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An international study found that air pollution leads to more cancer-related genetic changes than secondhand smoke.
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Health and Me on MSNYou Don’t Have To Smoke To Get Lung Cancer—Air Pollution May Be Just As DangerousNew global research links air pollution to DNA mutations found in lung cancer among non-smokers, suggesting polluted air may ...
A new study published in Nature says air pollution may be driving lung cancer development in people who have little to no ...
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Climate Crisis 247 on MSNStudy Links Air Pollution To Lung Cancer In Non-Smokers WorldwideDouglas McIntyre, Editor-in-Chief at Climate Crisis 24/7, reports on new findings linking air pollution to lung cancer in non ...
Lung cancer, the second-most common cancer in the U.S., is often associated with smoking — but even those who have never had ...
Exposure to air pollution, other contaminants and traditional herbal medicines may be contributing to the development of lung ...
A new study reveals that air pollution, traditional herbal medicines and other environmental exposures are linked to genetic ...
UC San Diego study of global lung cancer shows mutations that lead to cancer are common in people who live in cities with bad air pollution. But cancer mutations are quite close to normal among ...
Research from the NIH’s National Cancer Institute, an agency beleaguered by funding cuts and censorship, finds that ...
Scientists solve one of the most common causes of lung cancer, and it has nothing to do with tobacco
Why are more and more non-smokers developing lung cancer? An international study published Wednesday in Nature believes the ...
Air pollution and traditional herbal medicines could be major risk factors contributing to the development of lung cancer in people with no history of smoking, a groundbreaking new study has found.
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