Monday, February 11, 2008

Hair test cuts breast cancer errors

Detecting breast cancer from changes in the structure of hair could cut down false alarms from mammograms.

The test bombards strands of hair with X-rays from a synchrotron particle accelerator. In hair from healthy people, the pattern produced by the X-rays is a series of arcs, while in people with breast cancer a distinctive ring is superimposed on top of the arcs.

Though the test first showed promise in 1999 (Nature, vol 398, p 33), other researchers failed to repeat the results. Now Peter French and Gary Corino of the company Fermiscan in Sydney, Australia, say this is because hair is damaged by products such as dyes, by stretching as it is held in the X-ray beam, or because it is wrongly aligned in the beam. Their device holds hair in the correct position, does not stretch it and tests only the untreated hair a few ...


Read More

No comments: