Inflammatory Breast Cancer
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This page shows you the latest news and research items in this category.
CYP2C8*3 Increases Risk of Neuropathy in Breast Cancer Patients Treated With Paclitaxel
Women with breast cancer who carry a single allele of SNP CYP2C8*3 have approximately double the risk of developing grade 2 or higher peripheral neuropathy while being treated with paclitaxel.
Abstract
Background:... (Source: OncologySTAT Journal Scans)
Source: OncologySTAT Journal Scans - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: research
Computed Tomographic Colonography Versus Colonoscopy for Investigation of Patients With Symptoms Suggestive of Colorectal Cancer (SIGGAR): A Multicentre Randomised Trial
Researchers from the UK randomized 2:1 patients with symptoms suggestive of colon cancer to colonoscopy vs CT colonography (CTC). Both tests proved to be similarly sensitive; however, rates for further... (Source: OncologySTAT Journal Scans)
Source: OncologySTAT Journal Scans - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: research
Colorectal Cancer Subtype Associated With Obesity, Inactivity
A specific molecular subtype of colorectal cancer is more likely in people with greater obesity and physical inactivity, analyses of prospective data on 861 cancer patients found.For every 5-kg/m² increase... (Source: OncologySTAT Latest News)
Source: OncologySTAT Latest News - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: news
NCI Trials Overhaul Eyes Community-Based Biomarker Studies
Nearly 3 years after tasking themselves with overhauling the nation's publicly funded cancer clinical trials system, which had been criticized as sluggish and unwieldy, researchers working for and with... (Source: OncologySTAT Latest News)
Source: OncologySTAT Latest News - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: news
Infections in hospitalized children and young adults with acute leukemia in Morocco
ConclusionThe higher rate of infectious deaths in leukemia compared to that reported in high‐income countries, suggests that improvements in infection care and prevention, including consistent access to rapid hospitalization, diagnostics and antibiotics; and standardizing quality of patient care are necessary to improve as well as survival in patients with leukemia in Morocco. Pediatr Blood Cancer © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. (Source: Pediatric Blood and Cancer)
Source: Pediatric Blood and Cancer - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Jacqueline DePasse, Miguela A. Caniza, Asmaa Quessar, Mohammad Khattab, Laila Hessissen, Raul Ribeiro, Siham Cherkaoui, Said Benchekroun, Katherine K. Matthay Tags: Research Article Source Type: research
Bill O'Brien and members of Penn State's senior class to join elite company at the Maxwell Football Club National Awards Gala
On Friday, O'Brien and members of the Nittany Lions' senior class will be in Atlantic City to take part in the Maxwell Football Club National Awards Gala at the Harrah's Atlantic City Resort.03/01/2013 (Source: Kidney Cancer Association)
Source: Kidney Cancer Association - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: news
Low-Cost Prognostic Marker in Colon CancerLow-Cost Prognostic Marker in Colon Cancer
A high percentage of stroma cells in the primary tumor is linked to poor prognosis in CRC patients. Dr. David Kerr asks whether this is a way to identify patients at high risk for disease progression. Medscape Oncology (Source: Medscape Today Headlines)
Source: Medscape Today Headlines - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Hematology-Oncology Commentary Source Type: news
1 in 4 Breast Cancer Diagnoses May Spur PTSD
Women who are younger, black or Asian at highest risk for short-term symptoms of stress disorder (Source: WebMD Health)
Source: WebMD Health - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news
Fukushima: Cancer Risk Seen in Japanese Infants
(MedPage Today) -- Infants who were in the Japanese region most affected by radiation after the 2011 tsunami have a slightly elevated lifetime risk of some cancers, according to the World Health Organization. (Source: MedPage Today Public Health)
Source: MedPage Today Public Health - March 1, 2013 Category: American Health Source Type: news
Breast cancer rises in young women
CNN's Holly Firfer tell us about a new report that shows a disturbing trend for young women with breast cancer. (Source: CNN.com - Health)
Source: CNN.com - Health - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news
Bill O'Brien and members of Penn State's senior class to join elite company at the Maxwell Football Club National Awards Gala
Penn State's Eric Shrive will be recognized for his work off the field where he was selected with the 2013 Uplifting Athletes Rare Disease Champion Award. Shrive has raised nearly $70,000 for kidney cancer patients and research. The event will be streamed live on ESPN3.com.03/01/2013 (Source: Kidney Cancer Association)
Source: Kidney Cancer Association - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: news
Efficacy, Not Price, of New Breast Cancer Drug Is WelcomedEfficacy, Not Price, of New Breast Cancer Drug Is Welcomed
Trastuzumab emtansine, also known as T-DM1, is effective but expensive. Medscape Medical News (Source: Medscape Today Headlines)
Source: Medscape Today Headlines - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Hematology-Oncology News Source Type: news
FDA staff say calcitonin salmon cancer risk appears plausible
(Reuters) - Staff reviewers for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said that a potential increased risk of cancer with drugs containing calcitonin salmon appears plausible. (Source: Reuters: Health)
