PubMed Central (PMC3 - NLM DTD) (1.998.476 recursos) Archive of life sciences journal literature at the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), developed and managed by NIH's National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) in the National Library of Medicine (NLM).
2. The intraductal approach to the breast: raison d'être - King, Bonnie L; Love, Susan M Opportunities for the detection, prediction, and treatment of breast cancer exist at three biological levels: systemically via the blood, at the whole organ level, and within the individual ductal lobular structures of the breast.
7. What can be learnt from models of incidence rates? - Colditz, Graham A; Rosner, Bernard A Models of breast cancer incidence have evolved from the observation by Armitage and Doll in the 1950s that the pattern of incidence by age differs for reproductive cancers from those of other major malignancies.
8. Breast cancer, stem cells and prospects for therapy - Lynch, Magnus D; Cariati, Massimiliano; Purushotham, Anand D The mammary epithelium contains multipotent stem cells that give rise to all differentiated cell types present within the tissue.
9. Array-CGH and breast cancer - van Beers, Erik H; Nederlof, Petra M The introduction of comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) in 1992 opened new avenues in genomic investigation; in particular, it advanced analysis of solid tumours, including breast cancer, because it obviated the need to culture cells before their chromosomes could be analyzed.
11. Bone versus breast density - Cuzick, Jack The common link with oestrogen levels suggests that bone mineral density and mammographic density might also be linked.
13. The intraductal approach to the breast: raison d'être - King, Bonnie L; Love, Susan M Opportunities for the detection, prediction, and treatment of breast cancer exist at three biological levels: systemically via the blood, at the whole organ level, and within the individual ductal lobular structures of the breast.
18. What can be learnt from models of incidence rates? - Colditz, Graham A; Rosner, Bernard A Models of breast cancer incidence have evolved from the observation by Armitage and Doll in the 1950s that the pattern of incidence by age differs for reproductive cancers from those of other major malignancies.
19. Breast cancer, stem cells and prospects for therapy - Lynch, Magnus D; Cariati, Massimiliano; Purushotham, Anand D The mammary epithelium contains multipotent stem cells that give rise to all differentiated cell types present within the tissue.
20. Array-CGH and breast cancer - van Beers, Erik H; Nederlof, Petra M The introduction of comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) in 1992 opened new avenues in genomic investigation; in particular, it advanced analysis of solid tumours, including breast cancer, because it obviated the need to culture cells before their chromosomes could be analyzed.