Getting Strong With Exercise After Breast Cancer — August 17, 2006
Should you exercise after surgery? What kind of exercises should you do? Read occupational therapist and certified cancer exercise trainer Naomi Aaronson's article on exercise after breast cancer. This pilates video demonstrates an exercise routine designed specifically for women who are 6-8 weeks post-surgery, and have t heir doctor's permission to begin exercising.
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Management of ER-Positive Postmenopausal Early Breast Cancer — June 19, 2008
In this series of expert presentations William J. Gradishar, MD, explores the use of gene signature assays and other prognostic tools to optimize treatment strategies for postmenopausal breast cancer patients; Ruth M. O'Regan, MD, discusses hormonal treatment strategies for estrogen receptor–positivepostmenopausal breast cancer patients; and Paul E. Goss, MD, reviews the safety profiles associated with the long-term use of aromatase inhibitors.
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Clinical Care Options: Independent Conference Coverage of San Antonio
— December 20, 2007
Read and listen to Expert Highlights by Daniel Hayes, MD, Edith Perez,
MD, Clifford Hudis, MD and others. Find Capsule Summaries and Expert
Analyses on topics such as Endocrine Therapy, Chemotherapy and Targeted Agents, Metastatic Breast Cancer, and Prognosis and Prediction.
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Know Your METS: Using Exercise to Reduce Your Risk of Developing
Breast Cancer or Experiencing a Breast Cancer Recurrence
— May 9, 2007
When it comes to reducing breast cancer risk, exercise is increasingly looking like a good bet. But to reap all the benefits that exercise can provide, you need to be sure that your fitness routine is providing you with the right number of metabolic equivalents, or METS.
This article by Coach Marie Murphy tells you what you need to know to
reduce your risk.
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The Ethics of CYP2D6 Testing for Patients Considering Tamoxifen — April 13, 2007
This article published in Breast Cancer Research discusses
tamoxifen resistance testing, the data needed for resistance testing to
become standard of care, and who should consider testing right now.
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