Source: Reuters: Health - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: healthNews Source Type: news
Grp170 Shows Potential As A "Cancer Vaccine"
Preclinical, laboratory studies suggest a novel immunotherapy could potentially work like a vaccine against metastatic cancers, according to scientists at Virginia Commonwealth University Massey Cancer Center. Results from a recent study show the therapy could treat metastatic cancers and be used in combination with current cancer therapies while helping to prevent the development of new metastatic tumors and train specialized immune system cells to guard against cancer relapse... (Source: Health News from Medical News Today)
Source: Health News from Medical News Today - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Cancer / Oncology Source Type: news
New Study Confirms Potential Of Low-Dose CT To Prevent Lung Cancer Deaths In High-Risk Populations
MITA Urges Coverage of LDCT to Further Reduce Lung Cancer Deaths The Medical Imaging & Technology Alliance (MITA) have commended a new study published in Cancer, the journal of the American Cancer Society, that concludes that low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) imaging of high-risk individuals has the potential to prevent 12,000 lung cancer deaths each year in the United States. "This new study adds to mounting evidence that the use of LDCT in high-risk individuals has the potential to prevent thousands of lung cancer deaths each year," said Gail Rodriguez, Executive Director of MITA... (Source: Health News from Medical News Today)
Source: Health News from Medical News Today - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Lung Cancer Source Type: news
Leukemia Survival Improved By Infusion Of Stem Cells And Specially Generated T-Cells From Same Donor
In a significant advance for harnessing the immune system to treat leukemias, researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center for the first time have successfully infused large numbers of donor T-cells specific for a key anti-leukemic antigen to prolong survival in high-risk and relapsed leukemia patients after stem cell transplantation. Both the stem cells for transplant and the T-cells came from the same matched donors... (Source: Health News from Medical News Today)
Source: Health News from Medical News Today - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Lymphoma / Leukemia / Myeloma Source Type: news
Hyaluronan Production And Cancer Growth Affected By Cell Sugar Concentrations
According to a recent University of Eastern Finland (UEF) study, elevated cell sugar concentrations increase the production of hyaluronan which, in turn, promotes cancer growth. Regulating the production of hyaluronan may be a way to prevent the spreading of cancer. Hyaluronan is a long, linear carbohydrate polymer present in the human body. It forms a coating on the surface of many cells and plays a key role in fetal development and in the maintenance of normal tissue balance... (Source: Health News from Medical News Today)
Source: Health News from Medical News Today - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Cancer / Oncology Source Type: news
Study Offers Hope In Fight Against Common Skin Cancer
Hailed as a major step forward in the effort to develop targeted cancer therapies, a recently approved drug for the most common type of skin cancer has been a mixed blessing for patients. Although the initial response is usually dramatic, the tumors often recur as the cancer becomes resistant to treatment. Now researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have identified a second way to block the activity of the signaling cascade, called the Hedgehog pathway, that is abnormally active in these cancers... (Source: Health News from Medical News Today)
Source: Health News from Medical News Today - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Melanoma / Skin Cancer Source Type: news
Potential Cancer Drugs From Naturally Occurring Compounds
Inspired by a chemical that fungi secrete to defend their territory, MIT chemists have synthesized and tested several dozen compounds that may hold promise as potential cancer drugs. A few years ago, MIT researchers led by associate professor of chemistry Mohammad Movassaghi became the first to chemically synthesize 11,11'-dideoxyverticillin, a highly complex fungal compound that has shown anti-cancer activity in previous studies... (Source: Health News from Medical News Today)
Source: Health News from Medical News Today - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Cervical Cancer / HPV Vaccine Source Type: news
Probiotics Largely Eliminated Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci From The Intestinal Tracts Of Mice
Too much antibiotic can decimate the normal intestinal microbiota, which may never recover its former diversity. That, in turn, renders the GI tract vulnerable to being colonized by pathogens. Now researchers from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, and Centro Superior de Investigación en Salud Pública, Valencia, Spain, show that reintroducing normal microbial diversity largely eliminated vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) from the intestinal tracts of mice. The investigators showed further that the findings may apply to humans... (Source: Health News from Medical News Today)
Source: Health News from Medical News Today - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Infectious Diseases / Bacteria / Viruses Source Type: news
Fukushima Residents Have Slightly Higher Cancer Risk
