Showing posts with label Cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cancer. Show all posts

Friday, December 18, 2009

What is Lupus?

What is Lupus?
Sat, Dec 05, 2009
The Straits Times

Lupus is a chronic illness where the immune system attacks healthy cells and tissues by mistake.

The most common type of lupus, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), affects many parts of the body.

Women are most at risk of developing the disease, with the female to male patient ratio at nine to one. The peak age of onset in women is between the late teens and early 40s.

Those with African, Hispanic, native American or Asian ancestry are more prone to developing lupus.

Factors like sun exposure, viral infection and drugs can trigger the disorder but no one cause has been identified.

Genetics can also play a part in SLE. Dr Anita Lim, a consultant in the division of rheumatology at National University Hospital, said: "SLE can strike suddenly but usually the person affected by it would have been feeling unwell for some time before seeking medical attention."

Symptoms include fatigue, mouth ulcers, hair loss, rashes and joint pain. There is no cure for lupus but medication like antimalarial drugs, steroids and steroid sparing agents, which are drugs that modify the course of the disease, help to control the disease.

Steroids are usually used in the beginning as they fight the inflammation very quickly.

Dr Lim said: "It is possible for lupus to go into remission. However, the patient will need to remain on long-term follow-up medication."

Asked if treatment regimens for lupus and cancer modify each other's effects, Dr Lim said: "Cancer needs to be treated irrespective of lupus and the specialists involved will work together on how the different therapies should be used.

"Treatment for lupus modulates the immune system and treatment for cancer will also have effects on the immune system."

The Lupus Association

The Lupus Association (Singapore) was set up in 1992 and has 300 members currently. There are around 4,000 lupus patients in Singapore.

Dr Leong Keng Hong, vice-president of the association and consultant rheumatologist at Gleneagles Medical Centre, said: "The association was set up to help educate patients, their caregivers and the public about the illness. It is a rather complicated disease and sufferers are often afraid when they're diagnosed."

This article was first published in Mind Your Body, The Straits Times.

Living with lupus
Wed, Dec 10, 2008
NST

IF any newly diagnosed Systemic Lupus Erythematosus patient asks Chee Siew Lan for advice in dealing with the chronic illness, she has only this to say: "Never give up."

Having lived with this incurable illness for 21 years, she knows that she would not be alive if she had given up hope and didn't have the determination to fight it.

"When I had the symptoms in 1987, no one knew what it was. Lupus was unheard of at that time. The doctor even told me that I had only five years to live. But I refused to give up. I did my own research and learnt all about the symptoms, treatment and medication. I learned the things that I could and could not do as a lupus sufferer.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

No-meat, no-sex myths about cancer patients

No-meat, no-sex myths about cancer patients
Dec 03, 2009
New Straits Times

By Annie Freeda Cruez

KUALA LUMPUR - Who says cancer patients cannot include sugar in their drinks, eat meat or take rice for lunch or dinner?

There are also some who say that patients cannot have sex and should not be touched as "cancer is infectious".

According to Dr Albert Lim of the Malaysian Oncology Society (MOS), these are common myths that needed to be debunked.

"I ask them (people who spread these myths), how do you fight cancer if the patient does not have proper nutrition?" he said at the launching of Hope, a second handbook for cancer caregivers.

The book provides comprehensive information on the dos and don'ts involving cancer patients, dispelling many of the common misconceptions and fallacies surrounding cancer care.

The book includes educational articles on cancer and programmes for healthcare professionals.

The Hope project was also aimed at providing accurate information relating to cancer to help patients, caregivers, the public and healthcare professionals make informed decisions about screening, early detection and treatment of cancer.

Pfizer (M) Sdn Bhd managing director, Ahmet Genel, said the project was part of the company's commitment to playing an active role in raising awareness on cancer prevention, screening and early detection.

MOS president Datuk Dr Mohd Ibrahim Wahid said the book was part of an ongoing initiative by the society and Pfizer Malaysia to create awareness on how to care for cancer patients including providing information on diagnosis, treatment and management of the disease.

"The caregiver's role is as important for a patient's recovery as the therapy that the patient has to undergo," he said.

Meanwhile, Dr Ahmad Kamal said in his talk, on the "Crucial Role of Caregivers", that cancer caregivers should be prepared to sacrifice a great deal for the sake of patients. It can affect you emotionally and physically and financially.

"However, you will also experience gratifying and often unexpected rewards." Dr Ahmad said.

The handbook is also distributed through oncology clinics, cancer support groups and the MOS website at http://www.malaysiaoncology.org.

The public can also pose questions related to cancer.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Are you at risk of cancer?

Are you at risk of cancer?
Mon, Jun 15, 2009
The Star/Asia News Network

By: Datuk Dr Adel Zaatar

THIS is the first of a two-part article that outlines the important role of understanding the risk factors involved in developing cancer in general and the role of cancer prevention, public education, early detection and screening programmes for cancer in particular.

Cancer has been a taboo word for many years. To many people, the word cancer often causes concern and fear. A diagnosis of cancer is often thought to be a death sentence. Yet, many people are cured of cancer while many others continue to lead very full, active lives even if they are not completely cured.


Cancer is not a single disease.

It is a word that covers over one hundred different types of malignant diseases, which have different causes and are treated in different ways.

Cancer is a genetic disease. The cause of cancer is complex and involves damage to our genetic make-up. If, for any reason, some of our genes rage out of control, cancer may develop. The first rule for cancer cells is that they follow no rules. Cancer begins when a single cell in the body mutates, is unable to grow in the normal way and starts to overgrow and spread.

Who gets cancer?

The answer is anyone. Cancer knows no social, economic or educational boundaries. It affects the young and the old, the rich and the poor, male and female alike. It is known that the incidence of cancer rises with age. Most cases of cancer affects adults in mid-life or older.

What are the risk factors?

Doctors often cannot explain why one person develops cancer and another person does not. However, certain risk factors increase the chance that a person will develop cancer.

The concept of risk appears often in articles about cancer. In general terms, risk is the probability that an event will occur. In terms of cancer, risk refers to the likelihood that a person will develop cancer, experience a recurrence of their cancer after treatment or benefit from treatment of their disease.

A risk factor is anything that affects your chance of getting a disease. Different cancers have different risk factors. For example exposing skin continuously to strong sunlight and ultraviolet radiation is a risk factor for skin cancer. Smoking is a risk factor for cancers of the lung, mouth and throat.

But risk factors do not tell us everything. Having a risk factor or even more than one risk factor does not mean that you will get the disease. For example, most women who have one or more breast cancer risk factors never develop breast cancer while many women with breast cancer have no apparent risk factors - other than being female and growing older. Even when a woman with risk factors develops breast cancer, it is hard to know just how much these factors may have contributed to her cancer. Although risk factors can influence the development of cancer, most do not directly cause cancer.

There are different kinds of risk factors. Some factors, like a person's age or race, cannot be changed. Other risk factors are linked to cancer-causing factors in the environment, while others are related to personal habits such as smoking, drinking alcohol and diet. Some factors influence risk more than others and your risk of developing cancer can change over time due to factors such as ageing or personal lifestyle choices.

Understanding your risk for developing cancer is important. People who have close relatives with cancer or close relatives who have died from cancer, especially at a younger age, may be at higher risk of developing cancer. For example, a woman whose mother or sister had breast cancer is twice as likely to develop breast cancer than an otherwise similar woman who does not have the same family history.

Examples of risk factors

The risk factors for developing cancer are both external and internal and several are personal lifestyle choices. Some examples of risk factors and personal lifestyle choices are:

Growing older

- Tobacco consumption

- Continuous exposure to sunlight

- Ultraviolet radiation

- Certain chemicals

- Some viruses and bacteria

- Family history of cancer

- Heavy alcohol consumption

- Imbalanced diet

- Lack of physical activity

- Being overweight

The risk factors you cannot change include:

Gender

Simply being a woman is the main risk factor for developing breast cancer. The main reason is that a woman's breast cells are constantly exposed to the growth-promoting effects of the female hormones oestrogen and progesterone.

Age

It is known that the risk of developing cancer increases as you get older. Most cancers occur in people over the age of 60 years. But people of all ages including children can get cancer.

