Address: Beijing's xizhimen south street, xicheng district
The British garden 1 floor. Room 824
Zip code: 100035
Telephone: 010-58562339
Fax: 010-58562339
Email address: cngjzj@163.com
Web site (click on the url link directly left) :
http://www.cngjzj.com/
Blog (click on the url link directly left) :
http://blog.sina.com.Cn/CNGJZJ
To xizhimen south street, xicheng district building to the British garden route
L airport line 1
Take the airport shuttle from the airport, the dongzhimen station transfer to metro line 2 to xizhimen direction and get off at xizhimen station, from C outbound, go straight to the east 100 meters on the right side to xizhimen south street, north to walk to the t-junction namely to the British garden 1 floor downstairs.
L airport line 2
From the capital airport take airport bus to xidan, get off at no.22, take a taxi to xizhimen south street English garden 1 floor.
L bus subway near:
106 bus GuanYuan: 107 road, express way
Bus: xizhimen south road 387, 44 road, inner ring 800, 816 road, inner ring 820, 845 road
Che zhuang: subway line two
Xizhimen subway: metro line 2
Buses and attempts: 107 road, 118 road, 701 road
Buses and north zhuang: 209 road, 375 road, 392 road
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Chinese health 中医保健 >>
Chinese health 中医保健
2018年04月12日
Weight loss is an important warning sign for cancer.
Xinhua London on April 10 (xinhua jia-wei zhang) Britain, according to a new study for lung cancer, pancreatic cancer, kidney cancer, not intentional weight loss is high risk factors for second place. It is necessary to further quantify this risk factor in order to improve the diagnostic efficiency of related cancers.
Oxford University on April 10, the report said, the school and the university of Exeter scholars research team, led by contrast analysis of the previous results of 25 studies, involving more than 11.5 million patients data.
Weight loss is associated with 10 types of cancer, including prostate, colorectal, lung, pancreatic and kidney cancer, according to the team's report in the British journal of general medicine. In particular, people over the age of 60, if there is a non-intentional weight loss, the risk of developing the above cancer will reach the level of urgent need to be examined in the relevant medical guidelines.
The report's lead author, Oxford University scholar Brian Nicholson, said it was necessary for patients with significant weight loss to examine multiple parts of the body. The next step should be to determine how much weight loss is needed to alert patients and doctors, and which types of tests can better improve cancer diagnostic efficiency.