Mother's Bones

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May 25, 2011

City of Hope, an NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center, located near Los Angeles, California.

Histopathology Bone--Multiple myeloma



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Myeloma for beginners - Understanding myeloma



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CancerTV: Understanding Multiple Myeloma



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Multiple Myeloma: International Myeloma Foundation

City of Hope's Walk for Hope - A National Fundraising Walk to Fight Wome...


For hundreds of thousands who face womens cancers each year, hope is a precious thing. These mothers, daughters, sisters and wives count on places like City of Hope, where award-winning care offers the chance to overcome disease and innovative research cultivates new, better therapies on the path to cures.
  Walk for Hope is a series of eight national walks and a virtual walk to raise necessary funds to continue groundbreaking research at City of Hope and to raise awareness of womens cancers. Without funds, research is impossible. And without research, the cure to cancer is a far away dream.

Please join us today in the fight by registering to participate, donating or supporting the cause. Visit http://www.walk4hope.org to learn more.

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Louise M. Perkins, Ph.D. discusses the importance of the Multiple Myelom...



From: TheMMRF | Mar 23, 2011 | 790 views
The MMRF's Multiple Myeloma Genomics Initiative (MMGI), the most extensive research collaboration ever focused on the genomics of multiple myeloma, was spearheaded by the MMRF, which built the collaboration between world-class genomics centers and leading myeloma clinicians, as well as provided funding and tissue samples from the Multiple Myeloma Research Consortium (MMRC) Tissue Bank. Watch this video of Louise M. Perkins, Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer of the MMRF, highlighting recent results and how this research will pave the way toward personalized medicine in multiple myeloma.
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MMRF 2010 Corporate Video



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Multiple Myeloma - Cancer Council Victoria

Multiple Myeloma - Cancer Council Victoria

Multiple myeloma

Multiple myeloma is cancer of the plasma cells in bone marrow. Normally, the body makes as many plasma cells as it needs. When a person has multiple myeloma, too many plasma cells are made. This causes overcrowding in the bone marrow, which prevents adequate numbers of normal blood cells forming.