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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Giuliana Rancic celebrity news well after double lumpectomy

Giuliana Rancic is an Italian American celebrity news personality. She is a host on E! News, the E! Network's flagship entertainment news program. She was born August 17, 1975
In addition to her news anchoring duties, Rancic often co-hosts red carpet events for award shows, such as the Golden Globes and the Academy Awards. On March 13, 2006, she was joined as host of E! News by Ryan Seacrest. She is the creator and executive producer of MTV's Celebrity Rap Superstar, which premiered in 2007. She appeared in the movie Bring It On: Fight to the Finish in a brief scene. She also hosted the Miss USA 2011 beauty pageant on NBC.

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Giuliana Rancic, who announced she’s battling breast cancer in October, told the Today Show on Monday early treatments were ineffective, so she’s going to have a double mastectomy.
“Instead of radiation, I’m going to go ahead and move forward,“ Rancic -- flanked by her husband Bill -- told Ann Curry about the procedure, in which both of her breasts will be surgically removed.
 “To be honest, at the end, all it came down to was choosing to live and not looking over my shoulder the rest of my life,” Giuliana Rancic said.
Breast cancer: Microwaves help shrink tumors“We were faced with a decision to make ... this wasn’t a decision that was made lightly, we talked to as many experts as we could ... in this particular case, this is the best option for Giuliana.”
E! News host Giuliana Rancic is recovering after undergoing a double lumpectomy, CNN/People reports. Giulana’s husband, Bill, talked about her surgery on The Today Show: “Giuliana is a trooper.
She pulled through it,” he said. “She’s relieved to have it over with and get the cancer out. She’s doing well at home and recovering — and I’m adding nurse to my resume. She’s having fun with that.”
Giuliana, 37, had cancerous growths in both breasts removed, as well as lymph nodes. Giuliana announced her breast cancer diagnosis on The Today Show earlier this week, explaining that she found the cancer after

attempting in-vitro fertilization for the third time and getting a mammogram, as instructed by a doctor.
Though Giuliana was upset about the failed IVF and her miscarriage, she says her future child “will have saved my life.” If she had gotten pregnant before discovering the cancer, she could have been in more serious health trouble.
Giuliana Rancic was her double lumpectomy with flying colors and, like her husband is on us, life is a little different than before, Bill Rancic said in a television interview on Thursday morning.
Bill Rancic said she is a trouper. She went through and was kind of relieved, and gets it over with the cancer out.”
Giuliana was “doing well recovering at home,” from the two-hour operation, which was made Tuesday to remove lumps in both breasts, and some lymph nodes. Bill said that they see on their way back to the doctor on Friday if the cancer had spread to lymph nodes were, and that “God willing” Giuliana would return to the next week. Giuliana Rancic treatment wills also radiation.
“I’m a nurse now add to my resume,” said Bill, it heartbreaking to see, his wife called wheeled away for surgery. “She has enjoyed it.”
Giuliana went public with her diagnosis of breast cancer Monday. The 36-year-old only a mammogram before age 40 age, was as a symbol of fertility doctor to, she said. Rancic was the third round of in-vitro fertilization attempt, but hoped that their babies are now put on hold.
Decide to women with breast cancer often double mastectomy because she may fear the side effects of radiation, radiation-consuming cut away or removal of the tumors may be too much breast tissue and make it a cosmetic decision to remove her breasts.
“There are few situations in my head where I think it’s really in the best interest of a woman with a mastectomy, unless you want it,” said Dr. Marc Lippman, a professor and deputy director of the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer – Center at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
“If you look at the studies – six in the world – Comparison of mastectomy for breast-conserving surgery and radiotherapy, the survival of the same,” says Lippman. “Survival is not a second less lumpectomy and radiation therapy.”
Meanwhile, after breast cancer research, the radiation is reduced after a lumpectomy, the risk to tell the recurrence of the disease and improves survival in women with early breast cancer, according to a new study, and experts that the research was to their faith that helps validate women in the early stages of the disease need not to lose her breasts.
“I will not give up,” Giuliana said Monday. “I want the baby. The baby would have saved my life.”

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