Here and Now: Inspiring Stories of Cancer Survivors --
by Elena Dorfman, Heidi Schultz Adams
Kathy's Hats: A Story of Hope Kathy's Hats: A Story of Hope
by Trudy Krisher
My Mommy's Cancer
by Cindy Klein Cohen
Beating Cancer With Nutrition
by Patrick Quillin
A Cancer Battle Plan: Six Strategies for Beating Cancer, from a Recovered "Hopeless Case"
by Anne E. Frahm, David J. Frahm
How to Fight Cancer & Win
by William L. Fischer
What to Eat if You Have Cancer
by Daniella Chace
The Cure for All Cancers: Including over 100 Case Histories of Persons Cured
by Hulda Regehr Clark
Just Get Me Through This: The Practical Guide to Breast Cancer
by Deborah A. Cohen

    Discovery's Edge is Mayo Clinic's online research magazine

    Source: Mayo Clinic
    Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006





    Discovery's Edge, Mayo Clinic's online research magazine, highlights stories of leading medical investigators. Many features cover ongoing projects long before they reach the journals. Science writers and medical reporters seeking new story ideas will want to check out the articles, which span a wide range of conditions and feature visuals they can use in their own publications.

    Building a Cellular Band-Aid

    If a certain type of repair cell helps a person's damaged blood vessels heal, what would happen if a lot of those cells were used at one time -- to create a vascular bandage? Mayo researchers are studying ways to grow endothelial cells and reintroduce them at an injury site in the body. It's part of a multi-pronged approach by cardiovascular investigators to battle blood clots.

    http://discoverysedge.mayo.edu/vascular_biology/

    Green Tea and Leukemia

    Mayo investigators took the healthful benefits of green tea a step further: starting in the lab, they advanced a key component of this Asian folk treatment into a potential medicine in the fight against leukemia.

    http://discoverysedge.mayo.edu/green_tea/

    Predicting Brittle Bone Breaks

    Mayo researchers defined osteoporosis as a treatable disease. Now they have developed a way to identify weak spots in the bones of living persons, pinpointing where bones are at risk of breaking and treating them before a fracture occurs.

    http://discoverysedge.mayo.edu/brittle_bones/

    E. coli: In the Right Hands, a Great Research Tool

    The bacteria causing havoc around the country also have a good side. E.coli, it turns out, are excellent subject matter for studying how DNA works, especially in genetic diseases.

    http://discoverysedge.mayo.edu/bacteria.cfm

    View the entire magazine at http://discoverysedge.mayo.edu/.


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