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Resources And Tools For Battling Cancer


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Justice Where It Is Due


New or Experimental Therapies For Mesothelioma

Photodynamic Therapy

As the name suggest, this treatment uses light to kill cancer cells. Originally used to treat skin cancer, it can help to treat mesothelioma lung cancer provided the cancer have not metasized. Patients are given a certain drug to the vein to make cancer cells sensitive to light of a specific length before exposure to the special light, killing cancer cells in the process.

Gene Therapy

Gene therapy is engineered to work hand-in-hand with chemotherapy. Still in clinical trial process, this process involve some interesting steps. A harmless genetically modified virus is actually release into the body so they can enter the cancer cells and produce a special protein. Chemotherapy drug are then given to the patient that react with this protein to kill the cancer cell. Gene therapy has been achieving high level of success.

Immunotherapy

In normal cancer cases, the body immune system do not destroy cancer cells because these are mutated cells that originated from normal cells. Immunotherapy involve creating customized vaccines based on the patient's tumor cells to make the body immune system recognize the cancer cells as harmful.





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Latest Mesothelioma Updates & Legal News

When the Heart Stops Beating (HealthDay)
HealthDay - MONDAY, Jan. 5 (HealthDay News) -- Deanna Babcock's heart stopped beating on July 20, 2007. Just like that.
Smoking ban leads to major drop in heart attacks (AP)
AP - A smoking ban in one Colorado city led to a dramatic drop in heart attack hospitalizations within three years, a sign of just how serious a health threat secondhand smoke is, government researchers said Wednesday.
Study points to way of stopping lung cancer spread (Reuters)
Reuters - Lung cancer cells produce a compound that helps the tumor spread to other parts of the body, a finding that could lead to a new way to prevent this dangerous development, researchers reported on Wednesday.
Teens are influenced by health risks of smoking (Reuters)
Reuters - Teenagers who underestimate the risks of smoking -- or overestimate the social value -- are substantially more likely than their peers to take up the habit, a new study suggests.
Gene Mutation Tied to Inherited Fatal Lung Disease (HealthDay)
HealthDay - TUESDAY, Dec. 30 (HealthDay News) -- A mutation in a gene previously found to help protect the lungs against toxins may also be linked to lung cancer and some inherited cases of a lethal lung disease affecting older adults, a new study says.
No cancer risk reductions seen with antioxidants (Reuters)
Reuters - In the large Women's Antioxidant Cardiovascular Study, participants who took beta carotene, vitamin C, vitamin E, or a combination of supplements had no significant reductions in their risk of cancer.
Many studies needed to tie genes to cancer: study (Reuters)
Reuters - Many genes linked to various cancers do not appear to raise the risk of getting cancer after all, according to an analysis of hundreds of studies published on Tuesday.
Antioxidants fail again in cancer prevention study (Reuters)
Reuters - Beta carotene, vitamin C and vitamin E supplements taken for years failed to lower overall cancer risk in the latest study to cast doubt on the possibility that such dietary supplements can prevent cancer.
Food Phosphates Might Spur Lung Cancer (HealthDay)
HealthDay - MONDAY, Dec. 29 (HealthDay News) -- A diet rich in the inorganic phosphates found in many natural and processed foods accelerated the growth of lung cancers in rats, South Korean researchers report.
Processed food may fuel lung tumors: Korean study (Reuters)
Reuters - Common food additives known as phosphates may help lung cancer tumors grow faster, at least in mice, South Korean researchers reported on Monday.






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