Ductal Carcinoma, maybe some type of Breast cancer. Also is Defense Criminal Investigative Service. It's like NCIS except for the Army.
does hyperintense means herniation dcis
NCIS can be equated to a cross between the FBI and Military Police, however there jurisdiction only covers the Navy and the Marines. DCIS is part of the Department of Defense responsible for protecting military personnel from terrorist and such.
DCIS Breast Cancer is a type of non-invasive cancer, formally known as Ductal Carcinoma in Situ. It is the most common type of non-invasive breast cancer, beginning in the milk ducts and does not spread.
Are you sure it was DCI and not DCIS, because the most common acronym I can think of for something like that is: DCIS - ductal carcinoma in situ Though DCI could mean: Decompression illness D-chiral-inosotol But these last two are pretty esoteric.
The control-section-job (CSJ) number is the key descriptor for the record of each project in DCIS. Each project's CSJ is a nine-digit number consisting of four digits representing the control, two digits representing the section and a three digit job number. Enter the CSJ on the DCIS menu screen. Always enter zeros where they are part of the CSJ. Do not enter dashes. DCIS will display the CSJ with dashes for ease in reading.
Hawaii is Washington DCis no where near a Volcano you should have paid more attention in high school
The web address of the Delaware County Institute is: http://www.delcohistory.org/dcis
The Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS) is a federal law enforcement agency within the United States Department of Defense that investigates major criminal activities committed by personnel and contractors associated with DoD. DCIS also has jurisdiction over significant fraud, theft, cybercrime as well as extortion, public corruption and complicated illegal procurement schemes. The mission of DCIS is to investigate crimes impacting the U.S. military in an effort to protect national security interests.
The breast cancer that has not broken through the milk duct and has a cure rate of nearly 100% is DCIS.
I just had a pappilloma removed in Dec. It produces symptoms such as bloody nipple discharge and nipple dysfunctions. The itching could be anything from dry skin to breast infection. It's not cancer but DCIS (breast cancer of the milk ducts) can mimic an I.P. in a ultrasound so you really need to have it checked.
Tamoxifen has also been used off label for malignant glioma (type of nervous system tumor), ovarian cancer, mastalgia (breast pain), infertility, osteoporosis, and precocious puberty.AnswerPalliative or adjunctive treatment of advanced breast cancer; reduce the incidence of breast cancer in women at high risk; reduce risk of invasive breast cancer in women with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS); metastatic male breast cancer; treatment of melanoma, desmoid tumors
It would depend on the treatment you choose. Also what type of breast cancer you have. If you do nothing, the cancer will grow and shorten the life span. With treatment , and there are several options, you can live a long normal life. I am a 2x breastcancer survivor, 65 years old and presently in good health. I had stage 1 very aggressive adenocacinoma , receptor negative, and chose aggressive treatment, mastectomy and chemo therapy, I was 54 at the time. 3 years later I had DCIS in the other breast, a different primary cancer not a spread cancer, stage 0, I chose lumpectomy, chemo and radiation. There are no guaranties for the cancer not returning, but vigilant check ups , blood work and talking to your doctor is a must.The American Cancer Society has a very good web site with chat rooms where you openly can discuss everything and ask questions in detail.