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Ewing James - - 2012
This Classic Article is a reprint of the original work by J. Ewing, The Bulkley Lecture: The Modern Attitude Toward Traumatic Cancer. An accompanying biographical sketch of J. Ewing is available at DOI 10.1007/s11999-011-2234-y . The Classic Article is ©1935 and is reprinted courtesy of the New York Academy of ...
Yee Samantha - - 2012
This study explores the attitudes, knowledge, and referring behaviors in fertility preservation among Ontario physicians providing adult cancer care. Ontario physicians with specialties in medical oncology, radiation oncology, gynaecologic oncology, and urology were invited to complete a 48-item questionnaire. A total of 152 questionnaires were available for analysis with a ...
Kim Bong Ki - - 2012
This study investigated the relationship between intention of undergoing cancer screening and information, motivation, and behavioral skills using an information-motivation-behavioral skills model. The authors performed a telephone survey of a random sample of 2030 residents aged 30 to 69 years from 6 counties of Gangwon province, South Korea from July ...
Ryan Julie L - - 2012
Skin changes caused by ionizing radiation have been scientifically documented since 1902. Ionizing radiation is a widely accepted form of treatment for various types of cancer. Despite the technological advances, radiation skin injury remains a significant problem. This injury, often referred to as radiation dermatitis, occurs in about 95% of ...
Brand Richard A - - 2011
This biographical sketch on James Ewing corresponds to the historic text, The Classic: The Modern Attitude Toward Traumatic Cancer (1935), available at DOI 10.1007/s11999-011-2235-x .
Gorman Jessica R - - 2011
PURPOSE: Young adult cancer survivors are often unaware of their fertility status and uninformed regarding their fertility and fertility preservation options. This qualitative research study explores the fertility and parenthood concerns of reproductive-age female cancer survivors and how they make parenthood decisions. METHODS: Population- and clinic-based recruitment methods were used ...
Carter Jeanne - - 2012
Regardless of cancer origin or age of onset, the disease and its treatment can produce short- and long-term sequelae (ie, sexual dysfunction, infertility, or lymphedema) that adversely affect quality of life (QOL). This article outlines the primary contemporary issues or concerns that may affect QOL and offers strategies to offset ...
Silk Kami J - - 2011
Recent research links perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) to increased breast cancer risk. Efforts to inform the lay public about potential risks associated with PFOA need to be accessible in their content as many individuals, including highly educated ones, have low scientific literacy. This study investigates the role of message format, as ...
Paul C - - 2011
PAUL C., CAREY M., ANDERSON A., MACKENZIE L., SANSON-FISHER R., COURTNEY R. & CLINTON-MCHARG T. (2011) European Journal of Cancer Care Cancer patients' concerns regarding access to cancer care: perceived impact of waiting times along the diagnosis and treatment journey Waiting times can raise significant concern for cancer patients. This ...
Bingen Kristin - - 2011
Previous research in childhood cancer and hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) survivorship has relied on the use of standardized questionnaires that assess symptoms of psychological functioning but do not sufficiently capture the cancer survivorship experience. Study aims are to quantitatively and qualitatively assess the psychosocial functioning of pediatric cancer and HCT ...
Dekeuwer Catherine - - 2011
This article presents the results of a study that investigates the way in which carriers of a mutation on the BRCA1 or the BRCA2 gene, associated with a high risk of breast and ovarian cancer, make their reproductive decisions. Using semi-structured interviews, the study explored the way in which these ...
Land Charles E - - 2011
Ionizing radiation is a known, well-documented, and reasonably well-quantified human cancer risk factor based on a remarkably consistent body of dose-response information from epidemiological studies of exposed populations supported by experimental studies using animal and cellular models. This fact is largely ascribable to the relative ease, compared to other carcinogens, ...
Stubblefield Michael D - - 2011
Radiation-induced toxicity is a major cause of long-term disability after cancer treatment. Radiation fibrosis describes the insidious pathologic fibrotic tissue sclerosis that can occur in response to radiation exposure. Radiation fibrosis syndrome describes the myriad clinical manifestations of progressive fibrotic tissue sclerosis resulting from radiation treatment. Radiation-induced damage can include ...
