Loading...
RSS feeds allow Web site content to be gathered via feed reader software. Click the subscribe link to obtain the feed URL for this page. The feed will update when new content appears on this page.
Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Tumors published by this site and its partners.

Sort By: Relevancy | Date | Type
Displaying items 1-12 of 284
» View wsbtradio.com items only
    Dec 24, 2012 |Story| South Florida Sun-Sentinel
  1. Chronology of 2001 anthrax events

    Sun-Sentinel
    Sept. 18: Envelopes containing letters and granular substances are sent to NBC News in New York and the New York Post. Both are mailed from Trenton, N.J. Sept. 22: Editorial page assistant at New York Post who opens letters to the editor notices...

    Tags: Florida, Health Organizations, Jon Corzine, Television Networks, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  2. Jun 17, 2012 |Story| WGN-TV
  3. Proton Therapy

    Killing tumors while sparing healthy tissue. It's the goal of doctors treating cancer patients around the world. Closer to home, a new weapon to fight the disease. It zaps away cancer cells much like traditional radiation, but this treatment's promise lies in what it doesn't touch.
    WGN News
    Killing tumors while sparing healthy tissue. It's the goal of doctors treating cancer patients around the world. Closer to home, a new weapon to fight the disease. It zaps away cancer cells much like traditional radiation, but this treatment's promise...

    Tags: Government Health Care, MRI (imaging), Chemotherapy, Human Interest, Cancer

  4. Aug 24, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  5. Breast cancer and the HCG diet

    When VJ Sleight’s breast cancer returned last year, she wondered if the unusual recurrence – 23 years after her original diagnosis -- had anything to do with the controversial hCG diet that she had repeatedly followed.
    When VJ Sleight’s breast cancer returned last year, she wondered if the unusual recurrence – 23 years after her original diagnosis -- had anything to do with the controversial hCG diet that she had repeatedly followed. The near-starvation...

    Tags: Rush University Medical Center, Chicago Tribune, Estrogen, Hormone Replacement Therapy, Fox Chase Cancer Center

  6. Jun 15, 2011 |Story| KSWB-LTV
  7. UCSD tests cap to fight brain cancer

    SAN DIEGO -- Researchers at the University of California San Diego's Moores Cancer Center are testing a promising new approach to fighting brain cancer that doesn't involve surgery, chemotherapy or radiation.
    FOX 5 San Diego Reporter
    SAN DIEGO -- Researchers at the University of California San Diego's Moores Cancer Center are testing a promising new approach to fighting brain cancer that doesn't involve surgery, chemotherapy or radiation. A year and a half ago, 67-year-old Linda...

    Tags: Surgery, Chemotherapy, Human Interest, Healthcare Provider, Cancer

  8. Aug 16, 2011 |Story| Daily Pilot
  9. City Life: An unasked question when buying a home

    If asked, most real estate agents will tell you that one of the most commonly asked questions is about the quality and location of the local schools — an important question, to be sure. Don Abrams, of Abrams Coastal Properties on Balboa Island,...

    Tags: Emergency Planning, Medical Services, Homes, Brain, Human Interest

  10. Aug 3, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  11. Medical tourism: A faraway health fix

    When Stan Long's doctor told him he needed prostate surgery, the unpleasant procedure bothered him less than the part of the price tag he'd be on the hook for: $15,000 for the hospital stay his Medicare plan didn't cover.
    When Stan Long's doctor told him he needed prostate surgery, the unpleasant procedure bothered him less than the part of the price tag he'd be on the hook for: $15,000 for the hospital stay his Medicare plan didn't cover. So Long, who lives in Washington...

    Tags: Tourism and Leisure, Homes, Government Health Care, Addiction, Plastic Surgery

  12. Aug 18, 2011 |Story| Coastline Pilot
  13. From Canyon To Cove: Some answers just lead to more questions

    I'm cancer-free. At least that's what my last "tumor marker" test showed after a few weeks of intensive treatment with radiation and chemotherapy. The test result caused my oncologist to smile — a rare sight. Call me a skeptic, but I wanted to...

