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Detecting Kidney Cancer

January 3rd, 2009 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

In order for you to understand kidney cancer more completely, let us first look at the description and functions of the kidneys. Kidneys are basically the organs in the body responsible for producing and then ridding the body of, liquid waste substance known as urine. The kidney is able to perform this function because of the filtration that occurs in millions of nephrons in this organ. The kidneys are also designed in such a way that it can remove the liquid waste substances but return the filtered liquid to the blood stream and thus it allows the body to retain its water balance. It should also be noted that there is a special hormone that is made in the pituitary gland that controls and regulates the water content in the body.

Kidney cancer is a very dangerous and painful disease in severe cases. However, you should also remember that everyone has two kidneys in the body and if one becomes damaged or can no longer function properly, there is still no immediate problem to be worried about because one kidney can be sufficient for the body’s needs and survival. Kidney cancer also constitutes around four percent of all cancers and it affects more males that females. So males should be on the lookout for possible signs of kidney problems.

Some symptoms for kidney cancer include having blood in your urine but it may also be invisible. Another symptom is the chronic pain in the back and side of your abdominal region. Or signs of kidney cancers may be felt in the upper abdomen when you feel lumps or fullness in this area. On the other hand, there may actually be no symptoms of kidney cancer in some cases although you already have this disease. For this reason, it is essential that you try to live a healthy lifestyle that ensures you have a disease free existence.

Meanwhile, around fifteen to twenty percent of people who have present tumors removed confirm that the symptoms of having blood in the urine, pain in the abdominal region and the sensation of fullness and having lumps in the upper abdomen all disappear upon the surgical removal of the tumors. Still other symptoms of kidney cancer you should watch out for include having constipation, fever and the loss of appetite. You may also experience feeling nauseous and vomit in some cases. Anemia or low red blood cell count and polycythemia, which are high blood cell count, may also be experienced when you have kidney cancer.

Because the symptoms present in kidney cancer are not as extreme as other cancers and some of the conditions you may experience are quite common, it is rarely that people can detect kidney cancer at its early stages. But you should be particularly careful when you are in the age of 30 to 70 because most cases of kidney cancer occur at this stage.

Overall, you should remember that preventing cancer is always the best possible option because cancer whether it is kidney, lung, or , is difficult to cure once it is already present in your body.

Michael Russell

Your Independent guide to kidney-cancer-guided.com/ Kidney Cancer

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Loosing The Breast Cancer War - Part 2

January 3rd, 2009 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Case 1

Jean (not real name) is a 56-year-old female. Sometime in 2004, she felt a hard, flat lump in her right breast. A was done in October 2004. The pathology report indicated infiltrating ductal carcinoma, Grade 3.

Jean underwent six cycles of with FEC (5-FU Epirubicin cyclophosphamide). In addition, she had twenty sessions of radiation treatment. All treatments were completed in June 2006.

Barely three months later Jean was told that the cancer had spread to her liver. On 4 September 2006, she underwent another cycle of . This time the treatment caused severe side effects. Jean decided to forgo the remaining five cycles of .

Case 2

Li is a forty-one-year-old lady. She was my student some years ago. After graduation from the university she became a science teacher. Sometime in 2004, Li felt three lumps in her left breast after being taught how to self-breast examination (SBE) by a nurse. She went to consult a doctor who then proceeded to do a lumpectomy to remove the lumps. The subsequent histopathological report confirmed malignant tumors. A few days later, Li had her entire left breast removed at a government hospital. After this Li received eight cycles of and twenty sessions of radiation treatment. After the completion of these treatments, Li took tamoxifen for two years, until January 2007. At the same time as she was started on tamoxifen, Li was also asked to take Zoladex (goserelin acetate) — a chemical way of destroying her ovaries to stop the production of females hormones. She was given Zoladex once a month, every month for a period of two years.

In mid-January 2007, Li started to have stomach discomforts and her abdomen became bloated and was hard. A CT scan showed a 4 mm nodule in the peripheral upper lobe of her right lung. There were multiple nodules in both lobes of her liver. There was also a local lytic lesion in her L2 vertebra. There was slight central disc protrusion at C5/6. These findings indicated that the caner had spread to her liver and bone. According to the radiologist, the lesion in her lung was probably a granuloma.

Li underwent another six cycles of . After the fourth chemo-cycle, a CT scan indicated that there was reduction of the size and number of liver lesions. However, at completion of the sixth chemo, this initial “success” proved shor-lived. The liver tumours had grown in size.