Davoren S L - - 2011
Research and public policy literature on alcohol-related harm predominantly focuses on the impact of alcohol policies over the short term. However, evidence on the effect of interventions on long-term, alcohol-related chronic disease, including cancers, is growing. The experience from tobacco control supports the use of interventions that increase the price ...
Kröz Matthias - - 2011
Objectives: Current quality of life inventories used in oncology mainly measure the effects of chemo- or radiotherapy alongside functional and role scales. A new approach is to measure the autonomic state of regulation with the trait-inventory of autonomic regulation (Trait-aR). Loss of Trait-aR has been shown in different medical conditions ...
Letourneau Joseph M - - 2011
BACKGROUND: The post-treatment quality of life (QOL) impacts of receiving precancer-treatment infertility counseling and of pursuing fertility preservation have not been described in large-scale studies of reproductive age women with cancer. METHODS: In total, 1041 women who were diagnosed between ages 18 and 40 years responded to a retrospective survey ...
Khan Haseeb Ahmad - - 2011
Radiation therapy is a key modality in the treatment of different cancer types. Fatigue is the most common side effect of radiotherapy, while others include nausea, hair loss, skin irritation, anemia, infertility, cardiovascular disease, cognitive impairment and even the development of second cancers. Studies in experimental animals have shown protective ...
Johnson David - - 2011
This paper describes the initial groundwork carried out as part of the European Commission funded Transatlantic Tumor Model Repositories project, to develop a new markup language for computational cancer modelling, TumorML. In this paper we describe the motivations for such a language, arguing that current state-of-the-art biomodelling languages are not ...
Berman Noah C - - 2011
The present study examined whether beliefs about the importance of thoughts (i.e., thought-action fusion; TAF) are related to the target subject of the negative thought. One hundred and seven undergraduate students were randomly assigned to imagine either a beloved relative or a stranger being diagnosed with cancer and provided in vivo ...
Shah Divya K - - 2011
The past 2decades have seen a significant rise in cancer survival rates, and an increasing proportion of survivors at reproductive age are interested in childbearing. Although assisted reproduction provides physicians with an array of potential possibilities to help patients whose fertility is compromised by cancer treatment, there is still a ...
Yang Mihi - - 2011
This review is focused on current information of avoidable environmental pollution and occupational exposure as causes of cancer. Approximately 2% to 8% of all cancers are thought to be due to occupation. In addition, occupational and environmental cancers have their own characteristics, e.g., specific chemicals and cancers, multiple factors, multiple ...
Birtwistle Marc R - - 2011
Negative feedback is an ubiquitous feature of biological networks. Recent work from Sturm and colleaguespresents experimental evidence that biological negative feedback can serve the same function as it does for engineered systems: robustness to perturbations within the feedback loop. Such behavior has important implications for how to attack deregulated signaling ...
Sia Valerie May - - 2011
Cancer of the colon is the second most common visceral cancer in the United States (lung cancer is the first). It is usually diagnosed in patients older than 40 years, with a peak incidence at 70 years of age. Rarely, are cases seen in the pediatric population. In this study, ...
Baer Allison R - - 2011
Informed consent is fundamental to the conduct of clinical trials. Prospective participants need to be adequately informed and given the opportunity to ask questions and consult with relatives or friends without feeling pressured or rushed.
Harrington J E - - 2012
To carry out a national service evaluation of the integrated cancer support programme offered by The Haven using the Measure Yourself Concerns and Wellbeing (MYCaW) outcome questionnaire. Breast cancer survivors who visited one of three Haven centres in the UK completed the MYCaW questionnaire before and after 6 one-hour complementary ...
Penrose Rebecca - - 2011
PURPOSE: This study aims to assess the fertility concerns among cancer survivors aged 50 and under as part of a larger study investigating the survivors' concerns regarding fertility, sexuality and parenting. METHODS: Cancer survivors who were at least 1 month post-treatment were invited to a recorded interview. The patients were identified ...