Family history

Some cancers tend to run in families, so knowing what disease you are at risk of is a big plus. Self-examinations and annual cancer screening examinations are recommended. We know that early detection can pick-up cancer at its earliest most treatable stage.

Studies have shown that cancer is related to our genetic profile, which cannot be changed. Most cancers develop because of mutations in our genes. A normal cell may become cancerous after a series of gene changes occur. Tobacco use, certain viruses or other factors in the environment may cause changes in certain cells in the body to become cancer. In the second part of our article next month, we will look at lifestyle-related cancer risks and the prevention strategies. Stay tuned. -The Star/ANN

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Bride dies 2 weeks after this photo was taken

Tue, May 26, 2009
The New Paper
Bride dies 2 weeks after this photo was taken
by Chong Shin Yen

FOR a few precious moments, the pallid spectre of death was replaced by the blush of true love. In a place of pain, there was joy. In the midst of crisis, there was celebration.

She was dying. But on that special day in a hospice, she was alive with love.

Her boyfriend of 15 years, retired businessman Teo Jit Sin, proposed. Two weeks later, on 26 Apr, they got married.

Exactly two weeks later, she died.

Breast cancer had taken away Madam Goh Guat Eng, 54, a former secretary, just as it had killed Mr Teo's first wife.

This time, however, he refused to buckle under the certainty of death.

'I wanted to give her a proper status as my wife,' Mr Teo, 62, told The New Paper on Sunday at his wife's wake in Ang Mo Kio.

'I wanted everyone to know her as Mrs Teo.'

The couple had been going out for 15 years but the idea of marriage never came up.

'To us, a marriage certificate was just a piece of paper. We felt that as long as we were happy together, that was enough.'

But towards the end of Madam Goh's life, Mr Teo changed his mind.

Recalling the day he popped the question, Mr Teo said that it was a 'simple' affair. There was no ring or flowers.

Nods with a smile

'I asked her 'shall we get married?', and she nodded with a smile. That was it.'

The couple held their customary wedding in a hall at the HCA Hospice Care on 26 Apr, a Sunday.

Exactly two weeks later, on 10 May, Madam Goh died in the hospice at about 1.30am, with Mr Teo and other relatives by her bed.

HCA Hospice Care is a voluntary welfare organisation at Jalan Tan Tock Seng.

Madam Goh moved to the hospice in March after her condition deteriorated.

She was unable to breathe on her own.

On her big day, she was a 30kg shrunken shadow of her former, healthy 60kg self. She had to be in a wheelchair throughout the ceremony. A tube attached to her nose helped her breathe.

But in the eyes of her husband, relatives and friends in the room, she was radiant in a red floral top and black skirt.

Said Mr Teo: 'The guests commented that although she was feeble, she was glowing with joy and she looked contented.'

The couple's guests included their friends and relatives, and doctors and nurses at the hospice.

The hall was decorated with pink and red heart-shaped balloons. A violinist played in the background.

Guests cheered and clapped as the couple exchanged wedding rings and cut their two-tier wedding cake.

But there were fears before the festivity.

'She was worried and scared,' he said, 'that she might not live till that day.

'But on our big day, I could tell that she was very happy. It was as though her last wish had been fulfilled.'

As Mr Teo spoke about that day, he flipped through their wedding album, pointing to photos of Madam Goh beaming.

He said the most tender and touching moment was when he picked up the microphone and sang a Mandarin song for his new wife.

'Everything that I wanted to tell her was all in the lyrics of this song,' he said.

The song was titled 'zui ai de ren' (Mandarin for The One I Love Most).

He and the guests fought back tears as he sang, while Madam Goh smiled calmly.

'She was her usual unassuming and cheerful self,' he said.

Madam Goh was diagnosed with breast cancer about two years ago. She completed the chemotherapy treatment and her cancer went into remission.

'We thought she was all right and we went on a lot of holidays together. We travelled to Dubai, Turkey and even drove to Malaysia and Hatyai,' said Mr Teo.

But at the start of this year, Madam Goh's condition worsened and she lost weight rapidly.

That was when she stopped working.

Said Mr Teo: 'She told me not to be sad. She also asked me not to cook any more expensive food such as bird's nest for her as it would be wasted.

'She said that as long as I'm by her side, it was enough.'

Two months before her death, Madam Goh moved to the hospice on the advice of her doctor.

Mr Teo would visit her twice a day, once in the morning and once in the evening.

'I would cook her favourite dishes like fish and double-boiled soup and bring it to the hospice to eat with her,' he said.

This was Mr Teo's second marriage and Madam Goh's first.

Mr Teo's first wife died of breast cancer in 1992. She was in her 40s and she left behind three children.

Called her 'mother'

The children, who are now in their 30s, grew close to Madam Goh and called her 'mother'.

Mr Teo said he first got to know Madam Goh in the '80s.

Back then, he was a businessman dealing with building materials, while Madam Goh was a secretary for one of his business associates.

Mr Teo recalled: 'I was married when I first met her. We became friends. Whenever I encountered problems, she was there to help me.'

Love blossomed in 1994, two years after Mr Teo's first wife died from cancer. The couple had been together since.

After Madam Goh became ill, Mr Teo moved from his Pasir Ris home to her Ang Mo Kio flat so he could care for her.

'She was someone who put others at ease and would never reject any friend who needed her help,' said Mr Teo.

'All these years, she never asked me for anything. The first and last thing I could give her would be a proper status as my wife.'

He added that although they only went through a customary wedding, to them and their relatives, they are already considered man and wife.

When Madam Goh was cremated on 14 May, 15 years of love and devotion, and two weeks of life as husband and wife, had come to an end.

Truly, sadly, till death did they part.

This article was first published in The New Paper

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Research sheds new light on why pancreatic cancer drugs fail

Research sheds new light on why pancreatic cancer drugs fail
Published on 21 May 2009, 11:27

An international team of scientists, led by researchers based at the Cambridge Research Institute, have discovered a new mechanism that may explain why pancreatic cancer patients are often resistant to a common chemotherapy treatment, germcitabine.

The study, published in the journal Science today, shows that a genetically modified mouse model of pancreatic cancer, which closely resembles human cancer, is largely resistant to germcitabine treatment. It is hoped that these results will help scientists overcome a common resistance to germcitabine and make future chemotherapy drugs more effective.

The scientists had set out to discover why promising drugs generally fail in pancreatic cancer clinical trials. They found that in these mice studies pancreatic cancer is resistant to chemotherapy because the tumours tend to have poor networks of blood vessels called vasculature, which makes it harder for drugs to reach the tumour.

Working with groups at Addenbrooke's Hospital, the Johns Hopkins Hospital, the University of Dresden, MD Anderson Cancer Centre, University of Pittsburgh and the Fred Hutchison Cancer Research Centre, they also noted that human pancreatic cancer samples also contained a deficient blood supply, suggesting that their observation should also be applicable to patients.

Senior author Dr David Tuveson, group leader in tumour modeling and experimental medicine at Cancer Research UK's Cambridge Research Institute, said: "We're extremely excited by these results as they may help explain the disappointing response that many pancreatic cancer patients receive from chemotherapy drugs."

The study also found that the genetically modified mice displayed the same resistance to gemcitabine as seen in human pancreatic cancer, whereas the transplantation mouse models traditionally used to develop chemotherapy treatments were sensitive to gemcitabine. This means that the new genetically modified models could prove superior in developing new treatments in the future.

When the scientists added the compound called IPI-926, created by Infinity Pharmaceuticals, to gemcitabine, they noticed increased cell death and a reduction of the pancreatic tumour size. Using this combination the researcher believe that it could re-open the door to several new treatments which have, so far, proven disappointing in patient trials for pancreatic cancer because of poor drug delivery.

"But these are early days and we need to show this approach is safe to use in humans before we can consider adding the new compound to cancer treatments," said Dr Tuveson.

These findings may also help to explain why pancreatic cancer does not respond to anti-angiogenic drugs such as VEGF inhibitors when many other cancers do. These are a new class of drugs which starve the tumour by restricting its blood supply. As pancreatic cancers don't seem to need as good a supply of blood to the tumour as other cancers, the scientists believe that they may need to introduce additional drugs to help stop tumour growth.

The scientists at Cancer Research UK's Cambridge Research Institute were co-funded by The Lustgarten Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.

