the human body.
Managing chemotherapy side effects
Mayo Clinic experts give you details about the potential side effects of chemotherapy and ways to manage them.
 
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