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 | Stomach cancer news
Bacteria Increase Risk Of Stomach Cancer
The bacteria Helicobacter pylori substantially increase the risk of cancer in the lower stomach, but it may decrease the risk of cancer near the junction between the esophagus and the stomach, as per a research studyin the October 19 Journal of the National Cancer Institute. This finding may help explain the changing rates and distributions of these cancers in Western countries over the past century........
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| Sun, 25 Feb 2007 03:05:09 GMT
| Suggest your News Item To Medicineworld
As you are aware we are the leading publishers of health news on the web. We publish news items in various forms including numerous blogs and news items. We invite you to participate in our new collection. We are looking for quality news items that would be interesting to our readers. Now you may suggest the news item from your site to be included at Medicineworld.org. Inclusion of news item at our site get instantaneous attention since the item is illustrated from various blog posts. Addition of pictures to the item adds additional attraction to your news item. Inclusion in the Medicineworld.org site brings quality links and visitors to your site........
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| Sun, 25 Feb 2007 03:05:09 GMT
| Merry Christmas To All Our Readers
Medicineworld wishes all our readers merry Christmas. Oh, jingle bells, jingle bells Jingle all the way......
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| Sun, 25 Feb 2007 03:05:09 GMT
| Broccoli For Stomach Cancer
Researchers are focusing on the anti-cancer properties of a chemical derived from broccoli sprouts called sulforaphane.They think that the chemical can help cells defend against oxidants, the highly reactive and toxic molecules that damage DNA and kill cells, leading potentially to cancer.......
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| Sun, 25 Feb 2007 03:05:09 GMT
| Stat3 Protein and stomach cancer
It has been known from some time that the protein, called STAT3, is involved in the genesis of cancer. STAT3 proteins are regulatory molecules that signal cell functions for activating various genes. This story started several years ago with the observation that a large group of seemingly unconnected genes were behaving differently in patients with stomach cancer. Now a multi-national research team led by the Melbourne Branch of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research (LICR) has joined the proverbial dots and identified a potential new target for stomach cancer therapy, according to a paper published in the prestigious Nature Medicine journal.......
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