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Recent Posts
- International Mesothelioma Experts Present Promising New Research Findings at the 3rd Annual International Symposium on Lung-Sparing Therapies for Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma
- Researchers at the 3rd International Symposium on Lung-Sparing Therapies for Mesothelioma Present Promising Treatments for Extending Survival and Improving Quality of Life for Victims
- $150,000 Donation from Long-Time Supporter of Mesothelioma Research Helps Support The Pacific Meso Center’s 2013 Agenda
- Pacific Meso Center Welcomes New Treasurer Anu Venkatesh
- MESOTHELIOMA EXPERTS TO MEET FOR 3rd INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON LUNG-SPARING THERAPIES FOR MALIGNANT PLEURAL MESOTHELIOMA MAY 18TH.
Articles
Testimonials
As a teen in Oxfordshire, England, 70 year-old Terry Latham excelled in sports. “I was tall and tough,” he recalls with a grin. “I played rugby. I was fast. I set all kinds of records. Looking back, sports saved me.”
From 1948 to 1959, Terry lived and attended school at the Kingham Hill School Orphanage, a place that valued basic survival skills. He both avoided and ended many a scrape, thanks in part to his strength and cunning. He learned that bullys were simply cowards with brawn and once he overcame his fears they were just another bump in the road.
Terry Latham
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Terry Latham
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Walter “Wally” Nielsen and his lovely wife, Arleen, sit surrounded by comfort and beauty – testaments to their hard work and creativity. A well-tended garden is a riot of spring color, but the leaden sky and cool drizzle portend another side of the Nielsens' seemingly idyllic life.
You wouldn’t know it from his easy going manner and natural smile, but Wally is battling an insidious cancer. This diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma came as a shock to Wally, a tall, fit, active, 74 year-old lifetime nonsmoker.
Walter “Wally” Nielsen
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Walter “Wally” Nielsen
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In 2006, Tony Chomo was involved in a motorcycle accident. But, his injuries seemed minor, and Tony went home. One month later, he found himself having a hard time breathing normally. Tony went to the emergency room at Northridge Hospital. An EKG ruled out a heart attack, but fluid was found surrounding his lung, and was drained. Tests on the fluid revealed abnormal mesothelial cancer cells, and Tony was diagnosed was malignant pleural mesothelioma.
Tony Chomo
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Tony Chomo
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