Scans that make prostate cancer cells glow can eliminate the need for invasive biopsies and cut false positive—and they're ...
Researchers have discovered that cancer spread isn’t random—it follows a kind of biological “program.” By studying colon ...
Scientists have discovered why ovarian cancer spreads so rapidly through the abdomen. Cancer cells enlist normally protective abdominal cells, forming mixed groups that work together to invade new ...
Colorectal cancer remains one of the leading causes of cancer-related mortality worldwide, largely due to metastasis and ...
Researchers at the Josep Carreras Leukaemia Research Institute propose a new view of cancer based on spatial hallmark ecosystems and its evolution during cancer progression. This conceptual framework ...
SurvivorNet on MSN
Diagnosing muscle-invasive bladder cancer: The initial work-up
When a doctor suspects bladder cancer, they will order a series of tests which may include urine tests (urinalysis or urine cytology), a cystoscopy to visualize the inside of the bladder, and/or a CT ...
Australian scientists say it could also help reduce the risk of overdiagnosis by determining which cancers are low-risk and will never cause harm.
A fluorescent probe for visualizing the signaling dynamics in metastatic cancer cells has been developed. A research team at the University of Turku (Finland), led by Johanna Ivaska and James Conway, ...
A scan that makes prostate cancer cells “glow” could halve the number of men needing invasive biopsies, research suggests.
Pune: In biology textbooks, the Golgi apparatus is often depicted as a stack of flattened sacs—the cell's 'post office' that receives, processes, and ships proteins and lipids. However, a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results