Of those patients, 214 were diagnosed with noncancerous masses, and 30 had cancerous neoplasms. |
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Recent laboratory experiments suggest that vitamin D can also prevent the growth and spread of cancerous tumours. |
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Stereotactic radiosurgery, meanwhile, uses precise beams of radiation to kill both cancerous and non-cancerous tumours in the head. |
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A pathologist will examine the prostate sample under a microscope and check whether or not it is cancerous. |
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They inject me with the new bone marrow and hopefully it will engraft and start to make new, healthy cells instead of cancerous ones. |
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Not all polyps become cancerous, but nearly all colorectal cancers evolve from polyps. |
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Typically, seborrheic keratoses don't become cancerous, but they can resemble skin cancer. |
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Chemotherapy shrank it to the size of an apricot, but David needed a specialised biopsy to determine whether the tumour was still cancerous. |
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In March 1999, the doctor carried out keyhole surgery on her to remove a cancerous bladder tumour. |
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It has also been linked to certain types of cancerous tumors in laboratory rats. |
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But this is a specious argument, with an almost cancerous ill will attached. |
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The acid damages cells lining the oesophagus, also known as the food pipe or gullet, which can later become cancerous. |
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This at a time when the political press was treating every blemish in Gore's moral complexion as if it were a cancerous tumor. |
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Indeed, in the laboratory resveratrol protects cells from cancerous change. |
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I believe it has been proved that smoking weed on its own, especially from a bong, is more cancerous than smoking cigarettes. |
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Vegetables like cabbage, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, and turnips may reduce the risk of cancerous tumors. |
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This is important because what makes a cancerous cell different from a noncancerous cell is the set of genes that are turned on or off. |
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The goal of chemotherapy in people with early cancers is usually to kill the cancerous cells and to cure the condition. |
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Individuals from Family A were monitored by dermatologists for cancerous and precancerous lesions of the skin. |
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The young actress had a lump removed from her breast because doctors suspected it was cancerous. |
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It's believed calcium reduces the occurrence of polyps in the colon that can turn cancerous. |
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The study suggests that the size of the light scatterers in the cancerous epithelium are not significantly modified. |
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Knowing what changes to the genome make cells cancerous can help oncologists defeat the tumor with tailor-made chemotherapy. |
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Although cancerous liver cells easily can be grown in culture dishes, growing healthy liver cells is not so easy. |
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Your doctor will take a tissue sample from your thyroid gland and examine it under a microscope to see if it is cancerous. |
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But first, the doctors issued a statement today that his two cancerous spots have not spread and are operable. |
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She sought a second opinion, and was told about lumpectomy, in which just the cancerous lump is excised, and she chose to have that procedure. |
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Regular cervical smear tests will detect any abnormal cells before they become cancerous. |
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In 1735, Fiennius described a case in which he cured a cancerous growth on a patient's lip using a sunbath. |
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Gross chromosomal disturbance would certainly seem likely to cause either cell death or conversion to a cancerous state. |
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There's been a controversy for many years about whether the virus infects healthy epithelial cells or just cancerous and precancerous cells. |
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The re-educated cells, with the ability to identify and destroy cancerous cells, are then removed, purified, and injected into the patient. |
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Using a needle, your doctor injects the drug directly into a muscle, under your skin or into a cancerous area on your skin. |
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She went through surgery to remove a cancerous lump on her right breast and 17 surrounding lymph nodes. |
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The tar in tobacco contains hundreds of carcinogens that promote the transformation of normal cells into cancerous cells. |
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The examination revealed a cancerous tumour, and a biopsy revealed a malignancy. |
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Some abnormal smears do in fact revert to normal without treatment, but some go on to become cancerous. |
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About five years later, Emmy-Lou developed a cancerous growth in her mouth. |
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In preclinical testing these vectors were highly effective against cancerous tumors and did not harm normal tissues. |
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The eating of pork has produced leprosy and cancerous tumors. |
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Animal studies indicate that it enhances the immune system by stimulating natural killer cells and T cells, and by decreasing cancerous tumor's size. |
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He was immediately hospitalized and doctors removed a cancerous growth. |
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A new ovarian tumor index to help physicians accurately diagnose ovarian tumors as cancerous or benign has been developed by researchers in Dallas. |
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In the laboratory, this substance protects cells from cancerous change. |