The Cancer Research UK Cambridge Research Institute is a major new research centre which aims to take the scientific strengths of Cambridge to practical application for the benefit of cancer patients. The Institute is a unique partnership between the University of Cambridge and Cancer Research UK. It is housed in the Li Ka Shing Centre, a state-of-the-art research facility located on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus which was generously funded by Hutchison Whampoa Ltd, Cambridge University, Cancer Research UK, The Atlantic Philanthropies and a range of other donors. For more information visit www.cambridgecancer.org.uk.

Contact: The Office of Communications, Tel: 01223 332300, Fax: 01223 330262, Email: communications@admin.cam.ac.uk

Source: University of Cambridge

Friday, March 27, 2009

Very hot tea may cause throat cancer: study

Very hot tea may cause throat cancer: study
Fri, Mar 27, 2009
Reuters

By Michael Kahn

LONDON (Reuters) - Drinking hot tea may cause throat cancer, Iranian researchers said Friday, suggesting people should let steaming drinks cool before consuming them.

Previous studies have linked tobacco and alcohol with cancer of the oesophagus, and the research published in the British Medical Journal suggests that scalding beverages may also somehow pave the way for such tumors.

Drinking very hot tea at a temperature of greater than 70 degrees Celsius was associated with an eight-fold increased risk of throat cancer compared to sipping warm or lukewarm tea at less than 65 degrees, the researchers said.

Reza Malekzadeh of Tehran University of Medical Sciences and colleagues studied the tea-drinking habits of 300 people with oesophageal cancer and another 571 healthy men and women from the same area in Golestan Province in northern Iran.

That region has one of the highest rates of throat cancer in the world but smoking rates and alcohol consumption are low, the researchers said. Nearly all the volunteers drank black tea regularly, consuming on average more than a liter each day.

People who regularly drank tea less than two minutes after pouring were five times more likely to develop the cancer compared to those who waited four or more minutes, the researchers said.

British studies have reported people prefer their tea at an average temperature of 56 degrees to 60 degrees, they noted.

It is not clear how hot tea might cause cancer but one idea is that repeated thermal injury to the lining of the throat somehow initiates it, researchers said.

Cancers of the oesophagus kill more than 500,000 people worldwide each year, with the bulk of the disease occurring in discrete populations in Asia, Africa, and South America. The tumors are especially deadly, with five-year survival rates of 12 to 31 percent.

Earlier this week, U.S. and Japanese researchers reported that about a third of East Asians -- Chinese, Japanese and Koreans -- have an enzyme deficiency that puts them at higher risk of developing oesophageal cancer when they drink alcohol.

Friday, March 20, 2009

But not yet, Lord

Religion, medicine and death

But not yet, Lord

Mar 19th 2009 | NEW YORK
From The Economist print edition

Religious people seem curiously reluctant to meet their maker

HOW do a person’s religious beliefs influence his attitude to terminal illness? The answer is surprising. You might expect the religious to accept death as God’s will and, while not hurrying towards it, not to seek to prolong their lives using heroic and often traumatic medical procedures. Atheists, by contrast, have nothing to look forward to after death, so they might be expected to cling to life.

In fact, it is the other way round—at least according to a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association by Andrea Phelps and her colleagues at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. Religious people seem to use their faith to cope with the pain and degradation that “aggressive” medical treatment entails, even though such treatment rarely makes much odds.

Dr Phelps and her team followed the last months of 345 cancer patients. The participants were not asked directly how religious they were but, rather, about how they used any religious belief they had to cope with difficult situations by, for example, “seeking God’s love and care”. The score from this questionnaire was compared with their requests for such things as the use of mechanical ventilation to keep them alive and resuscitation to bring them back from the dead.

The correlation was strong. More than 11% of those with the highest scores underwent mechanical ventilation; less than 4% of those with the lowest did so. For resuscitation the figures were 7% and 2%.

Explaining the unpleasantness and futility of the procedures does not seem to make much difference, either. Holly Prigerson, one of Dr Phelps’s co-authors, was involved in another study at Dana-Farber which was published earlier this month in the Archives of Internal Medicine. This showed that when doctors had frank conversations about the end of life with terminally ill cancer patients, the patients typically chose not to request very intensive medical interventions.

According to Dr Prigerson, though, such end-of-life chats had little impact on “religious copers”, most of whom still wanted doctors to make every effort to keep them alive. Saint Augustine of Hippo, one of Christianity’s most revered figures, famously asked God to help him achieve “chastity and continence, but not yet”. When it comes to meeting their maker, many religious people seem to have a similar attitude.

Friday, February 27, 2009

Docs, mind your bedside manner

Docs, mind your bedside manner
Feb 27, 2009
The Straits Times

By Dr Ang Peng Tiam

This could very well be an apocryphal tale, but I have a suspicion it is more true than false. When Mrs Lim, a 79-year old lady, first noticed a lump in her left breast in 2006, she went alone to see a doctor who was introduced to her by a friend.

She recalled that he had told her: 'Call your family. You have cancer and you need to have surgery to remove your breast.' That message frightened her so much that she ran away and did not seek further medical advice about the lump.

She committed her illness to God and prayed fervently for divine healing. She tried all sorts of Chinese herbal medicine - lingzhi, pian zi huang and others - but to no avail.

By Chinese New Year last month, her left arm was swollen because of lymphedema (accumulation of fluid in the soft tissue). This is caused by destruction of the lymph nodes in the armpit by the cancer cells.

By this time the lump was bigger than a golf ball and could be seen if one looked closely at it. There was an unusual bulge above the breast on the left side, as if something was stuffed into the bra.

She finally revealed her illness to her family.

When she came to see me, it took me more than an hour to convince her of her illness and the need for treatment. She had an aggressive hormone-receptor negative breast cancer that needed targeted therapy.

With the help of her five children, I managed to convince her that her cancer was treatable. After one cycle of treatment, her cancer literally melted away like ice on a hot stove. 'God is really good,' she exclaimed.

I have no doubt that there is divine intervention in cancer, as with other inexplicable areas in life, but there is also a place for something more prosaic - like good communication skills.

I do not know who the doctor was who first saw her. I cannot even be sure that the account of that consultation is accurate. However, there is a lesson all doctors (including myself) can learn from this.

At every contact, especially the first, we have to be careful about what we say and how we say it. It sometimes does not matter how well-intentioned our words are but what counts is what the patient understands and what he takes away from that often brief visit.

Mrs Lim's tumour was probably not as advanced 21/2 years ago. Now, the cancer has already infiltrated the skin, involved the lymph nodes in the armpit and spread to the liver. In other words, she now has Stage 4 breast cancer.

It was pointless to consider surgery and her best option was to have palliative chemotherapy to treat her disease. While the chemotherapy has melted the tumour and she may even go into remission, her cancer cannot be cured. It will eventually recur.

Communication is such an important part of medicine. Yet, I really do not remember being coached on how to talk to patients when I was in medical school. We were left to learn by observing how our teachers interacted with patients.

I hope that things have changed and that the present curriculum does emphasise the importance of communication.

There is no one 'best' way to talk to a patient. It is not always necessary to tell all the 'bad news' at the first sitting, especially if the patient has come to the consultation alone.

The doctor must remember that the patient may never come back again. That is why it is important to keep the door open for the patient to either come back to see him or perhaps see other doctors so that care can be continued.

The care of cancer requires a great deal of understanding about the psychology of the patient. Each one is different.

Some want the facts without the icing. Others want lots of pampering. That is why it is important, in the selection of medical students, that we go beyond academic grades and emphasise 'emotional quotient'. A doctor must be able to assess the situation quickly and know how to make the patient feel comfortable.

When it is a question of life and death, when questions are unasked which nonetheless need to be answered, when obvious truths prefer to remain unsaid, you need to know that the patient has understood you perfectly.

Dr Ang, the medical director of Parkway Cancer Centre, has been treating cancer patients for nearly 20 years. In 1996, he was awarded Singapore's National Science Award for his outstanding contributions to medical research.

This article was first published in Mind Your Body, The Straits Times.

Natural Cancer KILLER

Natural Cancer KILLER - 10,000 times stronger than Chemo and more.....

How many people died in vain while this billion-dollar
drug maker concealed the secret of the miraculous Graviola tree?

