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This isn’t much more than a Disease of the Week movie dressed up with a pair of great breasts.
Mesothelioma is a form of cancer that is normally caused by asbestos exposure. Mesothelioma is cancer that occurs in the mesothelium.
Mesothelioma:
Mesothelioma is a type of cancer affecting the cells of mesothelial lining in the chest and abdomen. Mesothelioma cancer can develop in the tissues covering the lungs or the abdomen. Mesothelioma has also been found in the stomach and other abdominal organs but it is much rarer in those areas than are both pleural mesothelioma and peritoneal mesothelioma. Mesothelioma can also occur in the ovaries and scrotum. Mesothelioma invades the chest wall or the esophagus during the second stage.Mesothelioma also takes a long time to develop (typically 15-40 years), so patients today could have been exposed prior to the 1980s when asbestos was not highly regulated. Mesothelioma is not caused by smoking, as lung cancer so often is.
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Symptoms:
Symptoms One of the most common symptoms of mesothelioma is an accumulation of fluid between the lining of the lung and the chest cavity. Symptoms include:abdominal painascites, or an abnormal buildup of fluid in the abdomen a mass in the abdomen problems with bowel function weight loss. Symptoms such as trouble swallowing, pain, or swelling of the neck and face can be indications that the cancer has spread beyond the mesotheliom to other parts of the body. Symptoms of pleural mesothelioma include persistent pain in the chest and severe difficulty breathing caused by pleural effusion, or an accumulation of fluid in the pleural lining Cough, weight loss, and fever are also common symptoms. Symptoms of peritoneal mesothelioma include weight loss and abdominal pain and swelling due to a buildup of fluid in the abdomen. Symptoms of mesothelioma may not appear until 20 to 50 years after exposure to asbestos.
Diagnosis:
The key to long-term survival from treatment of mesothelioma is early diagnosis, which enables the greatest potential for success from standard therapies. Diagnosis begins with a review of the patient’s medical history, including any history of asbestos exposure. Diagnosis of Mesothelioma is based on a pathological exam, more commonly referred to as a biopsy.Since this disease can be hard to diagnosis and costly to treat, it may require the consultation of an experienced attorney. When conclusive diagnosis cannot be made from fluid samples, diagnosis is often made through a surgical procedure called a throrascopy.The average age at diagnosis of mesothelioma is between 50 and 70 years old, with men being affected three to five times more often than women. The diagnosis may be suspected with chest X-ray and CT scan, and is confirmed with a biopsy (tissue sample) and microscopic examination. The median survival time is 17 months, with ten percent of patients living for three years after diagnosis.
Conclusion:
Mesothelioma is a deadly cancer which is fairly rare although in the last few decades the number of people who have died from it have dramatically increased. Mesothelioma is a rare form of cancer, but the deadliest one of all. Mesothelioma is a rare form of cancer and only affects between 2,000 and 3,000 people in the United States per year. Mesothelioma is less common in African Americans than in white Americans. Mesothelioma is rare in people under age 55. National Cancer Institute stats show that 3000 new diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma is reported each year. Mesothelioma is not always fatal and that is the hope to hold on to.
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Opera may be getting most of its attention these days from its mobile browsers, but that doesn’t mean that the company is ignoring its desktop browser. The first beta for Opera 11 introduces a long-missing extensions API in a lightweight profile similar to those that run on WebKit-powered browsers like Chrome and Safari.
Available for Windows and Mac, Opera 11 beta 1 debuts other minor but useful changes. The most noticeable of these is tab stacks, a tab grouping mechanism similar in concept to Firefox’s Panorama but completely based in the tab bar. To use it, drag one tab on top of another. The bottom tab will disappear and an arrow will appear to the right of the tab. Click it and the tabs in the stack will slide out to one side. To break up a stack, drag a tab off the stack. Mouse over the stack to see previews for all the tabs in the stack.
Another tweak made to tabs is that when you pin a tab, it will automatically jump to the left side of the tab bar. The personal bar has been replaced by a bookmarks bar, both pulling the browser into parity with the competition and making bookmarks accessible with one click.
Plug-ins such as Adobe Flash can now be set to load on-demand, via a checkbox under the Content section in Preferences. This will allows pages to load content faster and minimize somewhat third-party plug-in based exploits, and was impressively smooth in its implementation.
Opera's extension network will look and feel familiar to anybody who's used extensions in the WebKit-based Chrome and Safari.
