Guest guest Posted August 4, 2009 Report Share Posted August 4, 2009 Wow Lottie, that sounds great. Maybe they can do this and we won't have to be stuck so many times with needles. Wouldn't that be great. Blessings, > > Lottie, > > Sounds so interesting, and yet safer then CT Scans and MRI's. It's good to know that in our near future > of cancer therapy, the technology which many Scientist all over the world are working to find better methods of detecting other cancer cells which will be the laser. > > Did anyone read the recent F.Y.I's on another New Leukemia Drug Shows Promise? It is being produced in Seoul, Korea. A new drug, developed by IIyang Pharmaceutical is believed to be 30 times more effective then Gleevec, and as popular anti-leukemia medicine, which is currently in clinical trials to be in clinical trials at the hospitals countries like China, Thailand, and India. > > It has been stated that this new drug if approved in the Asian country is expected to change the landscape of the leukemia drug market. > > To test the efficacy the team of administered doses of IY5511 from 100 milligrams. to 1000 mgs. per day, with the largest amount proving to be safe. Among the 22 patients, 16, or 73% have exhibited no side effects and developed no other problems. > > If you want to read about this new drug being discovered by Professor Kim Dong research at St. 's Hospital in Seoul, Korea. Go on www.koreantime.colr/www//news/nation200 > /07/117_49374... > > Dory Doggie > > > > > > ________________________________ > From: Lottie Duthu <lotajam@...> > CML < > > Sent: Monday, August 3, 2009 4:59:28 PM > Subject: [ ] Lighting up cancel cells in the body > > Researchers are perfecting a technology that may help solve one of the most vexing problems in cancer treatment: how to tell if cancer is spreading to other parts of the body. After first injecting a person with a chemical that labels specific types of cancer cells, doctors would then aim a laser at a vein near the surface of the body (for example in the wrist), “lighting up†circulating cancer cells. Unlike CT scans and MRI, the standard methods of detecting wayward tumors, the laser is able to identify and count individual cancer cells. And because it’s trained on a vein, the laser can monitor a large volume of blood, making it a much more sensitive test than could be obtained by using a small blood sample. Doctors hope the new laser technique will provide timely information on the progression of a person’s cancer, allowing them to tailor their treatment. A clinical trial is planned. > (From the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and the University of Michigan) Living with Cancer Health monitor > > FYI > > Lottie > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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