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NOVA scienceNOW4
Joined: 27 Dec 2006 Posts: 50 Location: Boston
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Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 11:05 am Post subject: Profile: Judah Folkman |
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| When Judah Folkman first proposed his theory of angiogenesis in the early 1970s, few of his medical colleagues believed the phenomenon was real, let alone that Folkman's ideas would one day lead to new drugs for cancer and other diseases. Today, doctors routinely turn to anti-angiogenesis drugs to treat macular degeneration, and about 100,000 Americans take Avastin, the first anti-angiogenesis cancer drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Have you or your loved ones had experience with anti-angiogenesis therapies? What are your hopes for new medications that either inhibit or promote blood vessel growth? |
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ginawiz
Joined: 01 Aug 2008 Posts: 1 Location: Brookline, MA
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Posted: Fri Aug 01, 2008 2:04 am Post subject: Re: Profile: Judah Folkman |
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I had never heard of Dr. Folkman before the NOVA science NOW segment. I was so moved by his story. I couldn't believe it when I found an hour long program about him on the NOVA website. I'm surprised I missed it when it was on TV. It is the SINGLE BEST NOVA documentary ever produced. A perfect blend of human drama and science. It seems so obvious now that blood vessels would support tumor growth, but what that poor man had to go through to make other people listen to him. What a story! This is a perfect example of the value of PBS to this nation! THANKS PBS!
PS I like the narrator's voice on the NOVA, but not so much on the NOVA scienceNOW |
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allynh
Joined: 29 Jun 2008 Posts: 11
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Posted: Sat Aug 02, 2008 9:04 pm Post subject: Re: Profile: Judah Folkman |
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The Nova episode about Judah Folkman and his search to understand cancer is at:
CANCER WARRIOR
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/cancer/
Watch the episode then read the transcript.
CANCER WARRIOR Transcript
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/2805cancer.html
The thing that impacted me most about the story was how this one man kept fighting to answer a real question while his peers called him a quack and warned young doctors not to work with him. Things like this happen all the time in any professional society. Who knows how far he could have moved forward with his research if he had simply had the support of his peers. Who knows how many other great insights in medicine are sitting unexamined because of the peer pressure not to rock the boat.
As always, check out the links and make up your own mind.
Have fun. |
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