    Tags: Surgery, Chemotherapy, Cancer, Pancreatic Cancer, Science and Technology

  14. Aug 22, 2011 |Story| Petoskey News
  15. Apple scab fungus more resistant to pesticides

    <strong>TRAVERSE CITY</strong> &mdash; Apple growers in the eastern U.S.  have a despised enemy known as apple scab &mdash; a disease caused by a fungus  that forms ugly brown or greenish-black pockmarks on the fruit's skin. A  scabby apple is unfit for grocery stores because consumers are  notoriously picky about blemished fruit.
    TRAVERSE CITY — Apple growers in the eastern U.S. have a despised enemy known as apple scab — a disease caused by a fungus that forms ugly brown or greenish-black pockmarks on the fruit's skin. A scabby apple is unfit for grocery stores...

    Tags: Environmental Politics, Colleges and Universities, Michigan, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Consumers

  16. Aug 24, 2011 |Story| Herald Mail
  17. Local family tries to see silver lining during difficult times of illness

    Lindsay Pinieski said she was devastated a little more than a year ago when her husband, Zack, was diagnosed with cancer.
    dan.dearth@herald-mail.com
    Lindsay Pinieski said she was devastated a little more than a year ago when her husband, Zack, was diagnosed with cancer. But things started to look brighter after chemotherapy treatments drove the disease into remission. The Hagerstown family’...

    Tags: Meningitis, Career and Workplace, Nevada, Chemotherapy, Abdomen

  18. Aug 25, 2011 |Story| WGN-TV
  19. Thyroid Robot

    Hiding the scar! Swapping one incision for another. It's a robotic surgery that leaves a scar but not where people can see it.
    WGN News
    Hiding the scar! Swapping one incision for another. It's a robotic surgery that leaves a scar but not where people can see it. Jennifer Panaro, Robotic Thyroidectomy Patient: "I never felt anything. My primary care physician found it during a general...

    Tags: Surgery, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Medical Procedures and Tests, WGN, Human Interest

  20. Jul 17, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  21. Doctors aim to stop pancreatic cancer before it forms

    Seeing a chance to stop one of the most deadly kinds of cancer before it forms, doctors at Johns Hopkins and at other hospitals around the nation are focusing on the common pancreatic cyst.
    Seeing a chance to stop one of the most deadly kinds of cancer before it forms, doctors at Johns Hopkins and at other hospitals around the nation are focusing on the common pancreatic cyst. Up to 20 percent of pancreatic cancer begins as one of these...

    Tags: Florida, MRI (imaging), Chemotherapy, Massachusetts, Skin

  22. Jul 13, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  23. 3 hospitals recognized for treatment of LGBT patients

    Three area hospitals were recognized in a new nationwide survey for their treatment of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender patients.
    Three area hospitals were recognized in a new nationwide survey for their treatment of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender patients. The Human Rights Campaign's Healthcare Equality Index 2011, released last week, cited Advocate Illinois Masonic...

    Tags: Health Organizations, Rush University Medical Center, Elections, Research, Barack Obama

 1  2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11-24Next >
Original site for Tumors topic gallery.
Loading...
 
 

Date:

Credit:

User-submitted

Tags:

Rate:
Sending...

E-mail this photo

Error: malformed email address(es)
Both "from" and "recipient" email fields are required.

Recipient E-mail Addresses

(up to 3, separated by commas) Send me a copy.

From:

e-mail | buy this photo | link to photo
Tumors Photos
Christian Stilwell, 17, of Algonquin, who died in his s...
(June 13, 2011)
Christian Stilwell
Exemestane, sold as Aromasin, can reduce the risk of tu...
(June 10, 2011)
Drug cuts breast cancer risk for some post-menopausal women
PLX4032, or vemurafenib, is the first chemotherapy agen...
(June 10, 2011)
New drugs show promise in treating deadly melanoma