Yakymenko I - - 2011
In this review we discuss alarming epidemiological and experimental data on possible carcinogenic effects of long term exposure to low intensity microwave (MW) radiation. Recently, a number of reports revealed that under certain conditions the irradiation by low intensity MW can substantially induce cancer progression in humans and in animal ...
Morita Yoshinori - - 2011
Endoscopic diagnosis of gastric cancer is very often made by conventional white light endoscopy and/or by indigo carmine chromoendoscopy. However, with this method it is difficult to detect and demarcate a small lesion affected by inflammation or a biopsy procedure. We considered it is useful for diagnosis of such small ...
Yasuda Ichiro - - 2011
The prognosis of pancreatic cancer is extremely poor as a result of the difficulty in early detection of small pancreatic cancer and the intractable nature of appropriate anti-cancer therapies. Computed tomography (CT) is generally used for initial screening, but imaging sensitivities are generally insufficient to detect small masses. Endoscopic ultrasonography ...
Saif Muhammad Wasif - - 2011
Pancreatic cancer is known to metastasize rapidly. Liver and peritoneum are the most common sites of metastases in pancreatic cancer, followed by lungs, bones and brain. Less common sites of metastases such as muscle, skin, heart, pleura, stomach, umbilicus, kidney, appendix, spermatic cord and prostate have also been reported in ...
Lee Hyuk - - 2011
Background/Aims: Early gastric cancer (EGC) can be treated by endoscopic resection, which results in an excellent prognosis. Optimal screening intervals considering risk factors for gastric cancer have not been established. The aim of this study was to determine the maximum gastric cancer screening interval in terms of long-term survival. Methods: ...
Tang Karen L - - 2011
BACKGROUND: One reason chest radiographs are recommended after pneumonia is to exclude underlying lung cancer. Our aims were to determine the incidence and correlates of new lung cancer and the diagnostic yield of new lung cancer by chest radiography in patients with pneumonia. METHODS: We conducted a population-based cohort study ...
Xu Xiaoxin S - - 2011
ABSTRACT: Bladder cancer is one of the most common malignancies and causes hundreds of thousands of deaths worldwide each year. Bladder cancer is strongly associated with exposure to environmental carcinogens. It is believed that DNA damage generated by environmental carcinogens and their metabolites causes development of bladder cancer. Nucleotide excision ...
Overdevest Jonathan B - - 2011
Metastasis is lethal in most bladder cancer patients. Expression of CD24, a GPI-linked sialoglycoprotein and cancer stem cell marker, is associated with metastatic progression in multiple cancer types, yet the role of CD24 in this process remains unclear. While developing a murine model of human metastatic bladder cancer, we observed ...
Hulagu Sadettin - - 2011
To investigate the indication, feasibility, safety, and clinical utility of endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) in the management of various gastrointestinal pathologies. The medical records of 60 consecutive patients (34 female, 26 male) who underwent ESD at the gastroenterology department of Kocaeli University from 2006-2010 were examined. Patients selected for ESD ...
Kim Chul Jang - - 2011
We previously showed that periostin expression is downregulated in human bladder cancer tissues and that ectopic expression of periostin suppresses the invasiveness of bladder cancer cells. However, in most other human cancers studied, the expression of periostin promotes cell invasiveness. In the present study, we investigated the regulation of the ...
Tennis P - - 2011
Background:  Cases of lymphoma or cutaneous cancer have been observed following use of topical calcineurin inhibitors (TCIs), but it is unclear whether TCI use increases cancer risk. Objective:  We used published literature to assess the extent to which atopic dermatitis (AD) or TCIs are associated with lymphoma, melanoma, basal cell ...
Scarlett Christopher J - - 2011
Pancreatic cancer has a dismal prognosis and is the fourth most common cause of cancer related death in Western societies. In large part this is due to its typically late presentation, usually as locally advanced or metastatic disease. Identification of the non-invasive precursor lesions to pancreatic cancer raises the possibility ...
