Pain Killer Fights Breast Cancer By Targeting Key Enzyme
29th Mar 2006, 22:14 GMT
COLUMBUS , Ohio — A pain—killing medication appears to halt the production of an enzyme that is key to a common form of breast cancer, a new study using tissue cultures suggests. - - The drug is called... [WebWire - Wednesday, March 29, 2006]
Pain Killer Fights Breast Cancer By Targeting Key Enzyme related news:
- Pain Killer Fights Breast Cancer By Targeting Key Enzyme — Medical News Today RSS/XML Feed
- Pain killer halts production of enzyme that causes breast cancer — KeralaNext: Health
- Pain killer does number on breast cancer cells — Science Blog -
- Painkiller may prevent breast cancer — The Cancer Blog
- Canada unveils pink coin for breast cancer — The Cancer Blog
- Jefferson scientists reveal new mechanism that causes spread of colorectal cancer — EurekAlert! - Breaking News
- Two novel genes predict breast cancer survival — The Cancer Blog
- Study shows drug reduces spread of breast cancer to bones — The Cancer Blog
- HRT and smoking dramatically increases breast cancer risk — The Cancer Blog
- Pregnant Women Should Not Ignore Breast Cancer Symptoms — Medical News Today RSS/XML Feed
Latest news from WebWire - Recent Headlines:
- Vijay Chattha Head of High-Tech PR Boutique VSC Consulting Joins EntrepreneurshipWeek USA in Effort to Support and Educate Nation's Next Generation of Entrepreneurs and Innovators
- New Allergen Safe Treats Enjoyed by All
- Citrix Receives INTERNET TELEPHONY® Magazine's Excellence Award for 2006
- Juniper Networks Unified Access Control Solution Supports 802.1X and Trusted Network Connect Open Standards
- Leave Winter's Chill Behind with Delta's New Nonstop Service to Tobago
- American Honda Recognizes EMC Corporation as a Top Supplier with Premier Partner Award
- Canon U.S.A. Redefines Small Office And Workgroup Efficiency With The Introduction Of The imageRUNNER 1023 Series
- BroadRamp and Limelight Networks forge content delivery business development alliance
- Boeing to Provide Information Assurance among Secure Networks
- Australian Universities Invest In Thomson Scientific National Citation Report