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According to information from the Mayo Clinic, breast cancer is the second-most common cancer diagnosed in women within the United States. Surgery to remove all or a portion of the breast is one...
Breast cancer will affect roughly one out of every eight women, according to information from the medical website Medline Plus. There are a number of different treatments for breast cancer,...
There are five treatments for breast cancer including surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, hormone therapy and targeted therapy. Because breast cancer is made up different kinds of cells, usually a...
Radiation therapy is a local breast cancer treatment that gets rid of cancer in the breast area only. This treatment can be used alone or combined with surgery, hormone therapy, or chemotherapy....
A diagnosis of breast cancer causes a woman to wonder whether she'll be healthy in the future and whether she'll be able to keep her breasts. Doctors treat stage I breast cancer with a combination...
One of the most common forms of cancer among women is breast cancer. One promising course that has developed in the last few years is proton treatment. Understanding the science and protocols of...
As a generally accepted method of treating breast cancer, brachytherapy is a term with which you should become familiar if you or someone you know has recently been diagnosed. Brachytherapy refers...
After skin cancer, breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer in women, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Breast cancer is also the seventh-leading cause of death...
Understanding the various signs and symptoms that precede a diagnosis of cancer can help you to accurately judge when to make a trip to the doctor. As breast cancer will affect one out of every...
Breast cancer is one of the most common types of cancer in women. It is characterized by a lump in a breast. It might be treated by removing the lump or one, or both, of the breasts and then using...
Combating cancer is always a weighing of risks and rewards--attempting to balance the promised cure against the possibility of unwanted or dangerous side effects down the road. When it comes to...
Breast cancer is the second deadliest form of cancer in women, with only lung cancer responsible for more deaths in the United States. Estimates from the American Cancer Society say that there...
Intensity-modulated radiation therapy is a procedure that's used for head, neck, prostate, and breast cancers. The procedure involves a scan being taken of the cancerous area, and a three...
Radiotherapy is given after breast cancer surgery to the region of the tumor bed in order to destroy microscopic cancer cells that may have escaped surgery. To shorten the time of treatment and...
Breast cancer is a leading cause of death for women, but early detection through mammograms saves countless lives every year. Until the 1960s, there was no specific test to detect breast cancer....
The National Cancer Institute estimated that over 192,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in 2009 and more than 40,000 will die from the disease. Radiation therapy continues to be a key...
Breast cancer forms in the cells of breast tissue. When breast cancer is discovered in its earliest stages, treatment has a very high success rate. Many treatment options are available. Usually,...
Breast cancer is the uncontrolled growth of malignant cells in the tissues of the breast. It may also involve nearby lymph nodes in the armpit and metastasize, or spread, to other areas of the...
According to the National Cancer Institute, breast cancer forms in the lobules and ducts within breast tissue. The National Cancer Institute expects 192,370 new female and 1,910 male breast cancer...
Women diagnosed with breast cancer that is caught early have a very good chance of survival, with proper treatment. According to the American Cancer Society and the National Cancer Institute,...
Currently, there is no cure for breast cancer. However, there are many therapies available that can treat the disease effectively and allow a person to live a long and happy life. What follows is...
Stage 0 breast cancer manifests in two basic forms and is often referred to as "carcinoma in situ." The first condition, known as DCIS, is characterized by the presence of abnormal cells isolated...
Much like any other type of cancer, breast caner treatment varies based on the stage of the disease. As the cancer becomes more and more advanced, less and less treatment options become viable to...
A diagnosis of breast cancer can often mean the beginning of treatments to help remove or prevent further spreading of the disease. The different treatments for breast cancer can often cause...
While chemotherapy has made many strides, it still comes with a host of side effects. It can cause weakness and sickness for days along with tell-tale hair loss. It is no wonder that many women...
Radiation treatment is used in breast-cancer patients to destroy any cancer cells that may have been missed during surgery. It may be used in conjunction with chemotherapy, after chemotherapy, may...
Breast cancer is more prevalent in older women. Fifty percent of breast cancer cases occur in women 65 years and older. Women past the age of 65 are at higher risk of dying from breast cancer. ...
Tamoxifen is used to treat estrogen-positive breast cancer, which accounts for more than two-thirds of all cases. Tamoxifen reduces the recurrence of breast cancer by up to 50 percent when taken...
Being diagnosed with breast cancer is a frightening and life-altering experience for most women. When a pregnant woman receives this bad news, however, the diagnosis may cause even more emotional...
Radiation therapy, or radiotherapy, is commonly used to treat a variety of cancers. When a patient has breast cancer, this form of treatment can target the infected area to remove or destroy...
Radiation therapy targets and destroys cancer cells in the breast using high-energy X-rays. Some patients don't experience any side effects at all, and most side effects are only in the area...
According to the non-profit organization Breastcancer.org, approximately one in eight women will develop breast cancer at some point in her life. In 2008 alone, 182,460 cases of invasive breast...
Breast cancer is one of the most common types of cancer. Although treatment may depend on the stage of the cancer, common treatments include surgery, chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Radiation...
Adjuvant therapy for breast cancer is any type of therapy that is given after the primary treatment for the breast cancer is given. This is done to reduce the chance the cancer will return and to...
Recurrent breast cancer is defined as breast cancer that reoccurs in the same spot as the original breast cancer. In other words, the cancer must come back in exactly the same spot, or very near,...
Invasive ductal carcinoma, or IDC, is a type of breast cancer that is fairly common; about 70 percent of diagnoses of breast cancer are IDC. IDC begins forming in the lining of the ducts that...
Although breast cancer can be treated, like other cancers, there is a chance of breast cancer recurring. Most recurrences of breast cancer happen in the first three to five years after the...
Inflammatory breast cancer is a cancer of the breast but a much more aggressive form of the disease. As the cancer develops, the abnormal cells quickly invade the neighboring tissue without ever...
In 2008, there were 2.5 million women in the United States who had survived breast cancer, a disease that involves the growth of malignant tumors within breast tissue. Surgery to remove the tumor...
Women and men who have breast cancer have an uncontrolled growth of cells in their breasts. This unhealthy growth is caused by mutations, or abnormal changes that take place in the genetic...
Treating breast cancer is a decision made by both patient and oncologist (a doctor or surgeon who specializes in cancer), and may involve several treatment procedures. The most common procedures...
According to the website www.breastcancer.org, breast cancer results from abnormal changes and uncontrolled growth in breast tissue. It is always caused by a genetic abnormality in the breast and...
To prevent breast cancer from becoming metastatic and spreading to other body parts, nonmetastatic breast cancer treatments focus predominantly on eliminating the cancer in the breast quickly....
Women with breast cancer are often treated with chemotherapy or radiation. Both treatments attempt to produce the same effect; either eliminate or reduce the size of the malignancy. Radiation and...
Breast cancer is the second deadliest form of cancer for women in the United States. Men can also contract breast cancer, yet it is not as common. According to the Mayo Clinic, it was predicted in...
While breast cancer itself does not cause malabsorption directly, the treatments used to fight breast cancer can cause a host of problems, including malabsorption, which means that your body is...
There are four main ways to treat breast cancer. Chemotherapy and hormone therapy are systemic treatments that kill cancer cells in your whole body. Surgery and radiation therapy are local...
As time has passed and the medical community has gained more experience successfully treating breast cancer, numerous approaches to combating the disease have emerged. They include the familiar...
Breast cancer is one of the more common cancers worldwide, though it is far less common in men. However, because men do have a small amount of non-functioning breast tissue, there is a risk that...
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2004 186,772 women were diagnosed with breast cancer, and 40,954 died from it. Breast cancer has become one of the top cancers...