(Credit:
Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
Opera claims the tweak can improve performance up to 30 percent, and that the browser’s performance in general has been improved. Opera says that Opera 11 beta 1 is 15 percent to 20 percent faster than Opera 10.63 on Linux, and that the browser size on disk has been reduced by almost one-third.
Opera’s security badge system marking sites as verified safe has received an overhaul, too. Click on the gray “Web” globe icon to the left of the URL bar to check a site’s status. Getting information returned was quick with some sites and slow to stalled with others in the beta. Other color-coded badges include yellow for “secure” and green for “trusted.” Opera’s take on the feature is interesting because it provides quick links for reporting a site as fraud or malware. When browsing with Opera Turbo on, the badge will display estimated data savings.
Finally, the mouse gestures tutorial has been given a visual refresh, making it easier to learn them.
Opera’s extensions gallery has 131 extensions at the time of writing, which sounds tiny except for the fact that extension support has been available only in a limited alpha release for the past month and appear to be mostly sourced from Opera internal development team. Now that the feature is ready for a wider release with the beta, expect the number of user-contributed add-ons to jump.
Tab stacks group your tabs using drag-and-drop, and are visible via mouse-over previews, so they feel like an extension of your current tab navigating habits.
(Credit:
Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
Much like the WebKit-based add-on network, Opera’s extensions install as buttons to the right of the search bar and auto-update. While they might seem to some users to be in conflict with the browser’s existing widget network, Opera spokesman Thomas Ford says that’s not the case. “Widgets are stand-alone Web-based applications. They are meant to showcase the browser as an application platform. To that end, widgets work across PCs, phones, TVs and other environments. Extensions are really there to let you tweak and customize your browser experience.”
An Opera 11 beta has not yet been made available for Linux users. Linux users who want to experience the new features can download the regularly updated Opera 11 alpha snapshot.
Comparing KitchenAid stand mixers with a single click from Target’s Web site works well.
(Credit:
Screenshot by Jasmine France)
Like it or not, the holiday shopping season is upon us. Luckily for those of us who dread the thought of wandering through crowded malls and department stores with Christmas music assaulting our ears at every turn, this nifty little tool called the Internet is here to help save our sanity. Still, scouring dozens of Web sites for the very best deal on that perfect gift is exhausting on a whole ‘nother level. To that end, Superfish–a visual search engine developer that just raised $4 million in funding–has created a nifty app called Window Shopper.
Window Shopper is a browser add-on that’s available for IE and Firefox. The extension is quite simple: if you’re shopping for an item within any of the hundreds of available stores, a “See Similar” button will appear next to the photo of the item. Clicking the button brings up a bubble (your virtual window, as it were) that shows pics, prices, and availability of similar products.
Just how similar the comparison items are varies, though. For instance, the KitchenAid stand mixer I searched for on Target.com populated a selection of the exact same product from across various sites (as shown in the screenshot above). However, a comparison for a pair of shoes on Nordstrom’s Web site produced rather different results.
In other words, the Window Shopper app may give you directly competing listings for the item you’re interested in, or it may populate a list of similar (but different) products, possibly even from the same site. Thus, the usefulness varies depending on what exactly you’re looking for: a better price or similar items. There doesn’t appear to be a way to tinker with settings to focus in on what you need.
The other issue is that it doesn’t work on all sites (Zappos being a prime example), and the functionality doesn’t activate if, say, there’s a video instead of a still image in the main product slot (as with the Kindle on Amazon). Still, Window Shopper’s still in beta–and it’s free–so these are a minor complaints, really. It’s worth checking out if you do a lot of online shopping.
The latest Firefox 4 beta comes with an easy hack to help tab addicts cover the high cost of memory-devouring tabs. Watch how to enable this key function of the BarTab add-on, without installing the add-on itself.
With the startling variety of products offered by online retail giant Amazon.com, it’s no wonder the site is the go-to Web depot for all manner of holiday shopper. Interestingly, though, digital media gifting was notably absent from the store’s repertoire–until last week. The company first announced a new feature allowing Kindle book gifting; unsurprisingly, MP3 gifting capability was launched almost immediately after.
Giving the gift of digital music is just as straightforward as you’d expect, and works largely in the same manner as e-book gifting. Simply visit the Amazon MP3 Music store, select a single track or an entire album, and enter the e-mail address of the recipient. You also have the option to add a personal note along with your musical offering.
Once all the requisite info is filled out, you can check out and select payment as with any other Amazon purchase. The recipient of the MP3 gift will be notified by e-mail within 5 minutes. The recipient is prompted to download the tracks, or has the option of exchanging the gift for store credit–a handy feature for those with finicky taste in music.
