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Patients should try to come to consult us personally, for
those that cannot do that, please send or fax to the professional group your recent symptoms, examination, analysis, early diagnose and case history (including patient's address, telephone number, height, weight), after discussion and diagnosis by the professional group, the treatment plan will be informed to the patient and he/she should receive treatment by postage. One can consult the professional group anytime during the treatment.
Tel: +380937434009
+380636018551
Fax:+80971147553
Email:yizi_06@yahoo.com.cn |
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Miss Wang +380937434009 |
Miss Wang +380636018551 |
Email:yizi_06@yahoo.com.cn |
Address:Bei Xi Liu Lu Zhan Dian Zi Bo Shan Dong China |
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Gufang Chinese medicine complicated diseases research center is located at Shan Dong Province Zi Bo City, ZhangDian Bei Xi Liu Road; Zi Bo is situated between LuZhong mountain area and LuBei champagne, located at a unique location, its south joins with TaiShan, its north is near by Yellow River, its west is connected with Spring City JiNan, its east is near by beach cities-QingDao, YanTai and WeiHai; it is one of ShanDong Province's five main tourist spots and it is one of the eight tourism city.
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Dr. Wang Yong, character Shurun, of Han Nationality, is born to the Chinese medicine aristocratic family, he has inherited the essence of traditional Chinese medicine, he uses ancient secret remedies as the base and he complies, matches the results with the special characteristics of modern chronic diseases, high possibility contracted diseases, complicated diseases associated with drugs resistance, …….
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| Aspirin seen cutting risk of type of breast cancer |
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| 2008-5-1 21:17:01 Viewed: [ Font:Large Medium Small] [ Close] |
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A daily aspirin may give women modest protection against the most common type of breast cancer, U.S. government researchers said on Wednesday.
The finding reinforced earlier research indicating regular use of aspirin might reduce the risk of so-called estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer, which makes up about three quarters of breast cancer cases.
Researchers led by Gretchen Gierach of the National Cancer Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, found that women who took aspirin daily cut their risk of developing this type of breast cancer by 16 percent.
"If aspirin is truly risk-reducing, it would be a very exciting finding," Gierach said in a telephone interview.
Estrogen receptor or ER-positive breast cancer is fueled by estrogen and aspirin may interfere with this hormone's activity.
"Even though it's a small reduction in relative risk, since ER-positive breast cancers are the more common types, if this result is confirmed to be true it could have potentially a big public health impact," Gierach said.
The research involved about 127,000 women aged 51 to 72 from around the United States who were cancer-free when the study began. About 18 percent of the women were daily aspirin users. They were tracked for seven years and about 4,500 of them developed breast cancer.
The study did not find any relationship between aspirin and the less-common estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer. It also did not find any protective effect in women who took aspirin less than daily.
The study, published in BioMed Central's open-access journal Breast Cancer Research, is the latest to suggest aspirin offers benefits beyond relieving headaches and body aches and reducing fevers.
Aspirin is a common anti-inflammatory painkiller that can be used to relieve symptoms of arthritis and prevent second heart attacks and other ailments. Previous research has indicated it also may protect against colorectal cancer.
Gierach said a number of previous studies have looked at the question of aspirin and breast cancer, yielding inconsistent results. Some of the earlier work looked only at aspirin's effect on overall breast cancer without breaking it down by types of the disease, she said.
A study by Columbia University researchers in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2004 found that women who took aspirin regularly had a modestly lower risk for estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer.
"Our findings are consistent with their findings for aspirin," Gierach said of the Columbia study.
She noted that aspirin can cause serious side effects in some people including ulcers and bleeding.
"A woman would really need to talk to her doctor before starting any new regimen, and weigh the pros and cons of starting a new treatment," said Gierach, whose study is available at http://breast-cancer-research.com/.
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