The National Cancer Institute estimates that, in 2009, there were 192,370 new diagnoses of breast cancer in the United States. Surgery is a mainstay of breast cancer treatment and there are several types of surgery that are used. The kind of...
The National Cancer Institute estimates that in 2009, more than 190,000 women and 1,900 men will be diagnosed with breast cancer in the United States. Breast cancer forms in the tissues of the breasts, generally the ducts, which are tubes that...
Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) is a type of cancer that causes the cells of the lymphatic system to abnormally reproduce and spur the growth of tumors. These tumors may be present in one region of the body, or they may spread to other lymph nodes or...
The breasts are made up of glandular tissue organized into lobules and ducts, surrounded by fat, lymph nodes, ligaments, nerves and blood vessels. Each breast is surrounded by a large number of lymph nodes, including a number of lymph nodes in the...
Breast cancer forms in the breast tissues and commonly starts in the ducts or lobules of the breast, which are involved in the production and transport of milk. Once there is a definitive diagnosis of breast cancer, the cancer is then staged, from...
The breasts contain a number of specialized cell types that work together to allow lactation. The glandular tissue of the breast is made up of lobules and ducts, which produce milk and carry that milk to the nipple. Surrounding the glandular...
Breast cancer are the two words no female/male ever wants to hear. The fear and anxiety associated with breast cancer is very profound. According to the National Cancer Institute, new cases in the U.S. in 2009 were 192,370 (female) and 1,910...
Inflammatory breast cancer, or IBC, is a type of breast cancer that is very different than what is typically thought of with the disease. There may not be a lump with IBC. Instead, there may be a warmness to the breast when you touch it, breast...
After breast cancer is diagnosed, staging of the cancer then takes place. Staging is done with surgery and various tests such as PET scans or an MRI to find out if and where the cancer has spread. The stages are a standardized way of describing...
Noticing a new bump on your body can be alarming, but often there is no reason for concern. There are many causes for underarm bumps and a doctor can tell you definitively what is causing yours. Before you consult your doctor, it is a good idea to...
Thai massage is also known as Thai yoga massage. This is actually a far more accurate name as, rather than a massage in the sense normally used in the West, it is more like assisted yoga. Thai massage works on the energy of the person as well as...
Itchy skin on the breasts can be irritating and painful. There are many causes, some of them serious, therefore it is important to check with a doctor if you are unable to find relief on your own or symptoms are prolonged. There are many treatment...
Although breast cancer occurs more commonly in women, men do get it. The lifetime risk of developing breast cancer in men is 1 in 1,000, according to the American Cancer Society. Survival rates are similar for women and men and depend on the...
Researchers have known for some time that having multiple family members with breast cancer increases a woman's chance of developing the disease. Now, researchers have identified the exact genes carrying the mutations that make a woman more...
Most breast cancers start in the milk ducts, which are the glands that produce milk. They are like little highways that connect to the lobules and the nipple. Some breast cancers start in the lobules and the rest start in the stroma or the fatty...
According to the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, the condition in which a person's blood platelet count is below normal is called thrombocytopenia. Platelets are blood cells produced in the bone marrow, which aggregate together to form a...
After a diagnosis of breast cancer is made, the next step is staging the disease. Staging is a standardized way of describing the extent and spread of the cancer, and helps to guide treatment and prognosis. The tumor size, lymph node involvement,...
There are several types of mastectomy, the surgical removal of the breast. Mastectomy is the most common treatment for breast cancer. The extent of the surgery depends on the size of the tumor, the stage of cancer, the involvement of the lymph...
Until the 1970s, most women diagnosed with breast cancer had a radical mastectomy. This surgery removes not only the breast, but also the chest wall muscles under the breast and all of the lymph nodes under the arm. Researchers now know that a...
Once breast cancer is diagnosed, it is staged. Staging is a standardized system of classifying the spread and extent of the cancer. According to the American Cancer Society, the stage of the cancer is the most important factor in the choice of...
The American Cancer Society's (ACS) Treatment Guidelines for breast cancer patients say radiation is used to destroy cancer cells left behind in the breast, chest wall or lymph nodes after surgery. It is considered a local treatment, targeted at...
Radiation therapy uses high-energy rays to kill cancer cells. Breast cancer can be treated with radiation therapy, and is typically combined with surgery, and sometimes chemotherapy or hormone therapy. For breast cancer treatment, radiation can be...
Each breast contains a number of cells that make up the glandular tissue of the breast, surrounded by fat cells, blood vessels, nerves and connective tissue. Breast cancer develops when cells within the glandular tissue of the breast, leading to...
Patients who have had breast-conserving surgery such as a lumpectomy to remove a tumor may receive radiation therapy after the surgery to destroy any cancer cells that remain. External beam radiation is the most frequently used radiation treatment...
Cancer begins in tissue cells and can arise from any organ in the form of a tumor. Malignant tumors are those that spread, or metastasize, from the original location of cancer to other parts of the body. The National Cancer Foundation indicates...
The Mayo Clinic says breast cancer is the most common female cancer in the United States. Breast cancers refers to an abnormal clump of fast-growing cells. These cells form breast tumors and can spread to other organs in your body. A breast lump,...
Once a patient is diagnosed with breast cancer, she will typically discuss a treatment plan with her physician. An individual's treatment plan for breast cancer depends on multiple factors. The physician will likely consider tumor size, the type...
Just so you know you are not stuck in the vast wilderness called cancer, experts have so organized the steps as to improve breast cancer management. It is expected to improve outcomes of the disease by guiding the way you treat the disease in a...
Breast cancer is an overgrowth of cells in the breast. Overgrowth of cells grows uncontrollably until a tumor is created within the breast. If the cells are malignant, which means they are cancerous then they will attach themselves to surrounding...
Mononucleosis, or mono, has symptoms of sore throat, high fever, swollen glands, and fatigue and is caused by the Epstein-Barr virus. Learn more about the causes, symptoms and treatments for mono in this health video.
Epstein Barr is a virus in the herpes family that can remain asymptomatic but may cause infectious mononucleosis (mono). Learn more about Epstein Barr including treatments and symptoms in this medical video.