A CT san in May 2007 showed lytic lesion in the body of T12 and L2 in keeping with bony metastasis. The oncologist wrote: “In view of the increasing size of the liver metastases and the increasing bone metastasis, features are suggestive of progression of the disease.” The oncologist told Li that he had to change to new drugs. Li dared not go for more and was in a limbo. She came to seek my help. She presented with distended abdomen, swelling of her left arm and both legs.

Comments

The above episodes are real tragic — again calling in question the effectiveness of the so-called “proven” therapies for . Li received all the treatments available but within three years she ended up worse off that she started with. I would like to pose on question: If Li were to do nothing, would she suffer these metastases to the liver and bones? Over a decade of helping cancer patients, I have this to say: “No, Li might not have suffered such unfortunate fate. I know of many patients from Indonesia who relied on their “jamu” or traditional herbal medication, and they do generally do not suffer such severe metastasis within three years.”

Professor Hardin Jones, University of California, Berkeley was quoted to have said this: “My studies have proved conclusively that untreated cancer victims live up to four times longer than treated individuals. If one has cancer and opts to do nothing at all, he will live longer and feel better than if he undergoes radiation, or surgery.”

For more information about complementary cancer therapy visit:

cacare.com cacare.com
NaturalHealingForYou.com NaturalHealingForYou.com

BookOnCancer.com BookOnCancer.com

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Colon Cancer - The Digestive System Killer

January 2nd, 2009 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

The part of the large intestine that joins the small intestine is called the caecum. Directly above the anus is a short length of large intestine - 12-15cm long - called the rectum. The colon extends from caecum to the rectum and is divided into 4 parts: the ascending colon, which rises upwards from the caecum; the transverse colon, which runs across the body from right to left; the descending colon, which sweeps downwards; and a relatively short section called the sigmoid colon, which leads to the rectum.

A major function of the colon is to extract fluids from what remains of food after its nutrients have been absorbed in the small intestine. The colon also provides a temporary storage place for solid wastes, as well as a channel for their removal from the body. Colon cancer and rectal cancer, often referred to collectively as cancer of the bowel, is one the most common cancers of the digestive system. All parts of the large intestine can develop cancer although most cases of occur in the descending colon, sigmoid colon and rectum.

The type of food you eat seems to increase or decrease your chances of getting . A variety of studies suggest that people who consume large quantities of high-fat and low-fibre foods run a greater risk than those who eat a low-fat and high-fibre diet. Therefore, you can reduce your chances of getting by, decreasing the amount of ‘bad’ foods you eat and, increase your intake of ‘good’ cancer preventing foods.

Among the ‘good’ cancer preventing foods are vegetables (especially broccoli, Brussels sprouts and cauliflower), whole grains and legumes (beans and peas). Your diet should also include sufficient amounts of vitamin A and C, which, according to experts help to neutralise cancer-causing substances in food. Diet is one aspect that can control the onset of , however, there are factors that you may have no control over. For instance, an uncommon inherited tendency to develop many small to large growths in the colon. These growths, or polyps, look somewhat like mushrooms.

There are signs that may be heeded as to whether cancer of the colon or large intestine is present or a condition that may lead to it, may be present in the body. In general, any persistent change in bowel habits should alert you. Diarrhoea or constipation that will not go away after about a week, despite the use of medication; stools that are narrower than usual, which can occur if a growth is blocking or narrowing any part of the colon or rectum are not sure indicators of , but may indicate a problem and the sooner you find out exactly what these changes mean, the better your chances will be in dealing with them.

One indication that you may have cancer of the colon may turn up when a routine test for invisible traces of blood in the faeces is positive. Bear in mind that many other conditions besides cancer can lead to the presence of small amounts of blood in the faeces; these conditions can include haemorrhoids (piles), non-cancerous tumours or infections. A routine physical examination by a doctor should be done even when no is suspected. After a general inspection, he may refer you to a specialist who will use an instrument called a sigmoidscope to examine the rectum and lower part of the sigmoid colon in more detail. If a growth is detected, the specialist, perhaps in collaboration with a surgeon, will outline a course of treatment. The choice of therapy will be based on the size of the growth, on how much of the colon is affected and whether the cancer has spread to other areas.

Like many other cancers, there are three basic ways in which can be treated: with surgery, radiotherapy or with anticancer drugs, or with a combination of these three approaches. The treatment will depend on where the is situated, on its size and on whether it has invaded the wall of the colon or areas beyond it.

