Young Women Who Smoke Prior To Their First Pregnancy Have A Higher Risk Of Breast Cancer In ...
1st Dec 2005, 02:13 GMT
Researchers outline in the November issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings their study of postmenopausal women, which supports the hypothesis that women who smoke cigarettes before first full-term pregnancy have a 20 percent increased risk of breast cancer compared with women who began smoking after the birth of their first child or were never smokers.
Young Women Who Smoke Prior To Their First Pregnancy Have A Higher Risk Of Breast Cancer In ... related news:
- Young women who smoke higher risk of breask cancer — EurekAlert! - Cancer
- Young Female Smokers At Higher Breast Cancer Risk — Medical News Today RSS/XML Feed
- Young women smokers may get breast cancer — Health News
- Smoking at a younger age increases breast cancer risk — The Cancer Blog
- Treatment of breast cancer in pregnancy not increase the risk of congenital anomalies — Medical News Today RSS/XML Feed
- Testing for breast cancer is getting more comfortable — The Cancer Blog
- Treatment of breast cancer in pregnancy — EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health
- Passive smoking is breast cancer risk factor (Reuters) — Yahoo! News: Health News
- Passive smoking is breast cancer risk factor — Reuters: Health
- Breast Cancer Risk Associated With Wealth — ABC News: Health
Latest news from ScienceDaily Headlines:
- Move Over, Penicillin: Researchers Mold Clay Into Potential Therapy
- Researchers Turn Cord Blood Into Lung Cells
- Keeping E. Coli Out Of Meat
- MRI Analysis Could Prevent Brain Damage From Stroke, Study Finds
- Shift Toward Services Industries Won't End Global Warming
- More Species In The Tropics Because Species Have Been There Longer, Study Suggests
- Grace Under Pressure: Researchers Analyze Effects Of Stress On Decision-making Ability
- 'Alzheimer's Gene' Protects Children From Severe Diarrhea
- European Airborne Campaign Simulates Sentinel Imagery Over Land
- Newly Identified Biomarker Detects And Regulates Spread Of Brain Tumors