Breast cancer :: Eggs lower breast cancer risk
US researchers have now found that teenage girls who eat eggs regularly are less likely to develop breast cancer later in life.
US researchers have now found that teenage girls who eat eggs regularly are less likely to develop breast cancer later in life.
In a significant breakthrough, researchers at the University College of London, have discovered a new technique, called Diffraction Enhanced Breast Imaging (Debi), which they claim could detect breast cancer at a much earlier stage, thus facilitating early treatment.
Blasts of ultrasound have successfully destroyed cancer cells in mice, without drugs, surgery or radiation during an experiment in UK.
Baby girls who are big at birth may be more likely to develop breast cancer before they reach the menopause, but less likely to develop heart disease, research suggests.
Cancerous cells can develop in the small amount of breast tissue that men have behind their nipples. Breast cancer occurs much more commonly in women and only 1% of breast cancers occur in men.