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...epidemiologists Maria Feychting and Anders Ahlbom of Stockholm's Karolinska Institute, looked at everyone who lived within 300 m (328 yd.) of a high-tension line in Sweden from 1960 to '85. Although the investigators could find no evidence of an increased cancer threat for adults, they did detect a higher risk of leukemia in children. The second study, led by Birgitta Floderus of Sweden's National Institute of Occupational Health, linked on-the-job exposure to electromagnetic fields and leukemia in workingmen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Danger Overhead | 10/26/1992 | See Source »

Other contentious issues will arise. Doctors will be able to detect many serious genetic diseases at the fetal stage, which will lead some parents to opt for abortion. But there will also be preventive measures for people who want to avoid passing their defective genes on to their children. When one parent carries the deadly and dominant gene for Huntington's chorea, for example, there is a 50% chance that any offspring will have it too. To reduce those odds to zero, doctors of the future will extract several eggs from the prospective mother and fertilize them in a test...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Seeking A Godlike Power | 10/15/1992 | See Source »

...size of a grain of sand -- has already produced a healthy baby girl for a British couple with a 1 in 4 chance of having a child with cystic fibrosis, according to a report in last week's New England Journal of Medicine. It is now being used to detect several inherited ailments, including hemophilia, Duchenne muscular dystrophy and Tay-Sachs disease...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Catching A Bad Gene | 10/5/1992 | See Source »

...doctors are hopeful that they can force the death rate back down -- through earlier and better detection and treatment. The effort begins this week and next, as the Schering-Plough pharmaceutical company, based in New Jersey, sponsors free prostate screenings all over the U.S. An estimated half a million American men will allow themselves to be poked, prodded and bled in hopes of being reassured of their good health or of spotting trouble before it gets serious. In addition to the rectal exam, men can undergo a new blood test that measures levels of a protein called prostate-specific antigen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Private Pain of Prostate Cancer | 10/5/1992 | See Source »

...easy. Over the past several decades, much of American medical practice and public expectation has been geared toward the idea that if someone has cancer, it should be treated without delay, observes Dr. Gerald Chodak, a urologist at the University of Chicago. But as blood tests and biopsies detect ever smaller cancers, physicians and patients will have to make more sophisticated decisions about treatment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Private Pain of Prostate Cancer | 10/5/1992 | See Source »

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