A Diet Heavy in Red Meat May Hike Breast Cancer Risk
14th Nov 2006, 18:33 GMT
Eating red meat may raise a woman's risk of a common type of breast cancer, and vitamin supplements will do little if anything to protect her heart, two new studies suggest. Women who ate more than 1 1/2 servings of red meat per day were almost twice as likely to develop hormone-related breast cancer as those who ate fewer than three portions per week, one study found. The other -- one of the longest and largest tests of whether supplements of various vitamins can prevent heart problems and strokes in high-risk women -- found that the popular pills do no good. Free WiFi Hotspot Locator from TechNewsWorld Wondering where to find the nearest publicly available WiFi Internet access? Our global directory of 87,000 locations in 26 countries is a terrific tool for mobile computer users.
A Diet Heavy in Red Meat May Hike Breast Cancer Risk related news:
- Report: Red meat may increase breast cancer risk — WISTV - Health
- Daily Diet of Red Meat May Increase Breast Cancer Risk — Ohmynews International
- Red Meat Linked to Hormone Receptor-Positive Breast Cancer — MedPage Today Primary Care
- Daily diet of red meat may raise breast cancer risk — Seattle Post-Intelligencer: Lifestyle
- Red meat intake linked to breast cancer risk — NewKerala Health News
- Red Meat May Boost Breast Cancer Risk — iVillage Health & Well-Being News
- Red Meat May Up Breast Cancer Risk — WebMD Health Headlines
- Study: Red meat may raise breast cancer risk — HeraldTimesOnline.com
- Red meat raises breast cancer risk — MSNBC.com: Health
- Study links red meat to breast-cancer risk — The Seattle Times: Horse racing
Latest news from TechNewsWorld:
- Novell's Deal With the Devil, Mac Malware, High-Def Gaming
- Is Legal Trouble Brewing for Microsoft and Novell?
- IBM's Blue Gene/L Tops List of Fastest Computers
- Sony's PS3 Nifty, But Price Is No Fun
- Samsung Expects Strong Q4 Sales
- Deutsche Telekom Names T-Mobile Head New CEO
- Inventors Create 'Stairway to Heaven' In a Shirt
- Project Seeks to Speed Heart Attack Care
- Nintendo Unleashes $200 Million Wii Ad Campaign
- Sun Opens Java to Developers