If there ever was a single example that makes it dramatically clear why the existence of Health Sciences Institute is so vital to Americans like you, it's the incredible story behind the Graviola tree.

The truth is stunningly simple: Deep within the Amazon Rainforest grows a tree that could literally revolutionize what you, your doctor, and the rest of the world thinks about cancer treatment and chances of survival. The future has never looked more promising.

Research shows that with extracts from this miraculous tree it now may be possible to...

* Attack cancer safely and effectively with an all-natural therapy that does not cause extreme nausea, weight loss and hair loss
* Protect your immune system and avoid deadly infections
* Feel stronger and healthier throughout the course of the treatment
* Boost your energy and improve your outlook on life

The source of this information is just as stunning: It comes from one of America 's largest drug manufacturers, the fruit of over 20 laboratory tests conducted since the 1970's! What those tests revealed was nothing short of mind numbing... Extracts from the tree were shown to:

* Effectively target and kill malignant cells in 12 types of cancer, including colon, breast, prostate, lung and pancreatic cancer.
* The tree compounds proved to be up to 10,000 times stronger in slowing the growth of cancer cells than Adriamycin, a commonly used chemotherapeutic drug!
* What's more, unlike chemotherapy, the compound extracted from the Graviola tree selectively hunts down and kills only cancer cells. It does not harm healthy cells!

The amazing anti-cancer properties of the Graviola tree have been extensively researched--so why haven't you heard anything about it? If Graviola extract is as half as promising as it appears to be--why doesn't every single oncologist at every major hospital insist on using it on all his or her patients?

The spine-chilling answer illustrates just how easily our health--and for many, our very lives(!)--are controlled by money and power.

Graviola--the plant that worked too well

One of America 's biggest billion-dollar drug makers began a search for a cancer cure and their research centered on Graviola, a legendary healing tree from the Amazon Rainforest.

Various parts of the Graviola tree--including the bark, leaves, roots, fruit and fruit-seeds--have been used for centuries by medicine men and native Indians in South America to treat heart disease, asthma, liver problems and arthritis. Going on very little documented scientific evidence, the company poured money and resources into testing the tree's anti-cancerous properties--and were shocked by the results. Graviola proved itself to be a cancer-killing dynamo.

But that's where the Graviola story nearly ended.

The company had one huge problem with the Graviola tree--it's completely natural, and so, under federal law, not patentable. There's no way to make serious profits from it.

It turns out the drug company invested nearly seven years trying to synthesize two of the Graviola tree's most powerful anti-cancer ingredients. If they could isolate and produce man-made clones of what makes the Graviola so potent, they'd be able to patent it and make their money back. Alas, they hit a brick wall. The original simply could not be replicated. There was no way the company could protect its profits--or even make back the millions it poured into research.

As the dream of huge profits evaporated, their testing on Graviola came to a screeching halt. Even worse, the company shelved the entire project and chose not to publish the findings of its research!

Luckily, however, there was one scientist from the Graviola research team whose conscience wouldn't let him see such atrocity committed. Risking his career, he contacted a company that's dedicated to harvesting medical plants from the Amazon Rainforest and blew the whistle.

Miracle unleashed

When researchers at the Health Sciences Institute were alerted to the news of Graviola, they began tracking the research done on the cancer-killing tree. Evidence of the astounding effectiveness of Graviola--and its shocking cover-up--came in fast and furious...

...The National Cancer Institute performed the first scientific research in 1976. The results showed that Graviola's "leaves and stems were found effective in attacking and destroying malignant cells." Inexplicably, the results were published in an internal report and never released to the public...

...Since 1976, Graviola has proven to be an immensely potent cancer killer in 20 independent laboratory tests, yet no double-blind clinical trials--the typical benchmark mainstream doctors and journals use to judge a treatment's value--were ever initiated...

...A study published in the Journal of Natural Products, following a recent study conducted at Catholic University of South Korea stated that one chemical in Graviola was found to selectively kill colon cancer cells at "10,000 times the potency of (the commonly used chemotherapy drug) Adriamycin..."

...The most significant part of the Catholic University of South Korea report is that Graviola was shown to selectively target the cancer cells, leaving healthy cells untouched. Unlike chemotherapy, which indiscriminately targets all actively reproducing cells (such as stomach and hair cells), causing the often devastating side effects of nausea and hair loss in cancer patients.

...A study at Purdue University recently found that leaves from the Graviola tree killed cancer cells among six human cell lines and were especially effective against prostate, pancreatic and lung cancers...

Seven years of silence broken--it's finally here!

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Cancer Care Seeks to Take Patients Beyond Survival

Cancer Care Seeks to Take Patients Beyond Survival

J. Emilio Flores for The New York Times

RECOVERY Tanya Saunders survived cancer but suffers effects of her treatment.

Published: May 22, 2007

As a growing number of Americans are learning, surviving cancer can mean slipping into a rabbit hole of long-term medical problems — from premature menopause and sexual dysfunction to more debilitating side effects of chemotherapy and radiation, like heart disease and even new cancers.

The realization that cancer and its aftermath can go on for years has given rise to a medical specialty known as survivorship. At several major hospitals around the country, survivor programs financed by the Lance Armstrong Foundation are focusing on life after cancer.

“It’s no longer sufficient to say, ‘Well, you survived,’ ” said Mary S. McCabe, who directs the program at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. “We need to maximize their recovery and quality of life.”

Cancer treatment and research are expanding to incorporate long-term postcancer care. With the number of survivors up to 10 million in the United States, from 3 million in the 1970s, cancer is increasingly being treated as a chronic disease, like diabetes or multiple sclerosis. As the presidential candidate John Edwards said in March after his wife, Elizabeth, learned that her breast cancer had returned and spread, the disease was “no longer curable” but “completely treatable.”

At U.C.L.A. Medical Center in Los Angeles, Dr. Patricia A. Ganz is helping patients like Tanya Saunders close gaps in their medical care. Staying healthy has become a full-time job for Ms. Saunders, who has endured one complication after another in the 15 years since she received her diagnosis of Hodgkin’s disease as a college student.

Radiation and chemotherapy thrust her into menopause. After a recurrence and a second round of treatments, she developed congestive heart failure. Last year, the bone tissue in one of her hips collapsed, forcing her to undergo a hip transplant.

Now 36, Ms. Saunders takes 11 medicines a day. She exercises three days a week with other cardiac patients, sees a much-loved psychotherapist (who is treating her free of charge) once a week and takes pottery and sailing classes. She lives on disability payments and qualifies for Medicare.

“It’s a kind of a renewal of spirit I would say I’m looking for while I try to get my strength back,” Ms. Saunders said.

Another patient of Dr. Ganz’s, Karen Huner, credits her with diagnosing and treating the hypothyroidism that was causing exhaustion and headaches months after she was cured of breast cancer. Other doctors had told her that the symptoms were effects of chemotherapy and that she should “just get used to it,” said Ms. Huner, a 44-year-old yoga and pilates instructor. In fact, she added, it was the radiation she received that probably disrupted her thyroid function.

She recently developed lymphodema, the painful swelling and water retention that can happen in the arm where lymph nodes were removed.

“My lymphodema doctor said to me, ‘Be happy you’re alive,’ ” Ms. Huner said. “I almost strangled her.”

The potential side effects of radiation and chemotherapy have been known for years, especially among survivors of childhood cancers. But the big push for awareness and support followed a strongly worded report in 2005 from the Institute of Medicine, part of the National Academy of Sciences.

“The transition from active treatment to post-treatment care is critical to long-term health,” it concluded. “If care is not planned and coordinated, cancer survivors are left without knowledge of their heightened risks and a follow-up plan of action.” Insurers, it added, “should recognize survivorship care as an essential part of cancer care.”

Another problem is that survivors may shy away from doctors, and not just because of the cost. Dr. Anna T. Meadows, a pediatric oncologist who directs the survivors’ program at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, said people who got their diagnoses as children or teenagers were often wary of care that would force them to revisit a painful part of their past. These survivors do not necessarily need a cancer specialist for routine checkups and screening, she said, but rather someone who understands their previous treatment and its risks.

“A lot of cancer survivors have nothing wrong with them,” Dr. Meadows said. “But what is important is for anybody who’s had cancer is to know what treatment they received and what it’s likely to lead to in the future.” The program is adding two primary care doctors to encourage follow-up visits.

