Chemotherapy Cancer Treatments & Side Effects : All Chemotherapy Drugs & Their Side Effects


 

Chemotherapy Cancer Treatments & Side Effects : All Chemotherapy Drugs & Their Side Effects – There is a wide variety of chemotherapy drugs used in cancer treatment and each comes with its own set of potential side effects. Find out how not everyone will experience side effects from cancer treatments, and how hardly anyone will experience all side effects, with information from a doctor in this free video on chemotherapy and cancer treatments. Expert: Dr. David Cathcart Bio: Dr. David Cathcart has been an occupational medicine physician at Heartland Regional Medical Center in St. Joseph, Mo. for more than 20 years. Filmmaker: Johnny Cathcart

 

MORNING UPDATE: St. Louis County wants to open new methadone facility

Filed under: Missouri Drug Treatment Centers

As the Lake Superior Treatment Center faces the revocation of its state license, St. Louis County wants to see if anyone else is interested in running a methadone clinic for drug addicts in the Duluth area. As the Lake Superior Treatment Center faces …
Read more on Budgeteer

 

Some Deadly Breast Cancers Share Genetic Features with Ovarian Tumors

Filed under: Missouri Drug Treatment Centers

St. Louis, MO – infoZine – The findings, published online Sept. 23 in Nature, suggest that most basal-like breast tumors and ovarian tumors have similar genetic origins and potentially could be treated with the same drugs, says the study's co-leader …
Read more on Kansas City infoZine

 

James Franklin refused painkillers for dealing with shoulder injury

Filed under: Missouri Drug Treatment Centers

Confirming what had been rumored the day before, Missouri quarterback James Franklin did not take the field Saturday night against Arizona State because of lingering soreness in his shoulder. Franklin missed … In fact, the Franklin family is a drug …
Read more on NBCSports.com

 

Long-time teacher Al Frisby into Education Hall of Fame

Filed under: Missouri Drug Treatment Centers

“While paying them, we gave patients malaria and then treated them with a new drug the Army wanted us to test,” remembers Frisby. “Our pill was better than the old method and was sent to … One of the places was the Medical Examiner's office at the …
Read more on The Kansas City Kansan