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Vitamin C has been shown to increase the activity of specific white blood cells that ingest and destroy bacteria, yeast and certain cancerous cells. |
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If the infection happens to be caused by the human papilloma virus then those slightly abnormal cells have a higher risk of going on to become cancerous. |
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Known as polyps or adenomas, benign tumors in the colon have the potential to become cancerous. |
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The lining of the esophagus continuously exposed to acid or bilious alkaline or both can change its type and become more susceptible to cancerous changes. |
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The idea is, hold back the barbarian hordes, and excise the cancerous growth that is sucking the lifeblood from our economy. |
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For that reason, the emission of red fluorescence on excitation of cancerous tissue by blue light increases more than the emission of green fluorescence. |
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Like Retsky, Demicheli doubted the dominant view of how cancerous tumors grow. |
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For years, doctors mistook the cancerous growth in her left breast for normal dense tissue. |
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A nurse whose life was saved after a colleague spotted a cancerous mole on her leg helped to screen others at a skin cancer screening clinic yesterday. |
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All proceeds from the event will go to St Mary's Hospice, where Mr Bolton was cared for after suddenly being taken ill in September 2003 with a cancerous brain tumour. |
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Cryosurgery refers to the application of very low temperatures to undesirable tissue, typically cancerous tumors, in order to destroy it. |
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The main difference between malignant and normal cancerous cells is on the distribution and number of microclassifications. |
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Signs of cancerous cells might not show up until years, or even decades, after exposure. |
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The radiation decay products ionize genetic material, causing mutations that sometimes turn cancerous. |
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Some cancerous tumors can be treated with heat alone, ablating diseased tissue in a single treatment. |
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The new technique targets the cancerous cells and radioactively kills them. |
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Susan's 18-month-old son Edward died in 1991 after a 28-week struggle against cancerous blastoma which destroyed his internal organs. |
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When the sensitizer is too fast bleached during illumination, the cancerous cells may not be destroyed completely. |
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Mesothelioma is a cancerous tumour of the mesothelium, the lining of some of the major organs. |
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Now, those techniques have begun to be used successfully when applied to RF and microwave thermotherapy treatment of cancerous tumors. |
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However, for cancerous cells, the way the ions are transported across its cell membrane changes, thus blocking the process of apoptosis. |
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That same cancerous sickness of short-sighted tribalization spreads throughout modern Japan's cultures of business and governance. |
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The tyrosinemia had caused the cirrhosis and the development of cancerous cells in Genghis' liver. |
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There, a Miami-based urologist directed ultrasonic waves at the patient's cancerous prostate gland. |
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An injection which is administered directly into a cancerous area is an intralesional injection. |
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Osteosarcoma is a rare cancerous tumour that affects children and usually develops during periods of rapid growth. |
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But the joy of their new daughter came the news the 38-year-old had a cancerous ovarian cyst, and the disease spread. |
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In some lab tests, stem cells that have been effectively deprogrammed to help regenerate a particular organ have appeared to turn cancerous. |
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While most of the mutations would result in cell death, perhaps a few cells would have mutations that promote a cancerous or precancerous state. |
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This makes it much easier for antibody-based drugs, known as immunotoxins, to attack the cancerous cells. |
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Tests found an aggressive fibromatosis, a soft-tissue cancerous growth that affects no more than four people in a million. |
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Statistics show that a large percentage of women worldwide have ovarian cysts and that when not detected early, they could turn into cancerous tumours, the doctor said. |
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And saffron, the spice that gives paella its vivid yellow, contains a vital antioxidant called crocetin which can fight certain cancerous tumours and lower blood pressure. |
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A new realm of so-called nonneoplastic lesions, or tissue changes that are pathological but not cancerous, has become a growing priority for the field. |
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During an autofluorescence bronchoscopy, the bronchoscopist advances a flexible tube, or bronchoscope, into the lungs to look for cancerous tissue. |
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While lumpectomies remove only a portion of the breast tissue, mastectomies remove all of the tissue to prevent any cancerous tissue from growing. |
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Among women tested during the last 2 weeks of their' cycle, researchers found 24 cases in which the mammogram failed to detect tumors subsequently diagnosed as cancerous. |
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The application of microwave radiometry for early detection of cancer is based on the difference of the temperatures between cancerous and healthy cells. |
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In 2008, he had a cancerous mole removed from underneath his right eye. |
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