In the largest study so far of survivors of childhood or adolescent cancer, published last October in The New England Journal of Medicine, researchers documented a high rate of illness because of chronic conditions caused by life-saving treatments. The study tracked the health of nearly 10,400 adults now in their 20s, 30s and 40s who were treated for cancer between 1970 and 1986.

More than 62 percent of those survivors had at least one chronic condition; nearly 28 percent had a severe or life-threatening one. The survivors were more than three times as likely as their siblings to have a chronic health condition, and women were at greater risk than men. Survivors of bone tumors, central nervous system tumors and Hodgkin’s disease had the highest risk of a serious chronic condition.

The good news is that almost 80 percent of children and teenagers who get diagnoses of cancer today become long-term survivors. Moreover, treatments have changed to minimize the risks; the lowest effective doses of drugs and radiation are used.

“The silver lining of this is that we know what to expect a reasonable amount of the time,” said Dr. Kevin C. Oeffinger of Sloan-Kettering, a lead author of the report. While young cancer patients are more vulnerable to damage because their organs are still growing, Dr. Oeffinger said, the study has obvious implications for adults.

Age and type of treatment play a huge role in the experience of cancer survivors, several experts said. Many experience no side effects at all. Others, especially women of child-bearing age, face infertility and early menopause.

“Our research shows that younger patients have a harder time, both physically and emotionally,” said Dr. Ganz, of U.C.L.A. “It’s not something they’ve expected.”

At Sloan-Kettering, five social workers are assigned to concentrate exclusively on follow-up care for survivors. Part of the plan, at Sloan and other cancer centers, is to develop an online database of patient-care summaries — of the cancer treatment received, the potential risks and recommended follow-up care — that could be used by any physician.

The hospital also plans to open an off-campus outpatient center devoted to cancer survivors’ physical rehabilitation, in part with a donation from the media entrepreneur Robert F. X. Sillerman, who was treated at Sloan-Kettering six years ago for tongue cancer. He received chemotherapy and radiation and later began to suffer pain and muscle spasms in his shoulders and back, as well as increasing weakness in his left arm.

Today, Mr. Sillerman said, he has reversed the damage with a little bit of medication and a lot of physical therapy. He exercises six days a week with weights, bands and manual resistance, partly with a personal physical therapist whom he puts up in a Manhattan townhouse adjoining his family’s. He said he appreciated the fact that few have the same luxury.

“I was two years out from my cure before I was able to find the right protocol and treatment,” said Mr. Sillerman, 59. “Our hope is to eliminate that and provide access to rehabilitation right away, initially in the New York metropolitan area and eventually to make that a template nationally.”

For premature menopause in patients who can safely use estrogen, Dr. Mercedes Castiel likes to give teenagers and young women birth control pills to control hot flashes and bone loss. “It’s nicer to say I’m on the pill like my peers instead of hormones like my grandmother,” said Dr. Castiel, director of the Barbara White Fishman Women’s Health Center at Sloan.

Even sexual dysfunction, which for years was viewed as a small price to pay for survival, is now treated like any other side effect. Vaginal dryness and missed or blunted orgasms are among the most common complaints.

“We look at it in terms of enhancing intimacy,” said Dr. Michael L. Krychman, Sloan’s expert on the subject. “They want things to get back to normal.”

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

CAP warns of ovarian cancer risk in talcum powder

Wednesday February 18, 2009

CAP warns of ovarian cancer risk in talcum powder

GEORGE TOWN: Instead of using talcum powder which poses health risks, consumers should use traditional bedak sejuk (rice talcum), says the Consumers Association of Penang (CAP).

The association made the call following findings in the United States that suggest that women who use talcum powder are 40% more likely to suffer from ovarian cancer.

»Women with ovarian cancer used talcum powder on their genitals more frequently than healthy women« S.M. MOHD IDRIS

CAP president S.M. Mohd Idris said bedak sejuk (powder made from rice flour) and powder made from corn flour were good alternatives to talcum powder.

He cited a study from the Harvard Medical School in the United States that found, from a sample of more than 3,000 women, that those using talcum once a week had a 36% higher risk of getting ovarian cancer while those using talcum daily faced a 41% higher risk.

A website that provides medical news, www.news-medical.net, reported that the study also revealed that the risk was greater still for those with a certain genetic profile.

The study’s lead researcher, Dr Maggie Gates, was also reported as saying that women should avoid using talcum powder in the genital area until more research was done,

Mohd Idris told a press conference yesterday that, despite the dangers associated with talcum powder, there were numerous talcum powder products in the market.

Some of these products were also baby products, he said.

“The majority of talcum products are being produced by well-known players in the industry and consumers buy them as they love the feel of talcum on their skin,” he added.

“Powder is an effective absorbent to help deodorise and imparts a silky touch.”

Mohd Idris said the primary component in talcum powder is magnesium silicate hydroxide, also commonly known as talc, which is the main ingredient in baby, medicated and designer perfumed body powder.

“Talc particles are capable of moving up the reproductive system and being embedded in the ovary lining,” he said.

“Researchers have found talc particles in ovarian tumour and they have also discovered that women with ovarian cancer used talcum powder on their genitals more frequently than healthy women.”

He urged the Health Ministry to place a warning on products containing talc and to stop the marketing of baby powder containing talc.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Two-pronged route to better health

Two-pronged route to better health
Fri, Jan 16, 2009
New Straits Times

By Kasmiah Mustapha

THE next time you are at the doctor's office, be sure to ask about health screening packages.

Today almost every medical centre offers medical packages tailored to an individual's needs, age and gender. Basic health screening includes a complete physical examination, chest x-ray, urine and blood tests, and an electrocardiography (ECG) test.

With a simple blood or urine test, the doctor is able to detect whether you are at risk of kidney problems, cardiovascular diseases and even cancer. The test can also determine if you have a healthy liver or high blood sugar level.

Prevention is better than cure, both in managing our health as well as in reducing the financial burden of treating an affliction.
Treatment for chronic illnesses such as diabetes can be long and costly. To make matters worse, it can lead to other related diseases if diagnosed at a later stage. Early detection is crucial and one of the ways is through frequent health screenings.

Kelana Jaya Medical Centre consultant physician and gastroenterologist Dr Abdul Malik Jamal Buhari says a health screening should be done at least once in a lifetime, if you are not in the high-risk group. Those between 35 and 40 years of age should undergo it once a year or once in two years.

"If you are in the high-risk group, such as having a family history of heart problems or diabetes, do a blood test every three to four months. But even if you are not at risk, it is advisable to have a cholesterol and blood sugar level screening every year.

"If you do not wish to go for the more advanced packages, the basic is good enough to detect these diseases. You can opt for the complete screening later if you feel that you need to know more."

The basic screening test includes a full blood count to detect the level of red and white blood cells, fasting blood glucose and fasting cholesterol levels, liver and kidney functions, and a urine test. A patient can opt for cancer marker tests and a HIV test.

The fasting blood glucose test helps detect if the patient is diabetic. If the blood sugar level is more than seven mmol per litre, than he or she is a diabetic. However if the level is between five and seven mmol per litre, it is considered borderline diabetes, which needs to be monitored.

"The normal blood sugar level is below 5.6 mmol per litre. If the blood test is done randomly, without the person fasting for 10 hours before taking the test, the normal level is 7.8 mmol per litre."

The blood test can also detect cholesterol levels - low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and high-density lipoprotein (HDL). Total cholesterol level should not be more than 5.2 mmol per litre.

"However, we look at LDL and HDL levels individually to detect if the person is at risk. It's best to have low LDL and high HDL."

LDL - also known as "bad" cholesterol - can slowly build up in the inner walls of the arteries and form plaque (a thick, hard deposit that can clog arteries). This condition, known as atherosclerosis, can lead to a heart attack or stroke.

In contrast, the high level of HDL - "good" cholesterol - protects against heart disease. It is believed that HDL removes excess cholesterol from arterial plaque, slowing its build-up.

Dr Abdul Malik says the LDL level should be below 3.4 mmol per litre. For a diabetic, it must be below 2.6 mmol per litre. Those who have both diabetes and heart disease, or have suffered a heart attack, must ensure their LDL level is at or below 1.8 mmol per litre.

