Last login: 1 hour agoKevin143
kevin143 is a 21 year old guy from Pennsylvania, USA.
Likes 138 pages, 1 video, 1 photo2 fans
Member since Jul 02, 2007

Favorites » His cancer pages

Scientists at Yale provide explanation for how cancer spreads | Think Gene
Liked it Apr 30, 12:04am 1 review cancer, yale, tumor, metastasis, white-blood-cell
http://www.thinkgene.com/scientists-at-yale-provide-explanation-for-how-cance...
From the page: "Metastasis, the spread of cancer throughout the body, can be explained by the fusion of a cancer cell with a white blood cell in the original tumor, according to Yale School of Medicine researchers, who say that this single event can set the stage for cancer's migration to other parts of the body."
Viruses may play a role in lung cancer development | Think Gene
No opinion Apr 25, 11:00pm 1 review cancer, virus, hpv
http://www.thinkgene.com/viruses-may-play-a-role-in-lung-cancer-development/
Story about how HPV plays a role in lung cancer.
SNPedia - SNPedia
Liked it Apr 12, 2:11am 1 review cancer
http://www.snpedia.com/index.php?title=SNPedia
Apple pectin, apple juice extracts shown to have anticarcinogenic effects on col…
Liked it Mar 27, 3:08pm 2 reviews cancer, colon-cancer
http://www.thinkgene.com/apple-pectin-apple-juice-extracts-shown-to-have-anti...
From the page: "The apples and apple juice you consume may have positive effects in one of the most unlikely places in the body" in the colon. New research has demonstrated that both apple pectin and polyphenol-rich apple juice components actually enhance biological mechanisms that produce anticarcinogenic compounds during the fermentation process."
Spit tests may soon replace many blood tests | Think Gene
No opinion Mar 26, 2:17pm 1 review cancer, blood, testing, saliva
http://www.thinkgene.com/spit-tests-may-soon-replace-many-blood-tests/
One day soon patients may spit in a cup, instead of bracing for a needle prick, when being tested for cancer, heart disease or diabetes. A major step in that direction is the cataloguing of the "complete" salivary proteome, a set of proteins in human ductal saliva, identified by a consortium of three research teams, according to an article published today in the Journal of Proteome Research.
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