Word: tumors
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...says relationships does not represent a conflict of interest because "this does not influence my basic interest in studying the role of tumor antigens and the development of methods for diagnosing and preventing cancer, which are my primary interests...
...week, King Hussein of Jordan received Al-Majid's band of fugitives in his palace and granted asylum. Insiders say King Hussein struck up a warm friendship with Hussein Kamel about a year ago when the Iraqi commander underwent surgery in Amman for the removal of a noncancerous brain tumor. The King reportedly visited the hospital nearly every day, and the two hit it off. At the same time, it seems, the invalid's absence from Iraq presented a golden opportunity for Saddam's eldest son, Uday, 33, who has recently ascended in power and prestige...
Luckily for Dole, his age actually works in his favor. Because prostate cancer usually grows so slowly in older men, even if a tiny malignant cell had escaped from Dole's prostate before the organ was removed and had seeded another tumor elsewhere in his body, chances are excellent that he would still die with prostate cancer, as opposed to from it. "You can't guarantee a 100% cure," says Dr. Gerald Chodak, director of the Prostate/Urology Center at University of Chicago Hospital. "But the odds are very much in his favor." In Chodak's opinion, Dole could...
...such surprises are likely to be in store for Dole. The tumor that was removed four years ago, along with the majority leader's prostate, was small and had not spread. Every six months since then Dole has undergone a highly sensitive test for a protein called prostate-specific antigen, or PSA. This substance can act like an early-warning device, alerting physicians to the presence or recurrence of the cancer...
...evidence comes from nearly two dozen patients treated by Damasio, including Elliot, the businessman who started behaving irrationally after surgery to remove a brain tumor. Elliot cannot behave rationally, even though his intelligence was not affected by his tumor. The part of the brain destroyed by invading tissue was in a region of the prefrontal cortex (see diagram) essential to decision making. But what Elliot lost, psychological testing revealed, was the ability to experience emotion. While the amygdala does process fear, his doctors argue from the example of Elliot and the other patients that other parts of the brain...