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Total 73 results found since Jan 2013.

Sisters Claim Merck's Gardasil Vaccine Caused Ovary Problems
Six years ago, Madelyne and Olivia Meylor were vaccinated with Gardasil. Like millions of parents, their mother agreed to have the teenage sisters vaccinated to ward off the human papillomavirus that can lead to cervical cancer. But within a couple of years, both were diagnosed with premature ovarian failure and were told they will be unable to get pregnant. They now experience signs of menopause. And so, the Meylor family has filed a claim with the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program in what appears to be the first case before the federal program to allege that Gardasil is responsible for this type of injury. As ...
Source: Pharmalot - November 19, 2013 Category: Pharma Commentators Authors: esilverman Source Type: blogs

I still think there is something else...
I know I have chemo brain. I had chemo and my brain has gaps and I cant remember things. I know I have fibro fog. I have fibromyalgia and now I can't remember names or words for things.But now I know I also have 'cognitive decline from breast cancer hormone treatment' due to my Femara treatment.""Decline in cognitive function is common in patients receiving adjuvant therapy for early-stage breast cancer," concluded Dr. Rugo, director of the Breast Oncology Clinical Trials Program at the University of California, San Francisco. "Ongoing hormone therapy appears to be a risk factor for worse cognitive function."I'm doomed. I ...
Source: Caroline's Breast Cancer Blog - October 20, 2013 Category: Cancer Tags: femara fibro fog chemo brain Source Type: blogs

The Gold Standard for Breast Cancer Screening
Mammograms are still the gold standard for breast cancer screening.  Although I go to great lengths to get my friends to go for a yearly mammogram, I am always surprised at how many women try to avoid it or make excuses not to have one. To be clear, by screening I mean testing to reveal cancer when none is suspected. The goal is to detect breast cancer before it becomes invasive.  Finding a breast tumor while it is still in-situ, or in the duct results in a much better outcome and possibly avoids extensive surgery and treatment. Both my mother and my mother-in-law were fortunate to be diagnosed with breast cancer while ...
Source: Life with Breast Cancer - October 14, 2013 Category: Cancer Authors: Kathy-Ellen Kups, RN Tags: Breast Cancer Breast Cancer Screening Mammograms Thermography Source Type: blogs

READER POLL: Novo Nordisk, A US Subsidiary And Product Liability
Should a foreign drugmaker be held liable for alleged harm caused by one of its drugs when its US subsidiary was responsible for marketing and distribution?  That is the contentious issue that Novo Nordisk wants the US Supreme Court to decide after an Oregon court ruled the parent company, which is based in Denmark, can be listed as a defendant – along with its US unit - in a product-liability lawsuit. In its filing, Novo Nordisk attorneys argue that Oregon courts do not have jurisdiction over a foreign manufacturer simply because its products are sold in the state. By allowing the lawsuit to proceed against the Danish ...
Source: Pharmalot - September 11, 2013 Category: Pharma Commentators Authors: esilverman Source Type: blogs

Prostate Cancer: Lowering Your Risk
By Amy Campbell After I wrote last week's posting, I came across more information on how nutrition and diet may help lower the risk for prostate cancer, so I'll share that this week. But first things first. How is prostate cancer diagnosed? Prostate cancer may be diagnosed during a physical exam; specifically, a digital rectal exam, during which the doctor inserts a lubricated, gloved finger into the rectum to feel for lumps, bumps, hard areas, or anything else unusual on the prostate. If cancer is suspected, your doctor may be able to tell which side it's on and/or if it's spread. The other way that prostate cancer may ...
Source: Diabetes Self-Management - July 1, 2013 Category: Diabetes Authors: Amy Campbell Source Type: blogs

We can avoid arm swelling after breast cancer surgery – most of the time.
Conclusion: The extensive surgery isn’t needed in these women, which would result in a much lower risk of lymphedema. So as we are learning in many aspects of cancer treatment, less treatment may be just as good and less harmful.
Source: Dr.Kattlove's Cancer Blog - June 9, 2013 Category: Oncologists Source Type: blogs

