YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Current Literature Overview on Breast Cancer
Essays 31 - 60
on Armstrongs body but the real heroics are attributable to the man and to the body itself! Armstrong was diagnosed with te...
In five pages this paper examines testicular cancer in an overview of symptoms, how it is diagnoses, treatment options, and curren...
In six pages this report considers a campaign of public awareness and the importance on early intervention in the detection of bre...
In twenty pages this report discusses the link between breast cancer and postmenopausal estrogen replacement therapy with pros and...
In five pages the causes of lung, breast, and colon cancer are examined along with their effects. Three sources are cited in the ...
In five pages breast cancer treatment is examined through its representation in three journal articles on the topic. Three source...
In a paper consisting of six pages the various psychological issues connected with breast cancer are examined as a way of coping b...
This paper discusses the importance of self image in terms of society and the individual in this examination of postsurgery patien...
In a paper consisting of eleven pages breast cancer is considered in terms of its medical significance as the second leading cause...
least three months of debilitating treatments, which can cause nausea, vomiting, lack of energy, and a general feeling of malaise....
The writer discusses the BRCA1 gene and its putative links to ovarian and breast cancer. The paper is seven pages long and there a...
In an analysis of the study, throughout 1994, doctors had diagnosed breast cancer in 144 of the women getting regular screenings a...
In six pages this paper discusses how tumors can increase in women with breast cancer due to the use of the drug Prozac. Eight so...
In five pages environmental factors such as carcinogens exposure are discussed as they relate to the high breast cancer mortality ...
In a paper consisting of ten pages the arguments surrounding adjuvant therapies and lumpectomies over radical or partial mastectom...
In a paper consisting of five pages the breast cancer issue is considered through a comparative analysis of journal and magazine a...
In a paper consisting of twelve pages the field of nursing is discussed in terms of breast cancer, coping strategies, and how nurs...
Hecht, 2008). Breast cancer in both men and women is a genetic disorder but it is not necessarily hereditary (U.S. National Librar...
2002). Finally, the paper notes that there should be an adequate screening test that is "capable of detecting the susceptibility, ...
"many emotional, medical, and practical needs. These needs change over time, depending on the trajectory of...
or seven years and her body had an auto-mastectomy" (2003, 28). The fact that some women receive better care does not account for...
also states that the intervention did not work ands came to the conclusion there was not treatment (American Cancer Society, 2005)...
& Wellness Week, 2005). This is important because estrogen is associated with the development of an estimated three-fourths of po...
to raloxifene, which, as a "promising agent" (pp. 7-15), falls far behind tamoxifen in any use other than clinical trials. When d...
been the principal focus in current research (1997). Studies focusing on school children generally include a food preference compo...
Another breast cancer patient is diagnosed every 2 minutes and one woman dies from this disease every 13 minutes (The Orator, 2001...
National Womens Health Information Center, 1998). Findings from a recent National Cancer Institute study noted how African Americ...
of cancer and that women with high concentrations of estradiol in their blood stream are at the greatest risk of developing breast...
of cell cycle progression change when cells become cancerous. One of these aspects is the proto-oncoprotein c-Src (Taylor and Sha...
in pink light, whihc is the color of breast cancer awareness. For example, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney, Australia had...