There is a lightly higher risk of developing some types of cancers for people living near the site of the Fukushima nuclear power disaster, says a group of international experts who carried out an analysis. They added that the predicted risks for developing cancer for the general population living inside and outside Japan are relatively low. On March 11, 2011, a magnitude 9 earthquake was followed by a tsunami that struck the Fukushima I Power Plant, resulting in a series of equipment failures, nuclear meltdowns, and the release of radioactive materials... (Source: Health News from Medical News Today)
Source: Health News from Medical News Today - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Radiology / Nuclear Medicine Source Type: news
Small-molecular modulators of cancer-related epigenetic mechanisms
, 2013, Accepted ManuscriptDOI: 10.1039/C3MB25410K, Review ArticleYukihiro Itoh, Takayoshi Suzuki, N MiyataDNA methylation and posttranslational histone modifications regulate expression of various genes independently of changes in the DNA sequence. Such epigenetic mechanisms play important roles in controlling cellular functions, including the...The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry (Source: RSC - Mol. BioSyst. latest articles)
Source: RSC - Mol. BioSyst. latest articles - March 1, 2013 Category: Molecular Biology Authors: Yukihiro Itoh Source Type: research
British women 'dying quicker of breast cancer than elsewhere'
Women in Britain dying quicker of breast cancer than in comparable countries, suggesting care on the NHS is not as good as it is elsewhere. (Source: Telegraph Health)
Source: Telegraph Health - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: breast cancer Source Type: news
Medical mystery: Advanced breast cancer increasing steadily among young women
Why on earth are younger women developing more malignant breast tumors -- especially the kind that spread to other parts of the body? That's the worrisome question a new study raises.
Rebecca H. Johnson, M.D., of Seattle Children's Hospital and University of Washington... (Source: NaturalNews.com)
Source: NaturalNews.com - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health Advice Source Type: news
Curcumin vs. cancer: The scientific evidence continues to flow in
There is definitely no shortage of scientific evidence these days to show that curcumin, the believed-to-be primary active ingredient in the spice turmeric, holds incredible therapeutic value, and just might be the most advisable medicinal spice of our day. And a prominent... (Source: NaturalNews.com)
Source: NaturalNews.com - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health Advice Source Type: news
Zinc helps fight infection and inflammation by boosting the body's immune response
Infection from bacterial and viral agents can pose a significant threat to human health, as it fuels the flames of systemic inflammation known to contribute to cancer, heart disease, dementia, diabetes and stroke. Many lifestyle factors, including diet, stress and exposure... (Source: NaturalNews.com)
Source: NaturalNews.com - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health Advice Source Type: news
Jane C. Wright, Pioneering Oncologist, Dies at 93
As a black woman, Dr. Wright was an unusual presence in medical institutions, but she said she never felt she was a victim of racial prejudice. (Source: NYT Health)
Source: NYT Health - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: By BRUCE WEBER Tags: Race and Ethnicity Deaths (Obituaries) Cancer American Society of Clinical Oncologists Wright, Jane C. Source Type: news
Tanzania: Dar Cervical Cancer Deaths Alarming, Says Minister
[Daily News]OVER 50 per cent of women diagnosed with cervical cancer in the country succumb to the disease making it one of the highest death rates, attributed to the sickness, in East Africa. The percentage translates the fact that 3400 victims pass away out of 6200 who are diagnosed mainly due to delays in seeking medical attention for timely services. (Source: AllAfrica News: Health and Medicine)
Source: AllAfrica News: Health and Medicine - March 1, 2013 Category: African Health Source Type: news
[News of the Week] Around the World
In science news around the world this week, China's government has acknowledged the existence of places where environmental hazards have contributed to elevated cancer rates, an Institute of Medicine report gave the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief high marks, and more. (Source: Science: Current Issue)
Source: Science: Current Issue - March 1, 2013 Category: Science Authors: Stewart Wills (mailto:swills at aaas.org) Source Type: research
Cancer doesn't change young girls' desire to have children, Moffitt Cancer Center study shows
(H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute) Researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center and colleagues have found that healthy adolescent females have predetermined expectations for becoming parents in the future, but have concerns about fertility and childbearing should they develop a life-threatening illness, such as cancer. (Source: EurekAlert! - Social and Behavioral Science)
Source: EurekAlert! - Social and Behavioral Science - March 1, 2013 Category: Global & Universal Source Type: news
Cancer risk from Fukushima disaster small, report says
People living near the site of Japan's 2011 nuclear disaster face only a slightly greater risk of cancer in their lifetimes as a result, a World Health Organization report concludes.The 9.0-magnitude Tohoku-Oki earthquake and resulting tsunami that triggered a meltdown at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station has resulted in only a small increase in lifetime cancer risks for people living nearby, and an even smaller risk for populations outside of Japan, according to a new report from the World Health Organization. (Source: L.A. Times - Health)
Source: L.A. Times - Health - March 1, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news
Without therapeutic drug monitoring, there is no personalized cancer care.