Blind to women’s sexual health
A recent article published in partnership with The Investigative Fund and Newsweek questioned the existence of “female dysfunction,” as if to say, who cares about women’s sexual health? If you can’t “see” it, apparently it doesn’t exist. This is one-sided, inaccurate and disparaging of women. Why is it that when men are impotent it is taken seriously, but when women suffer from sexual dysfunction it is ridiculed and attributed to “Big Pharma’s” attempt to conjure a condition so they can make and sell a drug?  If Pharma is so bad, why do we depend upon them to research and manufacture drugs to prevent a...
Source: Disruptive Women in Health Care - May 16, 2013 Category: Health Medicine and Bioethics Commentators Authors: dw at disruptivewomen.net Tags: Aging Women's Health Sexual dysfunction Source Type: blogs

Does Genomic Health Have Another Winner with Oncotype DX Prostate Cancer Test?
Oncotype DX definitely produced a winner with its Breast Cancer Assay. Here are the results of the test according to the company web site: 33% [of tested patients] switched from chemotherapy + hormone therapy to hormone therapy alone based on a low Recurrence Score result 4% [of tested patients] switched from hormonal therapy only to chemotherapy + hormonal therapy based on a high Recurrence Score result The company is now introducing a new assay for assessing the risk of biopsied prostate cancer (see: New Test Improves Assessment of Prostate Cancer Risk, Study Says). Here's an excerpt from a ...
Source: Lab Soft News - May 9, 2013 Category: Pathologists Authors: Bruce Friedman Tags: Clinical Lab Industry News Clinical Lab Testing Healthcare Business Laboratory Industry Trends Medical Research Surgical Pathology Source Type: blogs

Enjoy your Coffee and Fight Breast Cancer
I started drinking coffee because of breast cancer. After treatment I knew my brain wasn’t functioning quite as acutely as before the diagnosis, so coffee gave me the added ability to focus. I later learned that coffee was helping to address the effects of chemo brain. Now there are other reasons for breast cancer survivors to drink coffee. A study out of Sweden this month finds that women who are on the drug Tamoxifen and drink at least two cups of coffee a day have a reduced risk of recurrence of the disease. This was a pretty extensive study of 600 women over a 5 year period. CBS reported this wethat researchers found...
Source: Life with Breast Cancer - May 2, 2013 Category: Cancer Authors: Kathy-Ellen Kups Tags: Breast Cancer Source Type: blogs

The Testosterone Trap
Should the Modern Man Be Taking Testosterone? Is It Low T? .com By now you've likely seen the commercials. Fit-looking middle-age men telling you how they put on weight, had less energy, and were no longer the sexual tigers they were in their twenties -- until, that is, they started rubbing testosterone gel on their shoulder, upper arm, or abdomen. Now they feel more like the men they used to be. The commercials don't mention a 2009 study in the New England Journal of Medicine wherein a group of men on testosterone replacement therapy had more than four times the number of cardiovascular problems -- so many that the s...
Source: PharmaGossip - May 2, 2013 Category: Pharma Commentators Authors: insider Source Type: blogs

HRT for Menopause?
This article I saw on Yahoo News is an example of why patients ought not to go scouring the Internet for all their medical information.  The title of the article "Doctors Clear Up Confusion Over Hormone Therapy" is rather misleading.  Hormone replacement therapy (i.e. supplement estrogen and progesterone pills) has long been known to be the best intervention for refractory menopausal symptoms.  Unfortunately, a Women's Health Initiative study from a decade ago demonstrated that subsets of post-menopausal of women who took hormonal replacement therapy (HRT) medication increased their risk ...
Source: Buckeye Surgeon - March 17, 2013 Category: Surgeons Authors: Jeffrey Parks MD Source Type: blogs

Accelerated Biological Aging in Women with Alzheimer’s Inhibited by Hormone Therapy
Alzheimer's Reading Room Healthy menopausal women carrying a well-known genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease showed measurable signs of accelerated biological aging, a new study has found. However, in carriers who started hormone therapy at menopause and remained on that therapy, this acceleration was absent, the researchers said.  Hormone therapy for non-carriers of the risk factor, a gene variant called ApoE4, had no protective effect on their biological aging. Subscribe to the Alzheimer's Reading Room Email: Accelerated biological aging evident in women with Alzheimer’s risk factor, but inhibit...
Source: Alzheimer's Reading Room, The - February 22, 2013 Category: Dementia Authors: Bob DeMarco Source Type: blogs