Michael Russell
Your Independent guide to colon-cancer-guide.com/ Colon Cancer

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Mesothelioma Treatments, Support Groups & Medical Help

January 2nd, 2009 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Mesothelioma is one of the deadliest cancers known to medical science. This cancer of the lining of sacs that contain the internal organs is caused by primarily one agent: asbestos. Asbestos is a fibrous, naturally-occurring fire-resistant mineral that was used for millennia as insulation, heat shielding, and clothing before it was discovered that it was extremely toxic and carcinogenic.

Asbestos is so versatile it was used throughout the United States in construction and industrial processes in the first half of the 20th century, but by the 1960s and 1970s people began to realize that this useful material had a dark side. Unfortunately, it was too late to help the people that worked around asbestos, as conditions such as take decades to develop and are irreversible after initial exposure.

As the 20th century came to a close, hundreds of thousands of people were coping with the fact that they were lied to and mislead by the asbestos industry. Mining and manufacturers that produced asbestos knew of the dangers of their products, but instead of alerting their workers and consumers of the potential consequences of using their product and risk losing their income, they chose to ignore the risks and “make hay while the sun shone,” without regard to how their choice would affect the population at large.

This meant , asbestosis, and asbestos-related became the reality for hundreds of thousands of innocent people. As medical science struggled to keep pace with the treatment of this deadly disease, more and more doctors turned to radical new treatments that attempted to alleviate the suffering of the 10,000 people that die from asbestos-related each year.

The prolonged latency period between initial exposure and the appearance of symptoms, combined with the relatively few specialized medical procedures dedicated to this little known disease. New treatments, such as angiogenesis, immunotherapy, and multimodal approaches offer new hope to victims of .

To learn more about emesotreatments.com/ treatments, mesosupportgroup.com/ support groups or mesomedicalhelp.com/ medical help, please visit our website. This article may be freely reprinted as long as this resource box is included and all links stay intact as hyperlinks.

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Consuming More Calories After Intestine Cancer Leads To A Longer Life

January 2nd, 2009 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

A French study by some of its most noted scientists has surprised the professional medical world. Their studies have dismissed the well accepted theory that a diet plentiful in calories plays a factor in promoting the generation of cancer in the intestines.

Through their stringent observations over a five year period of cancer patients with intestinal cancer they found that a calorie rich diet also helps to actually increase the chances of outliving an intestinal cancer that has been removed through an operation.

French researchers in a study with 148 cancer patients proved this connection. Those patients who lived a calorie conscious lifestyle before their cancer diagnosis had a clearly higher mortality rate risk than their suffering counterparts after the operational removal of the tumor.

A negative for the saying a balanced nutrition.

The medical profession from the Marie Christine Boutron Ruault of the Paris Institute studied and evaluated the data of 97 men and 51 women who had their intestinal cancer removed through operations. The researchers particularly studied the eating habits of the patients before they were diagnosed with cancer. This was apart from the age, sex and situation of the tumor within the intestine and was found to be crucial for the chances for survival of the patients.

According to the facts of the researchers 50 of the patients nourished themselves on a calorie rich diet, 48 patients lived an approximate balanced diet and 50 patients were extremely calorie conscious.

Within five years the mortality rate after the intestinal cancer operation within those who had a balanced diet was 46 per cent and/or 22 patients which proved to be the highest. With the patients who led a calorie conscious lifestyle nutrition the ratio was 36 per cent, which corresponded to 18 deaths. Those who clearly ate too sumptuously lived the longest, only six patients or 12 per cent from this group died as the consequences of the intestinal cancer.

Special food which could have affected the mortality rate or alcohol and tobacco consumption was not taken into account and did not seem to play any substantial influence.

The results of this study were surprising to many researchers due to a calorie rich diet long being regarded as jointly responsible for the emergence of intestine cancer but it now quite possibly could be the exact opposite.

Intestinal cancer ranks among the most frequent cancer forms in the western industrialized countries. Usually it is discovered too late which makes the chances of survival very slim. Over half of the patients diagnosed with intestinal cancer die within five years after the initial diagnosis.

Further studies are required in this field to combat this deadly form of cancer, but due to the length of the term of each research study it may be a few more years yet before the human race can finally hope to rid itself of this killer known as intestinal cancer disease.

J. Stone writes exclusively for
cancer-treatment-help.com cancer-treatment-help.com

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