Search
Powered By HealthLine
Health Tools
 Mood Tracker
 Heart Healthy Diet
 Ideal Body Weight Calculator
 Diet Reviews
 Fitness and Family
 Quiz: Test Your Fitness IQ
 Exercise and Fitness Guide
 Eat Out Smart
 Healthy Cooking
 BMI Calculator
Featured Conditions
 Diet & Exercise
 Stop Smoking
 Food & Fitness
 High Blood Pressure
 Cholesterol
 Heart
Resources
Healthscout News
3D Health Animations
Health Videos
Quizzes & Tools
Health Encyclopedia
In-Depth Reports
Library & Communities
News Archive
Drug Library
Find a Therapist
Enter City or Zip Code:
Powered by Psychology Today
PR Newswire
 Read latest







Channels
Home |  Today | Women| Men| Kids| Seniors| Diseases| Addictions| Sex & Relationships| Diet, Fitness, Looks| Alternative Medicine| Drug Checker
 Printer Friendly  Send to a Friend

Painless, 3-D Mammograms

Ivanhoe Broadcast News


Related Encyclopedia
 border=
Amenorrhea
Amniocentesis
Amniocentesis and CVS
Anovulation
More...

Related Healthscout Videos
 border=
Baby Steps: Fertility Findings
Tumor Detecting App: Medicine's Next Big Thing?
Powerful Combo Reducing Lymphedema
Fighting Breast Cancer on Your Lunch Break
More...

Related Animations
 border=
Breast Reduction
Breast Self-Exam Video
Erectile Dysfunction
Facelift
More...

Related Drug Information
 border=
Actonel
Detrol LA
Diflucan
Ditropan XL
More...

Related News Articles
 border=
Prenatal Antipsychotic Drugs Linked to Motor Delays: Study
Coffee Drinking in Pregnancy Won't Lead to Sleepless Baby: Study
1 in 5 Pharmacies Hinders Teens' Access to 'Morning-After' Pill: Study
'Freezing' Secondary Breast Cancer Tumors Shows Promise
More...

Painless, 3-D MammogramsDURHAM, N.C. (Ivanhoe Broadcast News) -- Breast cancer ... 180,000 women will be diagnosed with it this year. One in four will die. Detecting it as early as possible is crucial for survival, and now doctors are working on a new tool to track the tiniest tumors.

Scrapbooker Jennifer Graham is cutting, pasting and keeping track of her journey through cancer -- a journey she thought she would never take.

Text Continues Below



"[I thought] 'This can't be happening to me,'" Graham says. "I'm too young for this." Like most women in their 30s, she never even had a mammogram. "I did a self breast exam, and I felt a lump."

Researchers at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C., are working on ways to detect cancer in younger women and find smaller tumors than ever before.

Painless, 3-D Mammograms"The idea is that being able to catch the cancer earlier, you'll be able to do something to potentially cure these women earlier," Martin Tornai, Ph.D., a radiologist at Duke University Medical Center, tells Ivanhoe.

Graham has created a new type of CT scanner that provides a 3-D image of the breast. Traditional mammograms provide only a 2-D image and can be painful -- compressing the breast and distorting the image.

Dr. Tornai says, "Our first priority is to make sure that patients are going to be comfortable because mammography often turns off a group of women from actually going to get regular screenings."

During the new scan, the woman lies on her stomach. A camera swings up and down, encircling the breast and capturing hundreds of pictures. The images are combined to form a complete 3-D image.

Painless, 3-D MammogramsBecause of where many tumors are, they may be missed by a mammogram but no with the new scanner. It can also detect tumors as small as a tip of a pen. Mammograms detect lesions the size of a marble. Not only can this scanner detect the smallest cancer tumors but it could detect even the threat of cancer. Dr. Tornai is combining his scanner with one that uses nuclear medicine to detect chemical changes in breast cells that could signal cancer.

Making this scanner a more powerful tool to help women like Graham live to finish not just one scrapbook ... But many, many more.

This article was reported by Ivanhoe.com, which offers Medical Alerts by e-mail every day of the week. To subscribe, click on: http://www.ivanhoe.com/newsalert/.

If you would like more information, please contact:

Becky Levine,
Duke University Medical Center
News Office
(919) 684-4148




Last updated 3/2/2007

Related Links
 border=
From Healthscout's partner site on breast cancer, MyBreastCancerNetwork.com
VIDEO: Chemo booster cuts treatment time by two months
SYMPTOMS: Learn what to look for and what the symptoms mean
PROGNOSIS: Early detection and new treatments improve survival rates





HealthScout is a part of HealthCentral
About Us   Our Blog   Contact Us   Privacy Policy   Terms of Use   Site Map  
Copyright © 2001-2013. The HealthCentralNetwork, Inc. All rights reserved.
Advertising Policy   Editorial Policy Advertise With Us   Anti-Spam Policy   PR Newswire