The liver function test detects levels of ALT and AST enzymes in the organ. High levels of these enzymes are proof of liver damage likely caused by fatty liver and hepatitis C, among others.

"We are seeing more cases of fatty liver now brought on by obesity, diabetes, hypertension and high cholesterol. The worrying fact is that many may not realise they have problems with the liver as there are no early symptoms and it is hard to detect."

Fatty liver is one of the most common forms of liver disease and is known to lead to critical conditions. If steps are not taken to control the risks, it can lead to cirrhosis, which can be life-threatening.

Dr Abdul Malik says those who have fatty liver may suffer from cirrhosis in the next 10 to 20 years.

"The number of Malaysians who are obese and diabetic is increasing. If they don't take care of their condition, they will eventually have fatty liver."

A blood test can also be done to detect certain types of cancer such as breast, uterus, ovary, liver, pancreas, colon and stomach.

"The test is about 50 to 60 per cent accurate. But you need to discuss it with the doctor if you want it. It is the same with the HIV test. Doctors have to seek permission from the patient. It is unethical to do these tests without a patient's consent."

Some health screening packages include a stress test to assess the condition of the heart. It is also called the treadmill ECG to determine cardiovascular fitness levels and if there is adequate blood flow to the heart during increasing levels of activity while the patient is running on the treadmill.

While health screenings help with early detection and treatment, it is also important that the person changes his lifestyle even if the screening does not detect any abnormalities, says Dr Abdul Malik.

"Exercise and eating healthily are important to better health management," he emphasised.

This story was first published in the New Straits Times on Jan 13, 2009.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Netizens mourn blogger's death

Netizens mourn blogger's death
Tue, Jan 06, 2009
The New Paper

THEY did not know her.

Yet, dozens of netizens found they could empathise with Miss Shandy Sim, a 30-year-old bank manager who blogged about her six-month battle with cancer.

Sadly, her story ended last week with the post: 'Shandy passed away this morning. We were all beside her when she left us peacefully.'

Her brother, Mr Edmund Sim, 28, a banking executive, had written this to inform those who had been following Miss Sim's online account of what turned out to be her last weeks.

She died of cervical cancer on 26Dec.

Mr Sim told The New Paper on Sunday that his sister was much loved by family and friends, with 80 mourners turning up for her funeral on Tuesday.

More than 10 strangers also sent condolences through the blog and text messages to Mr Sim.

The end came just six months after a cancerous mass was discovered on Miss Sim's pelvis. In June, she began feeling pain in her left leg.

Mr Sim said: 'Initially, she thought it was aching muscles as she had gym sessions. She had a healthy lifestyle and never drank or smoked.

'Only when her leg swelled up did we go for a medical check. By then, doctors said her cancer was at Stage3.'

What followed were four days of crying as the illness ended Miss Sim's hopes of having children.

Soon after being diagnosed, Miss Sim, who was single and lived in a Tanglin condominium, set up a blog on her fight with cancer and her optimism that she would win the battle.

The blog, at http://shandysim.blogspot.com, touched the hearts of many netizens because of its positive attitude towards life and death, said her brother.

Titled 'Adventures of Radioactive Girl', the blog details her experiences while undergoing chemotherapy.

Despite the pain and discomfort, Miss Sim still managed to inject humour into her posts.

In one post, she wrote that she had lost a lot of weight after chemotherapy, ending the post by saying, 'Am waiting for Marie France Slimming Centre to endorse me. hehehe.'

In another, she wrote about losing control of her bladder while on heavy sedatives.

'My mum and aunt had put me in these amazingly huge diapers. I totally hate them. Not that I don't have a choice about wearing them. I can live in the loo. Haha,' she wrote.

Before getting cancer, Miss Sim was a high flyer in a bank, becoming a branch manager at the age of 25. She earned enough to holiday in London every summer and drive a Saab car.

Mr Sim said his sister had a passion for her job.

He said: 'She was very much like the young executive - full of confidence and passion for her job and life. My sister enjoyed working where she felt important and her contribution to the company was never left unnoticed.

'Never once did I hear her say she was tired from working.'

Menopause

Miss Sim also went through early menopause as her reproductive system shut down.

In one entry, she quipped: 'I am most probably your youngest menopausing friend.'

Her blog gained a following, so much so that fellow cancer sufferers offered to visit her in the National University Hospital, saying they understood what she was going through.

As the cancer spread through her body, Miss Sim became too weak to update her blog and her brother took over from 20Oct.

Even then, her family wanted those who came to visit to project a positive attitude by wearing brightly coloured clothes and avoiding solemn expressions.

By mid-December, doctors told Miss Sim's family to be mentally prepared to lose her as the cancer had spread to more parts of her body.

She died on the morning of Boxing Day, surrounded by her family.

This article was first published in The New Paper on Jan 4, 2009.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

CAP call to ban plastic tumblers (Polycarbonate, PC)

CAP call to ban plastic tumblers
By : Audrey Dermawan

2008/12/23
CAP president Datuk S.M. Mohamed Idris
CAP president Datuk S.M. Mohamed Idris

GEORGE TOWN: The Consumers Association of Penang (CAP) is calling for an immediate ban on the use of plastic water bottles made from polycarbonate in schools.

CAP claims polycarbonate bottles could have detrimental effects on the health of children as it leaches out bisphenol A (BPA).

BPA has been linked with health problems such as impairment of reproductive organs and tumour formation.

BPA is also an "environmental hormone" which disrupts the endocrine system of humans and animals.

Its president, S.M. Mohamed Idris, said here yesterday: "With the coming of the new school year, parents will buy water bottles for their schoolgoing children.
"However, they should avoid getting water bottles made from polycarbonate. We will write to the Education Ministry and other authorities to alert them about this."

Idris said BPA could leach into the content of the bottles through normal wear and tear, as well as exposure to heat and cleaning agents.

He said a study conducted by the University of Missouri in the United States and published in the Journal of Environmental Health Perspectives revealed that BPA could even leach into liquids at room temperature.

He added that another study, conducted by researchers in California and published in the journal Cancer Research, had found that many genes in non-cancerous breast cells exposed to trace amounts of BPA began acting in a way that resembled the gene activities in aggressive breast tumour cells.

The study results were designated as a "priority report", published by the American Association of Cancer Research, a leading organisation devoted to study cancer.

"The Canadian Health Ministry is calling BPA a dangerous substance, making it the first regulatory body to take the initial step towards implementing measures to control exposure to the chemical.

"In view of the dangers associated with BPA, CAP calls on the Education Ministry and other authorities to impose a ban on the use of polycarbonate bottles in schools."

Polycarbonate water bottles with the letters PC next to it.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Some breast cancers may naturally regress: study

Some breast cancers may naturally regress: study
Wed, Nov 26, 2008
Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - Researchers who tracked breast cancer rates in Norwegian women proposed the controversial notion on Monday that some tumours found with mammograms might otherwise naturally disappear on their own if left undetected.

But leading cancer experts expressed doubt about the findings and urged women to continue to get regular mammograms, saying this screening technique unquestionably saves lives by finding breast cancer early on when it is most treatable.

Dr. Per-Henrik Zahl of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health in Oslo and Norwegian and U.S. colleagues examined invasive breast cancer rates among nearly 120,000 women age 50 to 64 who had a mammogram -- an X-ray of the breast used to find evidence of cancer -- every two years over a six-year period.

They compared the number of breast cancers detected with another group of about 110,000 Norwegian women of the same age and similar backgrounds who were screened just once at the end of the six-year period.

The researchers said they expected to find no differences in breast cancer rates but instead found 22 percent more invasive breast tumours in the group who had mammograms every two years.

This raises the possibility that some cancers somehow disappear naturally, although there is no biological reason to explain how this might be, according to Zahl, whose findings were published in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

"We are the first ones to publish such a theory," Zahl said in a telephone interview. "What we say is many cancers must spontaneously disappear or regress because we cannot find them at later screenings. I have no biological explanation for this."

Mammography and breast self-examination for tumours are standard methods used for early detection of breast cancer, the leading cause of cancer deaths among women worldwide.

The American Cancer Society estimated that about 465,000 women die of breast cancer globally each year, and 1.3 million new cases are diagnosed.

