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Following the Third Alcohol and Cancer Conference, this volume
compiles the most up-to-date research on the role of alcohol
consumption in carcinogenesis, from epidemiology to pathology
metabolism and stem cells. More specifically, it delves into the
effects of alcohol consumption and thyroid cancer, CD133+
progenitor cells, carcinogenic iron accumulation, developmental
morphogens, and cancer-inducing epigenetic changes. Alcohol and
Cancer: Proceedings of the Third International Conference is a
timely update to Biological Basis of Alcohol-Induced Cancer, which
followed the Second Alcohol and Cancer Conference, compiling
cutting-edge research from graduate students, young scientists, and
researchers. It is ideal for graduate students and researchers in
oncology, hepatology, epigenetics, and alcohol consumption.
In the recent years, a significant amount of research has emerged
connecting the link between alcohol and cancer. The field has
rapidly advanced, especially since the complex connection between
alcohol and cancer has several unique sub areas that are being
investigated. This proceedings volume will contain chapters based
upon the presentation of the 2nd International Conference on
Alcohol and Cancer in Colorado, 2013. The various topics explore
the affects of alcohol on: liver and breast cancer; cell signaling
and cancer; stem cells; biomarkers and metabolomics; aerodigestive
cancers; cancer and the immune system and more.
Following the Third Alcohol and Cancer Conference, this volume
compiles the most up-to-date research on the role of alcohol
consumption in carcinogenesis, from epidemiology to pathology
metabolism and stem cells. More specifically, it delves into the
effects of alcohol consumption and thyroid cancer, CD133+
progenitor cells, carcinogenic iron accumulation, developmental
morphogens, and cancer-inducing epigenetic changes. Alcohol and
Cancer: Proceedings of the Third International Conference is a
timely update to Biological Basis of Alcohol-Induced Cancer, which
followed the Second Alcohol and Cancer Conference, compiling
cutting-edge research from graduate students, young scientists, and
researchers. It is ideal for graduate students and researchers in
oncology, hepatology, epigenetics, and alcohol consumption.
The past 20 years have seen a surge of research into colorectal
cancer, which is a reflection of the need to improve our methods of
treating patients suffering from this increasingly common form of
cancer. Greater knowledge of the basic mechanisms involved in
colorectal carcinogenesis is an essential prerequisite to
improvements in cancer prevention. In this volume the editors have
brought together an impressive list of experts to cover the
epidemiology, pathophysiology, morphology and basis for new
diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to early detection and
prevention. This broad scientific approach provides the reader with
up-to-date review of our current state of knowl edge of colorectal
carcinogenesis and indicates how this information can be used to
generate more research and create new opportunities for diagnosis
and treatment. This is a book of knowledge and ideas, some of them
still at the stage of theoretical interest, but others with
practical potential for the care of patients. I recommend it to
those who have a research interest in colorectal carcinogenesis, as
well as to readers who wish to know just how far medical scientists
have progressed in their efforts to achieve the ideal of cancer
prevention."
Alcohol abuse ranks among the most common and also the most severe
environmental hazards to human health. Its significance is
heightened by the possibility of prevention by elimination of the
habit, however, rarely exerted. The incidence of deleterious
effects on human health has relentlessly risen in the past years
for a variety of factors. They include migration of populations
and, particularly, increased urbanization. Thus, in some parts of
the world, population groups previously spared have become
involved, which is also re flected in the increasing number of
breweries and distilleries in the developing countries. Social,
religious, and gender-related barriers to alcohol consumption are
loosening, and the financial improvement of some segments of
populations now enable them to buy alcoholic beverages. Thus the
greatest percentage rise in the United States has recently been in
black women. Adolescents and young people drink more alcoholic
beverages than ever, and growing alcohol abuse by pregnant women
has let to an increase of the incidence of the fetal alcohol
syndrome. While the social and behavioral, including psychiatric,
consequences of alcoholism are staggering, the gastrointestinal
and, particularly, hepatic manifestations are the most widespread
somatic effects, and chronic hepatic disease in alcoholics appears
to cause the greatest cost to society. Indeed, mortality from liver
cirrhosis is considered a reliable index of alcohol consumption in
a country."
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