According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ( CDC ), ovarian cancer may cause vaginal bleeding, pelvic pain, back pain, bloating, and difficulty eating. Women should see a doctor immediately if they experience bleeding that isn't menstrual, or if they have any of the other symptoms for two weeks or longer.
Widow Catherine Robinson, from Australia, stumbled across American widower Randy Mann’s blog in 2018. The two strangers started writing to each other, sharing their experiences of grief. Then they spontaneously decided to go on vacation together.
Medical advances mean many more people are surviving cancer and living for years or decades with its after effects. Here's how they are navigating life after treatment.
The test kits are being offered to 50-year-olds for the first time, but uptake is less than 60%.
After a Stage 4 cancer diagnosis and a prognosis of 16 months to live, Katie Doble didn’t know whether she should plan her wedding or her funeral.
U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Rayshaun Smith thought his knee pain was caused by his active lifestyle. It was an early sign of a rare cancer.
Rising diagnoses of certain cancers in people under 50 predate the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines by decades, undermining claims made in a U.S. broadcast that the inoculations have caused a sharp increase of “turbo cancer” in younger age groups.
The malfunctioning mitochondria seem to poison the immune cells, explains Yosuke Togashi, a pulmonary physician and cancer-immunology researcher at Okayama University in Japan, and the lead author of the study. “Mitochondrial transfer plays an important role in TIL exhaustion. But I think it’s just a partial role,” he says.
Following the U.S. surgeon general's new advisory linking alcohol to seven different types of cancer, hotels are expanding alcohol-free offerings. Travel industry experts speak out.
Tony Benna's Sundance-premiered 'André is an Idiot' irreverently chronicles the last years in the life of advertising creative André Ricciardi.
Captain Paramedic Anthony Mock died peacefully after battling two rare forms of cancer over the last two years, the Phoenix Fire Department said in a statement. Mock's lifelong dream was to become a Phoenix firefighter. After his cancer diagnosis, Mock advocated early cancer screenings for his fellow firefighters.