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  • Truths You Need to Know About Breast Cancer | Medical Magazine

    It is instructive to know that most breast cancer starts around the cells that line the ducts which carry milk from the lobules to the nipple and is referred to as ductal cancer. Others may begin in the lobules itself and is referred to ...
    thesymptoms.org
  • Breast Cancer – 101 | Breast Cancer Survival Rate

    Cancer that begins in the lobes or lobules is called lobular carcinoma and is more often found in both breasts than are other types of breast cancer. Inflammatory breast cancer is an uncommon type of breast cancer in which the breast is ...
    breastcancersurvivalrate.co.cc
  • Some Efficient Remedies For Breast Most cancers | Choose 4 Me Best ...

    At the time of a simple mastectomy, docs eliminate all of the tissue of the breast – the ducts, lobules, skin and fatty tissue comprising the areola as well as nipple. Find more other FREE information about what is prostate cancer, ...
    choose4me.com
  • Articles.vp.ly » What You Need to Know About Cancer

    The BreastsThe breasts sit on the chest muscles that cover the ribs. Each breast is made of 15 to 20 lobes. Lobes contain many smaller lobules. Lobules contain groups of tiny glands tha.
    articles.vp.ly

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  • FALL FROM RED MOUNTAIN (practice) Lobules

    FALL FROM RED MOUNTAIN (practice) Lobules

    Just one of our practices I recorded over the weekend. Support your local talent!!!! www.myspace.com/fallfromredmountain www.myspace.com/sugarvirus www.myspace.com/eyris
  • Bdelloid rotifer lives in liverwort lobule

    Bdelloid rotifer lives in liverwort lobule

    The leafy liverwort Frullania eboracensis has cup-like ventral lobes ("lobules"). These lobules are often occupied by microscopic but nonetheless quite complex Bdelloid rotifers, such as this one seen filter-feeding in a liverwort specimen taken from the bark of an elm tree in Delaware County, Ohio. March 22, 2010.
  • How the Body Works : The Architecture of the Liver

    How the Body Works : The Architecture of the Liver

    The Architecture of the Liver The liver is the largest organ in the body. Liver tissue is composed of a compact mass of multisided units, known as the hepatic lobules. Each lobule consists of a central vein, which acts as a tributary of the hepatic vein and conducts processed blood away from the lobule, surrounded by plates of liver cells. The liver receives blood from two sources, 80 percent, which carries digested food materials, arrives from the intestine via the portal vein and venules; the remaining twenty percent is oxygenated blood from the heart, which enters through the hepatic artery and arterioles. An exchange of materials takes place between the liver cells and the blood, which then passes into the central veins and returns to the general body circulation via the hepatic vein. Sinusoids, spaces between plates of liver cells composed of tributaries of the hepatic artery and portal vein, conduct the blood flow to the central vein. The bile canaliculus carries bile juice from the liver to branches of the bile duct which convey bile from the lobules to the gall bladder. When an adult is at rest, about two and a half pints of blood flow through the liver each minute.
  • Breast Anatomy in Punjabi language

    Breast Anatomy in Punjabi language

    Module 1 -- Breast anatomy (Punjabi language) At puberty, the female breast develops into its final adult form. As well as becoming larger, the breast develops new internal structures called lobules. These structures are clustered together around a duct, and are where milk is produced after pregnancy. A group of lobules form a lobe, and each of these lobes is connected to the nipple by a duct. During pregnancy the milk ducts and lobules grow to provide milk, and after suckling stops they diminish. During menopause, the structures of the lobules and milk ducts change leaving a few scattered ducts in the breast. Cancerous changes can occur in the lobules and the milk ducts, leading to ductal and lobular cancers. Some cancers remain in the milk ducts and the lobules, and are called in situ, or noninvasive, cancers. But many become invasive, and spread to other parts of the breast and body. It is important to detect cancers early before they spread. This can often be done using a mammogram, which is a type of X-ray, and forms the basis of the NHS Breast Screening Programme.
  • The Chest

    The Chest

    Learn a little about the chest.
  • Breast Cancer Awareness & the NFL TEAM UP! Cheerleaders & Players