Sadly, there doesn’t appear to an option to schedule the timing of the e-mail for, say, Christmas morning or a person’s birthday. Also, I have to say that though any gesture is sure to be appreciated, fully digital gifts aren’t nearly as exciting as a wrapped package or even an envelope-ensconced card–there’s just no substitute for that tangibility. That said, the ability to send one-off MP3s via Amazon is definitely a welcome feature.
Originally posted at Webware

With CoBrowser, your iPad becomes a kind of second monitor for your iPhone–great for big-screen browsing.
(Credit:
Collect3)
Ever heard the term “kludge”? It refers to a workaround, a cobbled-together solution to a problem. Usually, it ain’t pretty, but it works.
Collect3′s CoBrowser is a kludge, a way around Apple’s limitation on apps that enable tethering. With it, a Wi-Fi iPad can tap an iPhone’s 3G connectivity–no jailbreaking required. It’s extremely limited, and it ain’t pretty, but it works.
Just to clarify, CoBrowser doesn’t actually tether your iPad to your iPhone. Instead, it shares the latter’s screen with the former, and then only for Web browsing. Before you shake your head in dismay, consider the value in being able to surf on your iPad even when there’s no Wi-Fi available. Pretty tempting, right?
To get started, install the $1.99 app on both your devices, then enable Bluetooth on both–it’s how CoBrowser communicates. Run the app on your iPhone and tap Host Session; then run it on your iPad and tap Join Session. Presto! You’re connected.
Once this happens, CoBrowser launches its own custom browser (one that’s virtually identical to Safari)–on both devices. As you’ll quickly discover, the iPhone is actually sharing its screen with the iPad; that’s the “tethering” trick CoBrowser pulls off. So as you browse on your iPhone, you see everything writ large on the iPad.
It works the other way, too–you can navigate the browser on your iPad as well–but with one very irksome limitation: whenever you open a page or tap a link on the iPad, an “Accept Incoming Request” alert appears on your iPhone, and you have to tap to confirm it. Every single time.
That definitely diminishes the overall experience, which is why you may prefer to do the navigating on your iPhone and only the reading on your iPad. What’s more, the CoBrowser browser offers no way to import your existing bookmarks, another irksome limitation. And if you want to do anything other than browsing–check e-mail, stream a video, etc.–you can forget it.
Like I said, it’s a kludge. But it works, and does so for the extremely affordable price of 2 bucks. To put that in some perspective, AT&T charges an extra $20 per month for traditional tethering. If you own an iPhone and a Wi-Fi iPad, you may find CoBrowser the answer to a prayer. Or half the answer, anyway.
Originally posted at iPhone Atlas
Those of you ready to shop for the holidays now have a new tool to find the best prices.

Available today in Apple’s App Store, Amazon’s new and free Price Check for the iPhone tries to find the best deals on items among both online and offline retailers. iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch users shopping at their favorite outlets can compare prices on the shelves against those at other stores as well as at Amazon and other online vendors.
You’ll find a variety of ways to get the app to recognize an item. You can take a picture of the product’s bar code. You can snap a photo of a book, DVD, CD, or video game. You can speak the name of the product. If all else fails, you can simply type the name of the item into the app’s search field.
Amazon then matches the product’s photo or description with the same item already in its database and provides a list of vendors and their respective prices. Price Check even offers details on the item and reviews from other Amazon users.
If you find an item and a price you like, you can buy the item directly through the app, whether it’s sold by Amazon or by another retailer through Amazon. You can share prices on your favorite items through e-mail, Facebook, or Twitter as a not-so-subtle holiday wish list for friends and family.
“We’ve worked hard to have low prices at Amazon, and we like it when customers comparison shop so they know they’re getting a good deal,” Sam Hall, director of Amazon Mobile, said in a statement. “We hope this app will empower customers to shop with confidence this holiday and any other day.”
I tried the app on my iPod Touch, and the accuracy was solid. I snapped pictures of different books and CDs, and Price Check got every item right, each time pointing me to Amazon and other online bookstores and CD sellers. The voice recognition was equally on the money. I spoke the names of some of the tech gadgets cluttering my office, and the app picked up each one and again delivered prices from several different retailers. Beyond tracking down those items, the app can find many other products, from appliances to jewelry to clothes to groceries.
For anyone planning to hit the local stores and malls this season, Price Check can be a handy app to take with you to make sure your favorite retailer is giving you the best deal.
Originally posted at Crave