"I think generally when we look at studies like this it is important to keep in mind there are some studies that change practice and others that make us think a little bit more, said Dr. Eric Winer, director of the Breast Oncology Center at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

"The idea that somehow these cancers go away entirely is, I would say, an intriguing hypothesis, but one we don't have a lot of evidence to support," said Winer, who was speaking on behalf of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

In much of Europe women undergo mammograms every two years after age 50 except for in Britain where it is every three years, Zahl said. The American Cancer Society recommends that women get an annual mammogram beginning at age 40.

Bob Smith, director of cancer screening for the American Cancer Society, said Zahl's team misinterpreted the data, and expressed doubt about the idea that a significant number of breast tumours "spontaneously regress."

"I imagine there are still some people who believe the Earth is flat, but there are not very many of them," Smith said in a telephone interview. "It's not usual -- it happens every day that research is published that gets it wrong."

The researchers acknowledged many doctors might be skeptical of the idea but they cited 32 reported cases of a breast cancer regressing, a small number for such a common disease.

The researchers said their findings provide new insight on what is "arguably the major harm associated with mammographic screening, namely, the detection and treatment of cancers that would otherwise regress."

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Cancer survivors dismayed by blanket ban on yoga

Monday November 24, 2008

Cancer survivors dismayed by blanket ban on yoga

By SA’ODAH ELIAS

PETALING JAYA: Many Muslim cancer survivors who practise yoga to promote general wellbeing are disappointed and confused over the National Fatwa Council’s edict on the ancient form of exercise.

National Cancer Society of Malaysia’s advisor Datuk Zuraidah Atan said she had been inundated with calls from the survivors who were confused and apprehensive over the edict or fatwa.

“An overreaching fatwa like this is not good for them as unnecessary worry can have a negative effect on them psychologically and physically. Some are already feeling guilty for practising it.

“There is a need for the Fatwa Council to explain their edict properly so that Muslims who practise yoga, including cancer survivors are not made to feel guilty,” she said.

Zuraidah said the council organised a weekly free yoga session for cancer survivors, especially those who were over 40 as a form of relaxation and breathing exercise.

“Besides yoga, we also have qi gong sessions. Is the Fatwa Council going to ban qi gong, too, because it has its origins in Buddhism? Then how about line dancing? We also organise that as a form of light exercise for cancer survivors,” she said.

She said yoga, qi gong and line dancing were good for cancer survivors because they were group dynamics which also helped promote positive thinking and unity among survivors of different race and religion.

She said there were many levels of yoga and only yoga in its purest form involved religious chanting.

“Most Muslims know this. The yoga that is being taught in yoga centres nationwide only concentrates on techniques and has nothing to do with the promotion of Hinduism,” she added.

The National Fatwa Council on Saturday declared that yoga is haram (prohibited) in Islam and Muslims are banned from practising it.

Chairman Datuk Dr Abdul Shukor Husin said yoga had been practised by the Hindu community for thousands of years and incorporated physical movements, religious elements together with chants and worshipping, with the aim of being one with God.

He noted that while merely doing the physical movements of yoga without the worshipping and chanting might not be against religious beliefs, Muslims should avoid practising it altogether as doing one part of yoga would lead to another.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Effect of coffee enema

Effect of coffee enema

1) Introduction

I went to America to study as a resident of surgeon in 1963. The previous year, Silent Spring by Rachel Carson was published, in which she warned that the agrochemical and chemical synthetic materials invented in 20th Century could damage the nature and human body. It is the first sign of warning.

At the time America was in the boom of “mass production and mass consumption to symbolize richness” and was enjoying the food. During that time, in the medical world even very small polyps had to be extirpated by means of abdominal operation. I was having a serious doubt in such surgeries for a long time, and in 1969 I finally developed the epoch-making surgery of extirpating colon polyp using colonoscopy without abdominal operation.

In the process of inspection using colonoscopy, I discovered that people who had good intestinal phase were more likely to have good health. Since then I have done about 300,000 medical inspections and 100,000 polypectomies. As the result, I became confident that fine health was based on proper diet hence normal elimination that makes good bowel condition.

2) The change of diet brings tremendous burden on your bowel

I have had nearly 40 years of experience in medical care both in Japan and America.

During the 1960s, Japanese diet was rapidly westernized and high-calorie and high-protein diet became common. Besides, we were buying more and more fast food and eating out more. At the same time, the hazardous environment change including air pollution, ambient pollution, soil change, overuse of agrochemical and chemical fertilizer started having an effect on our health. My 300,000 diagnoses told me that those bad elements affected human bowel.

What is healthy diet;

  1. Eat locally produced natural products
  2. Follow the nutritious balance as follows;
    Cereal & beans: vegetable & fruits: meat & fish = 5:2:1
  3. Take in animal protein from seafood
  4. Keep healthy diet
    Chew food well
    Eat at least 4-5 hours before going to bed
    Eat moderately, do not overeat
    Preferably avoid eating between meals
  5. Eat fermented food including miso (bean paste) and natto
  6. Eat less sugar
  7. Avoid processed food and ready meals with a lot of food additives

Those are the advice I having been giving to my patients. It is not always easy to stick to these rules in our busy society.

Even if patients have regular bowel movement everyday, I still find, through the polypectomy examination, a lot of them have food scum in their bowel wall or colon fold. The scum goes off and poison the bowel in the environment of 36.5℃ body temperature within 24 hours. The best thing to get rid of the scum outside your body before it goes off.

3) Digesting mechanism and elimination time

When you eat, digestion in your mouth starts at first with spit. Amylase, one of digestive enzyme is in spit, which has power to melt down amylum. 1g of amylase melts down 5 tons of amylum in 15 minutes. Food becomes acidy in the stomach and after being fully digested with hydrochloric acid and pepsin, the outlet of stomach (exit of stomach) opens from where food is sent to duodena. Digestive fluid in duodena is called bile and pancreatic fluid. Bile is a strong alkaline fluid of ph8.2-8.5.

1g of Lipase, one of digestive enzyme, dissolve 5kg of fat to glycerin and fatty acid. Pancreatic fluid has some enzymes. One of them is pepchitase that melts down amylum and the other is trypsin that melts down protein so that most food is digested in your duodena and then absorbed in your small intestine. Food melted in your stomach is mixed with some digestive enzymes such as pepchitase, lipase, trypsin, etc. and is degraded, then finally changed to nutrient grain. These nutrients are taken in by ciliation or micro-ciliation during passing through your small intestine, which is 6m in length.
The residuum digested is sent to your large intestine.

In your large intestine moisture and mineral get absorbed. The length of your large intestine is about 1.5m and consists of 6 parts including an appendix, an ascending colon, a transverse colon, a descending colon, a sigmoid and an archo. It takes about 9-10 hours for unwanted grain and non-digested material to reach your archo and get removed from anus as feces.

4) Gas-forming caused by inadequately digested food

Examining with a colonoscopy, cancer or polyp is usually found in the fold of large intestine where feces is likely to pile up. The diverticulum or the area where bowel spasm is chronically strong is the places for feces to halt because the feces flow is not smooth.

As you become older, the number of good bacteria in your bowel decreases and on the other hand the number of bad bacteria increases. I find that young people including children who suffer from chronic ulcerative colitis, Chrohn’s disease, atopia and any allergosis such as phthisis have very poor bowel condition (intestinal phase) and having more bad bacteria and less acidophilus (good bacteria).

Bad bacteria for bowel including Welsh bacteria, clostridium, staphylococcal, pseudomonas seruginosa, bacillus coli, are putrefactive bacteria, which rot undigested food and in the process produce a lot of harmful substances such as hydrogen sulfide, indole, carbolic acid, skatole, ammonia, methane and amine arisen. These bowel bacteria and cell of colon mucosa generate radical oxygen ( free radical) and lipid peroxide. Gas and toxin not only make bowel condition worse, but also enter the blood through mucosa of large intestine to give whole body bad influence. Dirty blood causes hematogenous disorder and congestion of lymph. Hematogenous disorder reduces normal body function from skin to cardiovascular and rate of metabolism lowers. Weakened organ can be attacked by every phlogistica and disease such as cancer.

5) Crud in bowel leads to all kinds of disease

Normally healthy person has 50-200 cc of gas in the large intestine and excrete certain amount of gas depending on the type of meal, frequency of excretion of feces, hygienics of intestine (usage of Coffee Enema). The amount of gas is the barometer of your intestinal phase level and health condition (please refer to endoscopic photography at the end of the book).

