Clinical implications of risk factors for breast cancer
โ Scribed by John W. Berg
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1984
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 244 KB
- Volume
- 53
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
provide little or no support of his concept. These include 1 ) the 1969 AFIP Fascicle on Tumors of the Peripheral Nervous System by Harkin and Reed,g wherein the term cellular schwannoma was used to denote a benign schwannoma, one cellular, exhibiting pleomorphism, both Antoni-A and B tissue, and on
Although female breast cancer rates are lower in China than in Western countries, rates have been rising rapidly in China. This increase may be due to changes in established breast cancer risk factors, but it is possible that exposure to occupational and environmental carcinogens in Shanghai also ha
The nation-wide Swedish Family-Cancer Database was used to analyze the risk of contralateral breast cancer among 72,092 women with unilateral breast cancer. Contralateral breast cancer, defined as being diagnosed 6 months or more after the first breast cancer, affected 2,529 women (3.5%). In a young
Background Contrasting results have been published regarding the risk of breast cancer among teachers and nurses. Confounding by reproductive factors may explain the increased risk observed among women in these occupations as information on those factors were not available in most studies. Methods W