Yuan Xiaoyi - - 2011
This study examined the effect of silencing LRIG3 expression on the proliferation and apoptosis of bladder cancer T24 cells and explored the role of LRIG3 in the tumorigenesis of bladder cancer. Bladder cancer T24 cells were routinely cultured and pSilencer plasmids were employed to construct LRIG3 eukaryotic expression vector of ...
Mok Greta S P - - 2011
We describe a 70-year-old man who presented with a right neck mass, with suspicion of primary head and neck cancer. The PET/CT results demonstrated intense FDG uptake over right lateral neck around the angle of mandible, corresponding to an infiltrative soft-tissue mass presented in the right parotid space on CT. ...
Kudo Yasuyuki - - 2011
Recent advances in endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) techniques contribute to endoscopic treatment of early gastric cancer (EGC). Recognition of chronic atrophic gastritis as the background is important for high-quality detection and diagnosis of EGC. But, relationships between EGC and atrophy of the background gastric mucosa caused by Helicobacter pylori are ...
Shien Kazuhiko - - 2011
The safety and perioperative problems of primary lung cancer surgery after curative chemoradiotherapy (CRT) for thoracic esophageal cancer (EC) are controversial. We retrospectively evaluated six patients who had received curative CRT for EC from 2003 to 2009, in whom the lung nodule was identified as a primary lung cancer and ...
- - 2011
Science presents a timeline chronicling notable events in the war on cancer, launched 40 years ago when U.S. President Richard Nixon signed the National Cancer Act.
Psoinos Charles M - - 2011
Multicystic peritoneal mesothelioma (MCPM) is a rare cystic proliferation most often seen in women of reproductive age with a history of prior abdominal surgery. This is a case report of an 83-year-old woman diagnosed with MCPM during an exploratory laparotomy for presumed peritoneal carcinomatosis from colon cancer. After complete removal ...
Kisiel John B - - 2011
BACKGROUND: Ulcerative colitis (UC) patients are at increased risk of colorectal dysplasia and cancer. Few studies have examined the clinical outcomes of dysplastic polyps resembling sporadic adenomas that are removed with endoscopic polypectomy. METHODS: A centralized diagnostic index identified patients evaluated between 1994 and 2004 with UC and polypoid dysplasia ...
Rerknimitr Rungsun - - 2011
To evaluate the efficacy of non-sequential narrow band imaging (NBI) for a better recognition of gastric intestinal metaplasia (GIM). Previously diagnosed GIM patients underwent targeted biopsy from areas with and without GIM, as indicated by NBI, twice at an interval of 1 year. The authors compared the endoscopic criteria such ...
Stoltz A - - 2011
Pancreatic metastases from colorectal cancer are extremely rare. We report the case of a 74-years-old patient presented with a metachronous pancreatic metastasis, which was treated by segmental pancreatectomy. After reviewing literature, diagnosis and management of pancreatic metastasis from colorectal carcinoma are discussed.
Lin Hsin-Chung - - 2011
Metastasis from lung cancer, often found in the adrenal glands, bone, liver, brain, and kidneys, have been thought to be rare in the digestive system. When a metastatic tumor is found in the intestine, it is most commonly metastatic melanoma or carcinoma of the cervix uteri, ovary, or breast. Yet, ...
Partridge Brett J - - 2011
BACKGROUND: Primary malignant neoplasms of the small bowel comprise only 1-3% of all gastrointestinal malignancies. Small bowel cancers pose a significant diagnostic challenge. The recent development of video capsule endoscopy (VCE) and device-assisted enteroscopy (DAE) have greatly facilitated evaluation of the small bowel. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed all cases referred ...
Kobayashi Masaaki - - 2011
We have provided general anesthesia for a 53-year-old man scheduled to undergo lymph node removal for right mediastinal lymph node metastases caused by esophageal cancer. One year prior, acute respiratory failure occurred because of stenosis of the carinal bifurcation resulting from advanced esophageal cancer with tracheal invasion. The patient underwent ...
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