Researchers Identify Cells That Make Relapse Inevitable After Treatment For Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia
13th Nov 2006, 08:27 GMT
Prague, Czech Republic: In "Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" Robert Louis Stevenson wrote about the good and evil sides of the same person; now scientists in Australia have discovered that in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) there are Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde cells - "good" and "evil" clones of the same type of ALL cell. [click link for full article]
Researchers Identify Cells That Make Relapse Inevitable After Treatment For Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia related news:
- Cells Identified That Make Relapse Inevitable In Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia — Health News from Medical News Today
- Value Of 'Helper' Compound In Treating Some Leukemias — Health News from Medical News Today
- Researchers Turn Cord Blood Into Lung Cells — ScienceDaily Headlines
- Researchers spur growth of adult brain stem cells — Reuters: Top News
- Researchers spur growth of adult brain stem cells (Reuters) — Yahoo! Health: Health News
- Lab-on-a-chip could speed up treatment of drug-resistant pneumonia — EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health
- Celebrex for treatment of precancerous cervical changes — The Cancer Blog
- Key to acute lung injury lies in Ang2 protein — EurekAlert! - Breaking News
- Incidence Of Acute Rejection In High-Risk Kidney Transplant Patients Reduced By Antibody — Health News from Medical News Today
- Stem cells give hope for diabetes cure — NewKerala Health News
Latest news from Health News from Medical News Today:
- Biotech Industry Welcomes WHO Initiative On Naming Of Biologicals Including Biosimilar Medicines
- Common Cause Of Heart Disease, Diabetes May Be Treatable With Malaria Drug
- Two Nerve Cells In Direct Contact
- Value Of 'Helper' Compound In Treating Some Leukemias
- Internists Take Home Several National Awards At AAMC Annual Meeting
- Most Canadian Med School Grads Lack Basic Surgical Skills
- ACP's Electronic Medical Resource Ranked No. 1 Evidence-based Tool By MLA's South Central Chapter
- University Of Illinois Scientist Helping Processors Keep E. Coli Out Of Meat
- American Thoracic Society Publishes New Statement On Hepatotoxicity Of Antituberculosis Therapy
- Neural Networking Nanotubes