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| | Ovarian Cancer |
 | | The Gilda Radner Familial Ovarian Cancer Registry, established in 1981 at Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, N.Y., and named for Gilda Radner after her death in 1989, included 2,946 cases of ovarian cancer in 1,346 families as of January 1997. |
 | | Ovarian cancers start very small, and by the time they're large enough to feel, the cancer is most likely already advanced." The problem with ovarian cancer, she says, is that "you have to detect very small changes, and these are hard to detect on a pelvic exam because it's a very indirect examination." |
 | | If a woman or her doctor suspects ovarian cancer, diagnosis begins with a medical history of the patient, review of her symptoms, and complete physical examination, including a pelvic exam, in which the physician feels the vagina, ovaries, fallopian tubes, bladder, and rectum to check for any growths. |
| www.pueblo.gsa.gov /cic_text/health/ovarian/ovarian.htm (4518 words) |
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