Firm Logo
412.471.4300

Blog: Uncategorized

  • Medical Malpractice Lawyer Hospitals Failing To Adequately Assess Colon Cancer Spread

    March 22, 2017

    Medical Malpractice Lawyer — Hospitals Failing to Adequately Assess Colon Cancer Spread A recent study of nearly 1,300 hospitals nationwide found that nearly two-thirds of these hospitals are not adequately screening their colon cancer patients for signs that their cancer has spread to other parts of their body.  The study was conducted by researchers at […]

    Read More
  • High Intake Of Trans Fat Could Increase Risk Of Colon Cancer

    March 22, 2017

    High Intake of Trans Fat Could Increase Risk of Colon Cancer The American Journal of Epidemiology is reporting that a study done at the University of North Carolina shows that people who ate the most trans fatty acids developed more pre-cancerous polyps than those who ate less trans fatty acids.  Trans fatty acids are formed […]

    Read More
  • Study Shows Link Between Metabolic Syndrome And Breast Cancer

    March 22, 2017

    Study Shows Link Between Metabolic Syndrome and Breast Cancer According to a recent study which was published in a journal for the American Association for Cancer Research, metabolic syndrome may play a role in the risk of postmenopausal breast cancer.Metabolic syndrome, or insulin resistance syndrome, is characterized by abdominal obesity, high blood glucose levels, impaired […]

    Read More
  • Silent Heart Attacks More Common Than Previously Thought

    March 22, 2017

    Silent Heart Attacks More Common Than Previously Thought A new study from Duke University Medical Center shows that silent heart attacks may occur more frequently than physicians thought. A heart attack happens when a clot gets in the way of blood flow from a coronary artery to the heart. This may cause symptoms such as […]

    Read More
  • Liver Cancer Recurrence Common In Colon Cancer

    March 22, 2017

    Liver Cancer Recurrence Common in Colon Cancer Twenty percent of those with colon cancer will develop liver metastases.  Liver surgery is often performed to treat the liver metastases.  The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine just released results of a study they performed.  This is the first study to evaluate the recurrence of cancer in those […]

    Read More
  • Vitamin C May Interfere With Cancer Treatment

    March 22, 2017

    Vitamin C May Interfere With Cancer Treatment Many people gobble big doses of vitamin C in hopes of boosting their immune system and warding off illness. But new research shows that in people with cancer,  the vitamin may do more harm than good. Researchers at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York studied the effects of […]

    Read More
  • Few Adverse Reactions To Cervical Cancer Vaccine

    March 22, 2017

    Few Adverse Reactions to Cervical Cancer Vaccine Girls and young women given Merck and Co’s Gardasil vaccine to prevent cervical cancer were not any more likely than usual to faint, have an allergic reaction, blood clot, or other adverse reaction, federal officials said on Wednesday. The vaccine does not cause any more cases than usual […]

    Read More
  • Written And Verbal Instructions On

    March 22, 2017

    Written and Verbal Instructions on Coumadin Reduce Injuries A new study found that giving patients written and verbal instructions on the proper use of the blood thinner Coumadin significantly reduces the risk of serious gastrointestinal and brain bleeding problems.  It also found that patients who see only one doctor and fill their prescriptions at a […]

    Read More
  • African-Americans Suffer From Heart Failure More Than White Americans

    March 22, 2017

    African-Americans Suffer From Heart Failure More Than White Americans  A new study published in the New England Journal of Medicine indicates that African-Americans suffer heart failure at a rate 20 times higher than white Americans.  Heart failure is a condition in which the heart is unable to adequately pump blood to the body, often resulting […]

    Read More
  • New Screening Treatments In Works For Ovarian Cancer

    March 22, 2017

    New screening, treatments in works for ovarian cancer Down the hall from his office in the Magee Women’s Research Institute in Pittsburgh, Thomas P. Conrads, a scientist at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, sits daily in front of a tabletop-sized piece of equipment rarely, if ever, found in cancer research centers. It’s called a […]

    Read More

We Have Successfully Handled Cases Like Yours