treatment
A British teenager with severe epilepsy has become the first child in the world to receive a brain implant to control his seizures. Doctors at London's Great Ormond Street Hospital fitted a neurostimulator under 13-year-old Oran Knowlson's skull. It sends electrical signals deep into the brain, and has reduced his seizures by around 80 percent. After years of having up to 300 seizures a day, his mum, Justine, said: "I feel like I'm getting my child back a little bit, bit by bit. It's going to take time, but for the first time in ten years, we actually have hope." Three more children will soon ...
Euronews (English)
Some cancer patients may have better outcomes with less intensive treatment, according to several new studies. Research presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology conference in Chicago looked at ovarian and oesophageal cancer and Hodgkin lymphoma. It's part of a trend of studying whether less surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation can help patients to live longer and feel better. Decades ago, cancer research was instead about doing more, but researchers are now asking if all the treatment is needed. Often, doing less works because of improved drugs. "The good news is that cancer trea...
Euronews (English)
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