Your Search Returned 5 tagged news reports
DENMARK : There has been no substantial change in the number of adult brain tumours since mobile phone usage sharply increased in the mid-1990s, According to the website the Danish Cancer Society looked at the rates of brain tumours among...
Tags: mobile usage, brain cancer, brain tumor, Health, Health Medical Pharma, increased, Alison Ross, mobiles phones, brain tumours, incidence rate, Denmark, Copenhagen, Occupational safety and health, Mobile phone radiation and health, Pathology, Mobile telecommunications, Mobile phone, Oncology, mobile phones, Cancer
A latest study by Nordic researchers, found that there is no apparent link between cell phones and brain cancer, China's Xinhua news agency reported, citing the online edition of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Researchers at the Institute...
Tags: brain tumors, brain cancers, brain tumours, mobile phones, cellphone use, cancers society, cancers institute, Scandinavia, Institute of Cancer Epidemiology, cancers epidemiology, Los Angeles, Cancer, Health Medical Pharma, Oncology, Brain tumor, Pathology, Neurosurgery, Glioma, Neurology, Technology Internet, Mobile telecommunications, Neurological disorders, Mobile phone, Mobile phone radiation and health, Brain, Occupational safety and health, Radiobiology, Prostate cancer, Glioblastoma multiforme, Alcohol and cancer, Breast cancer
Long-term cell phone users face a higher risk of developing brain tumors later in life, researchers in Britain warn. The risks were identified in a landmark decade-long study by the World Health Organization, The Daily Telegraph reported Saturday.
Tags: mobile phones, brain tumours, cell phones, Daily Telegraph, brain tumors
But the humble fundraising drive embarked on by Neil and Angela Dickson in the 12 years since the death of their daughter Samantha has helped finance a "major breakthrough" in the battle against the condition that killed her. Dicksons have pinpointed...
Tags: brain tumours
July 28, 2008 Impotence drugs may help carry cancer-fighting drugs through the brain to treat malignant tumors, U.S. researchers reported Monday. Tests in rats showed two erectile dysfunction drugs -- Schering-Plough's Levitra and Pfizer's Viagra -- helped...
Tags: brain tumours, impotence drugs