Promising new CAP allows breast cancer patients keep more of your hair
Promising new CAP allows breast cancer patients keep more of your hair
For many women with breast cancer, feeling sick is hard enough without looking the part.
Thanks to the recent approval by the FDA DigniCap, hair loss does not have to be the final blow to those receiving chemotherapy for breast cancer because it has been shown to reduce the rate of hair loss associated with treatment. How it works? Nurses say two decks of the patient's head, one to keep fresh scalp and the other to isolate and "reduce the amount of chemotherapy that reaches cells of hair follicles," according to an official press approval device.
The cooling cover changes the game passed the test with great success, which is quite surprising, since it has been used successfully in Europe for more than a decade with minimal risks. (Reports of temporary headaches, chills and neck pain are not uncommon.)
"Not having to remember every time you look in the mirror who is sick, and seems normal to your friends and family, make more bearable chemotherapy," Dempsey wrote in testimony in the direction of the device. "Instead of the disease, I saw myself. Many people had no idea that I had cancer."
the Swedish inventors serious DigniCap that provide women who feel out of control with a real choice, though small proposals.
0 comments:
Post a Comment