The number of well-known doctors point out that constipation and fecal impaction, that is retention of contents and the crud in the large intestine, are possible cause of various diseases. Recently not only doctors specialized in stomach and dietetics but also other healthcare practitioner argue the importance of basic hygienic in large intestine, and “clean intestine and cleaning and activation of intestine are important for human health” becomes main issue.

Patients suffering from piles, colon polyp, intestinal cancer, breast cancer, prostate cancer, cardiovascular function disorder, liver and cholecyst diseases, chronic ulcerative colitis, Chrohn’s disease, enlarged prostate, arthritis, rheumatism, atopic dermatitis, allergosis, fibroid, mastopathy, collagen disease, elevated blood pressure, brain infraction, diabetes, etc are likely to have abnormal intestinal function and its dysfunction.

Regardless of quality of food, cancer-causing substances generate in your large intestine. The longer cancer-causing substances stay there, the more likely you suffer from colon polyp and intestinal cancer.

Less serious cases like symptom of asitia, nausea, headache, vertigo, chalk mark, hives, adiposities, comedo and boredom are somehow related to the retention of colon contents. Harmful substances absorbed through bowel wall into blood cause such ill health.

I can say that my patients who suffered from those symptoms have very poor intestinal phase.

*Clean colon

There are no waste substances that generate poisonous fumes, and good bowel easily produces good bacteria.

*Dirty colon

Crud in the fold of intestine and bowel wall go off and generate toxins that are absorbed into the body to pollute the blood.

6) Laxative damages the natural function of bowel

To keep yourself young and healthy, it is important to get rid of food scum coming into large intestine after absorption of nutrition in small intestine as soon as possible. However in reality many people of all ages suffer from chronic constipation. Constipation and fecal impaction slow intestinal function down and various toxins and active oxygen produced as the result are said to be the most serious causes of adult diseases including hardened arteries, cancer and aging.

Many people easily tend to rely on laxative to solve constipation and fecal impaction. However I must warn you as a doctor that laxative has side effect such as toxicity to bowel movement and mucosa of bowel. Even if the herbal medicines such as aloe, senna or rhuberbe contain chemical substance “anthracin” that changes the color of mucosa of bowel. Herbal medicine causes deposition of pigment called “melanosis” which leads to intestinal cancer or polyp. The more you take laxative, the less your bowel movement you will have.

7) Prevention is the best medicine and dietary education will be important issue from now on.

For 24 hours, your liver works hard to counteract poison. You should keep your large intestine clean to help liver to work smoothly. It is important for you to prevent illness rather than seek help after falling ill. In America the government organization did a huge research and study on diet and disease because of its premature aging society with fewer children. In 1975, MacGarban Report was published and it reported the serious relationship between diet and disease and made a point that improvement of diet would be beneficial for prevention and treatment of disease.

On the other hand, in Japan, the relationship between disease and diet is ignored even now. Many doctors are interested in early detection of disease and treatment method, and patients are not informed about preventive medicine or change of lifestyle and diet.

In Japan insurance revenue is very high and if there is no examination or no prescription for drug, there’s no profit to hospital or clinic. As you pay your attorney or accountant consultation fee, it should be the same with doctors for consultation regarding your health. So the problem of over-prescription or chemical antagonism will be solved.

It is time for Japan to think seriously about the problem of healthcare cost and insurance method just as America did 30 years ago. If not, medical costs would escalate every year and would lead to fateful crisis. In Japan it was recognized that main cause of chronic diseases were poor lifestyle and diet 25 year later than America.

We will have to take care of our own health more if state support for healthcare is to be cut.

8) Take supplement and acidophilus after cleaning colon

The diverticulum is formed at the right of large intestine, if you eat a lot of refined grain (polished rice, white bread or pasta) and the diverticulum is formed at the left side of large intestine, (especially in sigmoid or descending colon) if you eat a lot of meat. Red meat, chicken, and dairy products leave predisposition of cancer or heart disease.

Human beings have natural digestive function suitable for vegetable so cannot fully digest animal protein. If you have young and flexible colon and good intestinal phase, the bowel condition will be better. Good bacteria such as acidophilus will increase. Large amount of good bacteria builds up natural healing power and immune system, and create good circulation that will prevent adult disease.

You should eat nutritious food to maintain good intestinal phase to regulate the bowel function and to maintain ideal amount of good bacteria even when you are old. First thing you have to do is to make sure your bowel is clean to benefit from eating nutritious food.

9) It is Coffee Enema makes that intestinal phase better

Coffee Enema is one of the methods to clean colon by improving constipation and fecal impaction. You can use Coffee Enema twice a day without disturbing the function of small intestine because it only cleans left side of large intestine.

If you are worried that Coffee Enema might be addictive, I can assure you by my data that you will still maintain normal bowel movement. People who use Coffee Enema have good intestinal phase, good bowel movement with few constipation and fecal impaction. Most of my friends are using Coffee Enema once or twice a day although they are not suffering from constipation. They would like to keep clean colon with clean fold of bowel. Especially crud and food scum tend to pile up at the left of large intestine.

10) Detoxication

Coffee Enema is one of Gerson therapies developed by Dr. Max Gerson about 70 years ago. The liver is the biggest organ that generates toxin in the body. It is ideal for the improvement of liver function if you can remove toxin and body wastes generated in the colon by using Coffee Enema as soon as possible.

Whatever you do has only temporary effect unless the large intestine is clean. So I developed coffee for enema by adding to organic coffee the ingredients for to create good bowel condition based on this theory.

Another profound effect of Coffee Enema is that toxin and body waste in the blood can be removed more efficiently. After nutrition of food you eat is digested and absorbed in small intestine, food scum and undigested material stay in the fold of colon and bowel wall. If it stays more than a day, decomposition and fermentation will progress and generate toxin. It is important to get rid of remnants of food as feces using Coffee Enema before decomposition and fermentation.

11) Gerson therapy

Dr. Gerson developed it to treat his own migraine. It is one of the alternative therapies in which you are advised to eat fresh and natural food and to use Coffee Enema at the same time to have normal bowel function in order to recover liver’s detoxifying function.

A large number of patients have been benefited from the therapy and a lot of specialists who are interested in it have proved its effectiveness.

This Gerson therapy requires you to change your life style and your willingness to put it into practice.

At first clean your colon (you do not gain if you throw everything in dirty river)

  1. Eliminate unnecessary garbage from the body as soon as possible to prevent toxin from generating.
  2. Colon polyp and colon cancer are usually found in archo, rectosigmoid colon and descending colon.
  3. If your colon is clean, good bacteria will increase and you have good bowel condition.
  4. Even if you have a normal bowel movement, some food scum and crud might remain in the fold of colon or bowel wall.
  5. You can get rid of feces and body waste at the same time by Coffee Enama.
  6. Food scum in large intestine after nutrition is absorbed into small intestine generates toxin at the temperature of 36.5℃ and absorbed by the body.
  7. Heavy metal, agrochemical or food additive tend to pile up in the colon.
  8. The crud of colon not only pollutes blood but also slows body function down.

12) Latest frontiers of Coffee Enema

After 300,000 cases of clinical study I developed “CafeCOLON” that consists of adequate thickness of organic coffee and ingredients for improving bowel condition based on this theory.

I use coffee with adequate density, Gulf of Suruga deep water, ribirth sea salt, acidophilus generated extract, EM-X, oligo acid, etc., which are good for creating good bowel condition. In theory it is the coffee made for the purpose to increase and activate good acidophilus. It also contains various minerals to maintain mineral balance in the body after sudden bowel movement.

*Bay of Suruga deep water The deepest area of Bay of Suruga has the depth of 2,500m, which is the deepest sea in Japan. Deep water with the depth of 687m is said to be formed more than 1,000 years ago and has rich mineral.

*Ribirth sea salt Reduced sea salt fermented and matured using the seawater collected under a full moon, which is rich with good bacteria including balm for a long time.

*Acidophilus generated extract Effective substances extracted from fermented substance that is reproduced and matured from 16 different acidophilus including soya bean.

*EM-X 100 % natural antioxidant drink which extracted from materials such as brown rice, papaya, sea weed and fermented with good bacteria of acidophilus and balm.