Posts Tagged Lymphoma

A Quick Reference Guide to Hodgkin’s Disease

Hodgkin’s Disease (HD) or Hodgkin Lymphoma is a type of lymphoma, not to be confused with Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL).

Lymphoma is a cancer that begins at the cellular level of the immune system. For more information on lymphoma in general see the excellent article in our archives.

Hodgkin’s Disease is identified by the presence of the Reed-Sternberg cell.

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Coffee News Creator ‘Never Gave Up’

coffee-news-creator-jean-daum.jpgThu, July 26, 2007

By JOYANNE PURSAGA, SUN MEDIA

A Winnipeg entrepreneur who turned a coffee-break idea into a global success story has passed away at the age of 56.

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Lymphoplasmacytic Disorders

By Alison Cole

Lymphoplasmacytic disorder is a disease that affects the lymphoplasmacyte cells that produce monoclonal light chained immunoglobulins, which are part of the immune system.

Light chain deposit disease is a lymphoplasmacytic disorder that has uncommon monoclonal gammopathy (IgG). The symptoms should be monitored carefully in patients who also have renal disease. The diagnosis of this disease is easy when monoclonal light chains are present in the serum or urine and the renal biopsy exhibits typical morphological changes and stains for kappa or lambda light chains. It becomes difficult to diagnose when the patient does not have a known lymphoplasmacytic disorder and the monoclonal light chains are detectable only erratically.

Waldenstrom¹s macroglobulinemia (WM) is a well-known malignant disorder of lymphoplasmacytic cells that produce a monoclonal immunoglobulin M (IgM). The standardized criterion that is now established for diagnosis of this disease, includes the presence of any IgM monoclonal protein and marrow and nodal lymphoplasmacytic cells in the blood and its hyperviscosity due to increased levels of a class of heavy proteins called macroglobulins. A distinctive feature of WM is the presence of an IgM monoclonal protein that is produced by the cancer cells, and a simultaneous decrease in levels of uninvolved immunoglobulins IgG and IgA.

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Lymphoma Symptoms

By Alison Cole

One of the most important factors in determining the survival rate or chances for remission of cancer patients is early detection. Some cancers where this is very true include breast cancer and prostate cancer because early detection of the disease makes it easier to treat since the cancer is usually just found in one localized area. With regard to lymphomas, the same principle applies; early detection of lymphomas has been proven to lead to higher survival rates. The key to early detection is an awareness of symptoms that indicate the presence of a lymphoma. Fortunately, research on this topic is extensive and provides a wealth of information that can help people detect the symptoms of lymphoma.

Some Common Symptoms

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Infusion Clinic Opening Here In Winnipeg In January 2007

There is an article in today’s Winnipeg Free Press by Jen Skerrit ..

Source: Winnipeg Free Press - Cancer Meds For Those Who Have The Cash

Alternate Source: Therapeutics Daily - Cancer meds for those who have the cash

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What Is Lymphoma?

By Jeff Kimball

Most folks diagnosed with any type of cancer notice it hugely difficult to agree with their predicament. The typical reaction of patients and their family is disbelief of their disease. However, cancer is something that won’t go away quietly because you avoid its existence. It is therefore better to determine as much as possible of the illness and learn how to attack it than to simply hide and wait for the unavoidable to happen. In the case of people with lymphoma, it is critical that you should understand what is going on in your body and be ready for any circumstance. Many things can happen to people with lymphoma, as this type of cell anomaly is rather mobile compared to other forms of cancers.

Lymphoma is a type of cancer that assaults the lymphocytes. The lymphocytes are defined by medical science as any of the nearly colorless cells found in the blood, lymph, and lymphoid tissues, constituting approximately 25 percent of white blood cells and including B cells, which function in humoral immunity, and T cells, which act in cellular specific immunity. So you should know that lymphocytes are not only most mobile as it is carried in the blood, it is also part of the body’s typical protective armor called the immune system.

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The Pluck Factor

By Carolina Fernandez

Plucky (pluk’e) adj. Brave and spirited; courageous.

Have you ever noticed how few people possess radiating energy? How eyes lack sparkle and how few real smiles there are out there? How almost no one looks you in the eyes when you talk or how few people have truly gracious social skills? One thing that never ceases to amaze me is the lack of charisma or magnetism or exuberance among people everywhere!

So when I met Lorraine and Cam, I was immediately drawn to their energy. To their lit-up eyes, frequent laughter and bubbly personalities. Now they’re not particularly bubbly as in “effervescent.” No, they are actually more on the subdued side. But when one talks to them, their eyes twinkle. They smile when they talk. They maintain fabulous eye contact. Good upbringing? Perhaps. I’ve met both of their parents, even though one set lives in Scotland and the other in England (and we live up here in Connecticut in New England) and they are, indeed, darling people.

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Report: Cancer rates high for WTC workers

NEW YORK, NY, United States (UPI) — Nearly 300 rescue and recovery workers from the World Trade Center site have been diagnosed with cancer since Sept. 11, 2001, the New York Post reports.

Blood-cell cancers such as leukemia, lymphoma and Hodgkin`s disease are being reported at a much higher rate than normal from World Trade Center rescue workers, attorney David Worby told the Post.

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