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mata hari

09/03/10 11:10 PM

#27178 RE: Gold Seeker #27177

and inverness medical signed a license agreement AFTER the abbott/biocurex presentation at the 2007 isobm meeting. remember when you were pumping this stock giving out misleading expectations and timelines.

this stock has been manipulated. hull management who has been doing business with the nir group who is being investigated by the feds has some kind of swab agreement with another otc bb company involving bocx warrants. the shorting and manipulating b.s. and all the other trappings of this corrupt space are being finally exposed.

sincerely,

mr. mata






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HALF FULL GLASS

09/03/10 11:17 PM

#27179 RE: Gold Seeker #27177

Gold, Please tell the entire story...All of the markers have a range and each person can test within or above that range. This is why one registers a preoperative range and then looks to see if it decreases.

Gold stated, "Tentacle, unfortunately, the doctor would not know the normal level of RECAF for the patient involved. All he might possibly know is the pre-treatment level and the post treatment level. The normal level of RECAF for anyone varies from low to even above he normal cutoff level of 4700 units that would indicate cancer. So, in no way would a doctor be able to tell if the cancer is all gone with a RECAF test. That is the main problem with RECAF.

PSA Velocity
Patients often present with a rising PSA. The PSA velocity is defined as the rate of change of the PSA over a period time. For patients whose PSA is less than 2, a velocity of greater than 0.35 ng/mL per year is cause for concern. Patients with a PSA of 4-10 have reasons for concern when the PSA velocity is greater than 0.75 ng/ml. So while a rise in PSA from 1 to 1.5 may be a cause for concern, a rise from 5 to 5.5 may not.

CA 125
Note: some women maybe at zero while some normals may also be at 35...
A Normal values range from 0 to 35 (µg/mL). In pre-menopausal women, the test is less reliable as values are often elevated due to a number of non-cancerous causes, and a value above 35 is not necessarily a cause for concern.

CEA
Note: EVEN CEA levels vary from person to person...
Since not all cancers produce CEA, it is possible to have cancer but also have a normal CEA level.
The normal range for CEA in an adult non-smoker is <2.5 ng/ml and for a smoker <5.0 ng/ml.

It is normally produced during fetal development, but the production of CEA stops before birth. Therefore, it is not usually present in the blood of healthy adults, although levels are raised in heavy smokers




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tentacle

09/04/10 5:58 PM

#27189 RE: Gold Seeker #27177

Interesting, but if recaf is as accurate as claimed, everyone should get a baseline while healthy, and go from there. It sounds like a cheap test. If that sounds extreme, consider that almost 50% of the population will get cancer.