PMID: 23419487 [PubMed - in process] (Source: Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics)
Source: Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics - March 1, 2013 Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Authors: Beumer JH Tags: Clin Pharmacol Ther Source Type: research
Long-term prognostic value of residual pulmonary vascular obstruction at discharge in patients with intermediate- to high-risk pulmonary embolism
Conclusions
Residual pulmonary vascular obstruction evaluated before hospital discharge in patients with intermediate- to high-risk PE is a powerful prognostic factor for a 6-month outcome. RPVO ≥35% is associated with an increased risk of adverse events at 6 months. (Source: European Heart Journal)
Source: European Heart Journal - March 1, 2013 Category: Cardiology Authors: Meneveau, N., Ider, O., Seronde, M.-F., Chopard, R., Davani, S., Bernard, Y., Schiele, F. Tags: BASIC SCIENCE Source Type: research
'Where you're treated matters' in terms of cancer survival
(Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center) A study of older patients with advanced head and neck cancers has found that where they were treated significantly influenced their survival. (Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health)
Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health - March 1, 2013 Category: Global & Universal Source Type: news
Mechanisms regulating inflammation associated with type 2 diabetes, cancer identified
(Boston University Medical Center) A study led by researchers at Boston University School of Medicine has identified epigenetic mechanisms that connect a variety of diseases associated with inflammation. (Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health)
Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health - March 1, 2013 Category: Global & Universal Source Type: news
Study confirms safety of colonoscopy
(Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres) Colon Cancer Awareness Month is about encouraging more people to get tested for colorectal cancer. Colonoscopy is the most reliable screening test. A current study from the German Cancer Research Center confirms that, contrary to what some critics say, it is also safe. If more people made use of screening tests, about half of all new colorectal cancer cases and deaths from this cancer could be avoided in Germany every year. (Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health)
Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health - March 1, 2013 Category: Global & Universal Source Type: news
Using a state cancer registry to recruit young breast cancer survivors and high-risk relatives: protocol of a randomized trial testing the efficacy of a targeted versus a tailored intervention to increase breast cancer screening
DiscussionThe study will enhance efforts of the state of Michigan surrounding cancer prevention, control, and public health genomics.Trial registration: NCT01612338 (Source: BMC Cancer)
Source: BMC Cancer - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Maria KatapodiLaurel NorthouseAnn SchafenackerDebra DuquetteSonia DuffyDavid RonisBeth AndersonNancy JanzJennifer McLoskyKara MillironSofia MerajverLinh DuongGlenn Copeland Source Type: research
Bcl-2 associated athanogene 5 (Bag5) is overexpressed in prostate cancer and inhibits ER-stress induced apoptosis
Conclusions:
We have therefore shown that Bag5 is overexpressed in prostate cancer and plays a role in ER-stress induced apoptosis. Furthermore we have identified GRP78/BiP as a novel interaction partner of Bag5. (Source: BMC Cancer)
Source: BMC Cancer - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Anja BruchmannCorinna RollerTamara WaltherGeorg SchäferSara LehmusvaaraTapio VisakorpiHelmut KlockerAndrew CatoDanilo Maddalo Source Type: research
BMP‐9 induces EMT in hepatocellular carcinoma cells. Immunofl uorescent staining against BMP‐9 (green) and E‐cadherin (red) of a hepatocellular carcinoma section from TNF /cmyc bitransgenic mouse
(Source: Cancer Science)
Source: Cancer Science - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Qi Li, Xing Gu, Honglei Weng, Shahrouz Ghafoory, Yan Liu, Teng Feng, Johanna Dzieran, Li Li, Iryna IIkavets, Marianna Kruithof‐ Julio, Stefan Munker, Alexander Marx, Albrecht Piiper, Eduardo Augusto Alonso, Norbert Gretz, Chunfang Gao, Stefan Wölfl, St Tags: Cover Image Source Type: research
Preliminary Page
(Source: Cancer Science)
Source: Cancer Science - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Tags: Preliminary Page Source Type: research
Thanking our peer reviewers
Contributing reviewersAs 2013 commences I would like to take a moment to reflect and recognize the peer reviewers that made the previous year possible. Listed below are those people who reviewed for Molecular Cancer last year. All are generous individuals who donated their time to assessing and improving our authors’ submissions. Your combined efforts have been invaluable to the editorial staff in maintaining the continued success of the journal in the Open Access forum.The editors of Molecular Cancer would like to thank all the reviewers who contributed to the journal in Volume 11 (2012) by participating in the review p...
