Not exact matches
In a Chemistry & Biology
article published online
on September 10, researchers present ways to shut down the ability of GI microbes to convert
chemotherapy drugs to a toxic species in mice as a first step to helping cancer patients.
Based
on an analysis of existing evidence, published in an opinion
article in the Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology journal
on January 20, Dr. Narod argues that to achieve a cure, rather than simply delay progression or reoccurrence of the disease, women should be first treated with aggressive surgery to remove all clinically - detectable cancer cells, followed by targeted
chemotherapy to the abdomen (intraperitoneal
chemotherapy).
Dr. Wright continued her research
on chemotherapy and tissue culture, publishing over 100
articles during her career.
A 2015
article in the International Journal of Biochemistry and Cell Biology sums up the findings of multiple studies
on ketogenic diets and cancer with the following: «there is increasing evidence that the ketogenic diet may also be beneficial as an adjuvant cancer therapy by potentiating the antitumor effect of
chemotherapy and radiation treatment.»
This
article originally appeared
on Dr. Mahaney's The Daily Vet column
on PetMD as When Pets Complete
Chemotherapy Are They Cancer - Free?