Popular Articles
Burdock Root

Polymorphism In Endostatin, An Angiogenesis Inhibitor, And Prostate Cancer Risk And Survival: A Prospective Study
UroToday.com - Angiogenesis is the process of new blood vessel formation in tumors, facilitating their growth. Endostatin is a cleavage product of collagen and is a potent inhibitor of endothelial cell proliferation and migration. Endostatin causes apoptosis in endothelial and tumor cells. Prostate cancer expresses angiogenic factors.
generic viagra online
Quality And Purity Of Popular Stevia Sweetener Strengthened By New Reference Standards
As the number of food and beverage products sweetened with stevia-based ingredients continues to grow in the United States and worldwide, the U.S. Pharmacopeial (USP) Convention announces that new reference standards for Rebaudioside A and Stevioside are now available. The reference standards for these two ingredients complement the soon to be released written testing standard for high-purity Rebaudioside A in the Food Chemicals Codex (FCC), a collection of documentary standards for food ingredients that allow manufacturers to demonstrate the quality, and thus related aspects of safety, of the products they provide to consumers.
News of the day
Washington Independent Examines U.S. Food Aid
The Washington Independent examines a recent Government Accountability Office (GAO) report, which found that a federal law requiring most international food aid to come from U.S. farmers could be "hobbling efforts to feed the world"s hungry." Currently, Food for Peace - the nation"s largest food aid program - "requires that the crops be purchased from U.S. growers, processed through U.S. companies, and shipped using U.S.-flagged vessels," according to the article.
Cardiovascular

Genes Unlocked In Search For Breast Cancer Vaccine

Researchers at The University of Queensland have helped identify genes that could hold the key to treating a common and deadly type of breast cancer. The discovery suggests a vaccine could be developed for ER negative breast cancer, which accounts for a third of all breast cancer cases, has a generally poor prognosis and few therapy options. Work carried out by Professor Sunil Lakhani and his team at UQ"s Centre for Clinical Research, played a key role in the project which was lead by the international Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research (LICR). The study results were published yesterday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). The UQCCR team provided analysis of nearly 1,600 tumor samples to confirm the presence of two families of CT-X genes in nearly half of ER negative breast cancers. CT-X genes are thought to be responsible for a natural form of cancer control and might be the cause of spontaneous cancer remission. "ER negative breast cancer includes a particularly severe type of cancer - triple negative breast cancer, which tends to metastasize early and often to the brain. Many of these cancers are not responsive to current therapies," Prof Lakhani said. "These findings suggest that a therapeutic vaccine, combining members of the two CT-X families, could be a new therapy for filling a critical unmet need," he said. TNBC is more common in young and African American women. CT-X gene products are the targets of therapeutic cancer vaccines already in phase III clinical trials for lung cancer and melanoma. Dr Andrew Simpson, LICR scientific director and an author of the study, said clinical trials based on the findings of the PNAS study could theoretically be initiated in the near future. University of Queensland


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):