    Breast Cancer Awareness & the NFL TEAM UP! Cheerleaders & Players

    October is "Breast Cancer Awareness month" so I wanted to create a video tribute to the National Football League and it's cheerleaders, players, coaches and officials since the league is doing such a nice job of being involved. The stadiums are nicely marked... with their fields, goal posts and "BC awareness" signage. The PINK cheerleader outfits ie: pink "pom poms", wrist bands, boots, shoes, socks and the players, coaches & officials uniforms... ie:pink gloves, shoes, towels, helmets, hats & shirts with the Breast Cancer pink ribbon logo. *DISEASE INFORMATION* on Breast Cancer... Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women in the United States, aside from skin cancer. According to the American Cancer Society (ACS), an estimated 192370 new cases of invasive breast cancer are expected to be diagnosed among women in the United States this year. One in eight women will be affected at some point in their lifetime. An estimated 40170 women are expected to die from the disease in 2009 alone. Today, there are about 2.5 million breast cancer survivors living in the United States. If you're worried about developing breast cancer, or if you know someone who has been diagnosed with the disease, one way to deal with your concerns is to get as much information as possible. In this section you'll find important background information about what breast cancer is and how it develops. Breast cancer is a malignant tumor that grows in one or both of the breasts. Breast cancer usually ...
  • Carcass - Hepatic Tissue Fermentation II

    Carcass - Hepatic Tissue Fermentation II

    From the album "Necroticism: Descanting The Insalubrious" (1991). Lyrics: Orally force fed, until cirmosis is induced, Fatal renal failure, bleeds like a sluice, Spewing blood as the gallbladder extrudes, Alcoholic poisoning, bloated lobules burst, Toxins flood the stomach, in diffluence submerged. Coughting waste as the wrecked colon tears. The blood now critically proof, neural cells fatally quenched, Drowning in spilt retention, hepatic tissue ferments. Poisoned retention, with intoxication, Inflamed nephrons burst, your condition's getting worse, Chronically diffused, your liver you will lose. Bodily distillation, as emerged flesh reacts, With alcoholic contents, in your urinally tract. Dripping fluid as the decrepit appendix weeps. Matter turns to fluid, intoxicating ablution, Bilary dehydration, innards to solution. Bleeding urine as the inflamed bladder rips. The blood now critically proof, neural cells fatally quenched, Drowning in spilt retention, hepatic tissue ferments. Contamination, foul circulation. Alcohol force fed, goes straight to your head, Brain tissue damaged, fused with alcohol sewage. In a stupor you die, your brain lobes you fry.
  • Carcass(UK) - Pathologic(Ep 1989)

    Carcass(UK) - Pathologic(Ep 1989)

    Carcass - Pathologic EP, Earache 1989 Limited to 1000 copies 1.Genital Grinder II(Instrumental) 2.Hepatic Tissue Fermentation (Lyric): Orally force fed, until cirmosis is induced, Fatal renal failure, bleeds like a sluice, Spewing blood as the gallbladder extrudes, Alcoholic poisoning, bloated lobules burst, Toxins flood the stomach, in diffluence submerged. Coughting waste as the wrecked colon tears. The blood now critically proof, neural cells fatally quenched, Drowning in spilt retention, hepatic tissue ferments. Poisoned retention, with intoxication, Inflamed nephrons burst, your condition's getting worse, Chronically diffused, your liver you will lose. Bodily distillation, as emerged flesh reacts, With alcoholic contents, in your urinally tract. Dripping fluid as the decrepit appendix weeps. Matter turns to fluid, intoxicating ablution, Bilary dehydration, innards to solution. Bleeding urine as the inflamed bladder rips. The blood now critically proof, neural cells fatally quenched, Drowning in spilt retention, hepatic tissue ferments. Contamination, foul circulation. Alcohol force fed, goes straight to your head, Brain tissue damaged, fused with alcohol sewage. In a stupor you die, your brain lobes you fry.
  • FALL FROM RED MOUNTAIN (practice) Lobules

  • Bdelloid rotifer lives in liverwort lobule

  • How the Body Works : The Architecture of the Liver

  • Breast Anatomy in Punjabi language

  • The Chest

  • Breast Cancer Awareness & the NFL TEAM UP! Cheerleaders & Players

  • Carcass - Hepatic Tissue Fermentation II

  • Carcass(UK) - Pathologic(Ep 1989)

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