2009 ARCHIVES

  1. Breast Cancer Risk Varies in Young Women with Benign Breast Disease
  2. Diet tied to survival in breast cancer patients
  3. Lymphedema Risk For Breast Cancer Survivors Increased By Obesity
  4. Iodine Deficiency- An Old Epidemic is Back
  5. Extra Virgin Olive Oil May Help To Combat Breast Cancer
  6. Up-Front Use of Aromatase Inhibitors As Adjuvant Therapy for Breast Cancer: The Emperor Has No Clothes
  7. New Analysis Finds Bioidentical Hormones Safer Than Standard Hormone Replacement Therapy
  8. Cancer screening: Doing more harm than good? What you need to know before your next mammogram or colonoscopy
  9. Vitamin D and Musculoskeletal Health
  10. Penn Study Examines Power of Exercise to Prevent Breast Cancer
  11. When a Mother Has Cancer: Myriad Issues for Children and Adolescents
  12. Are We Overtreating Breast Cancer?
  13. Young Women's Breast Tissue Offers Clues to Cancer Risk
  14. Genetic Testing For Breast Or Ovarian Cancer Risk May Be Greatly Underutilized
  15. Antidepressants Commonly Prescribed with Tamoxifen Put Women at Much Higher Risk for Recurrent Breast Cancer
  16. How Lifestyle Choices Impact Breast Cancer Risk- From the Breast Cancer Options 2009 Healthy Lifestyles Calendar
  17. If an Adolescent Has a Lump in Her Breast, Does She Really Need a Biopsy?
  18. Ginger Reduces Chemotherapy Nausea, Study
  19. Glycemic load linked to breast cancer risk
  20. Lifetime exercise may cut breast cancer death risk
  21. Women often opt to surgically remove their breasts, ovaries to reduce cancer risk
  22. Breastfeeding Reduces Risk Of Breast Cancer For Women Who Delay Childbirth
  23. Lost in the fog: Understanding chemo brain
  24. Lifting Weights Reduces Lymphedema Symptoms Following Breast Cancer Surgery
  25. Medications That Lower Breast Cancer Risk Carry Other Dangers
  26. Rethinking October's Focus on Mammography
  27. Cancers Can Vanish Without Treatment, but How?
  28. Addicted to Mammograms
  29. It Can’t Help You if You Dont Take It
  30. Cancer Risks and Radiation Exposure From Computed Tomographic Scans. How Can We Be Sure That the Benefits Outweigh the Risks?