Source: Molecular Cancer - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Alan Storey Source Type: research
Matrix protein of vesicular stomatitis virus: a potent inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor and malignant ascites formation
g
& Q Li (Source: Cancer Gene Therapy)
Source: Cancer Gene Therapy - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Y ZhouF WenP ZhangR TangQ Li Tags: vesicular stomatitis virus matrix protein gene therapy vascular endothelial growth factor ascites apoptosis Source Type: research
Polymeric delivery of siRNA for dual silencing of Mcl-1 and P-glycoprotein and apoptosis induction in drug-resistant breast cancer cells
& H Uludağ (Source: Cancer Gene Therapy)
Source: Cancer Gene Therapy - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: H M AliabadiP MahdipoorH Uludağ Tags: lipophilic polymers Mcl-1 multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein siRNA delivery Source Type: research
1 in 4 Breast Cancer Diagnoses May Spur PTSD
Women who are younger, black or Asian at highest risk for short-term symptoms of stress disorder (Source: The Doctors Lounge - Oncology)
Source: The Doctors Lounge - Oncology - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: webmaster at doctorslounge.com Tags: Family Medicine, Oncology, Psychiatry, Research, News, Source Type: news
Significance of CD133 expression in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
Conclusions:
This study indicated that CD133 immunoreactivity is a good predictor of prognosis in ESCC patients. In addition, CD133 may play a role in the regulation of tumor cell cycle through p27 and p16 in ESCC. At present, it thus remains controversial whether CD133 expression is a valid prognostic marker for ESCC. To elucidate this relationship, further investigations are required. (Source: World Journal of Surgical Oncology)
Source: World Journal of Surgical Oncology - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Hiroshi OkamotoFumiyoshi FujishimaYasuhiro NakamuraMasashi ZuguchiYohei OzawaYayoi TakahashiGo MiyataTakashi KameiToru NakanoYusuke TaniyamaJin TeshimaMika WatanabeAkira SatoNoriaki OhuchiHironobu Sasano Source Type: research
Hospital volume is associated with survival but not multimodality therapy in Medicare patients with advanced head and neck cancer
CONCLUSIONS:Medicare patients with advanced HNSCC treated at high‐volume hospitals were not more likely to receive NCCN guideline therapy, but had nearly statistically significant better survival, when compared with patients treated at low‐volume hospitals. These results suggest that features of high‐volume hospitals other than delivery of NCCN guideline therapy influence survival. Cancer 2013;. © 2013 American Cancer Society. (Source: Cancer)
Source: Cancer - March 1, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Arun Sharma, Stephen M. Schwartz, Eduardo Méndez Tags: Original Article Source Type: research
Public to join cancer cure hunt
Giants of the technology world and cancer researchers are teaming up to come up with ways to let the general public hunt for cures for cancer. (Source: BBC News | Health | UK Edition)
Source: BBC News | Health | UK Edition - February 28, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news
Breast cancer survival 'lower in UK'
Women with late-stage breast cancer have lower survival chances in the UK than in other high-income countries, research in the British Journal of Cancer says. (Source: BBC News | Health | UK Edition)
Source: BBC News | Health | UK Edition - February 28, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news
Glycemia Control Using A1C Level in Terminal Cancer Patients with Preexisting Type 2 Diabetes
Journal of Palliative Medicine , Vol. 0, No. 0. (Source: Journal of Palliative Medicine)
Source: Journal of Palliative Medicine - February 28, 2013 Category: Palliative Care Tags: article Source Type: research
Breast Cancer Recurrence After Delayed Breast ReconstructionBreast Cancer Recurrence After Delayed Breast Reconstruction
Is there a correlation between delayed free flap breast reconstruction using internal mammary vessels as recipients and breast cancer recurrence? ePlasty, Open Access Journal of Plastic Surgery (Source: Medscape Today Headlines)
Source: Medscape Today Headlines - February 28, 2013 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Plastic Surgery & Aesthetic Medicine Journal Article Source Type: news

