Chemo and Diet

Zoi29
Zoi29 Member Posts: 11

Hello, Often, people tell me to stay away from sugar and most meat products, especially red meat. I still eat grass-fed beef and organic chicken occasionally. I am trying to have more of a vegetarian diet, however, it's just hard with all the mood swings and taste buds. I was never into sweets before all this happened but now I am craving ice-cream like crazy. It just seems as the doctors don't really care much about the diet when it comes to cancer patients. When I was in the hospital I kept on eating pizza and sweet puddings, and all the nurses and doctors kept on saying that the balanced diet is the right way to go. How do you feel about this? I am confused because I do want to do everything right and get better. Unfortunately, I feel like I am driving myself crazy, because I am constantly craving foods and most of the time I don't even know what exactly I am craving. I wish I can have those chicken nuggets and fries from McDonald's.......anyone feeling like this? Thanks

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Comments

  • anliperez915
    anliperez915 Member Posts: 770
    Hi Zoi29
    Hi Zoi29,
    I feel exactly like you!!! I just have to take care of myself, can't eat many things because of high cholesterol, diabetes and other health issues. Don't know the answer to your question but I have to agree with the docs that just eating a balanced diet is the way to go. I have read so many articles on this subject and almost all of them say the same thing...don't eat too much sugar but you don't have to abstain from it either because at the end almost everything turns into sugar. I think Sue had posted some time ago a website (not sure if it was cancercare.com) and it talked about sugar and cancer. Just do whatever feels right for you, wishing you only the best. Take care

    Sincerely,
    Liz
  • jimwins
    jimwins Member Posts: 2,107
    Sending you many "McHugs" ☺ ♥
    Hi Zoi29,

    I suspect prednisone is impacting your appetite and cravings.

    During treatment and for a week after I generally avoided acidic foods
    to prevent mouth irritation. If my counts were down (neutropenic), I of course
    didn't eat anything that was not cooked properly. Largely due to the prednisone
    I was hungry often and ate well and a lot. I ate whatever I wanted if I wasn't
    neutropenic or trying to avoid acidic foods as I mentioned. This included
    sweets, desserts (love pie), ice cream on occasion and I usually had a nice
    steak dinner with my sister and her husband in between treatment cycles.

    Some people have made comments like "sugar feeds cancer" but I did research
    and I didn't find any evidence of this. Maybe some people think this because
    of the sugary stuff you're given to drink before a PET scan that makes
    cancer cells light up as they are metabolizing it?

    I think you should eat whatever you would like to eat or you crave.
    Do it within reason of course - I mean don't eat a whole bucket of fried
    chicken or drink a pitcher of margaritas ;).

    These are my opinions - you might want to ask your oncologist but I think
    they would pretty much tell you the same. It's normal to want to do
    the "right" things to help kick cancer's butt. However, if you're stressing
    about it (your diet), it may be doing more harm than good.

    You can always tweak your diet after you complete and recover from your treatment.
    I hope you have some McNuggets and fries if that's what you want. Just don't eat
    it three times a day every day ☺.

    Be good to yourself and treat yourself on occasion.
    You are absolutely worth it ! I'm thankful you have an appetite
    and are eating.

    McPrednisone Bears


    Give youself a big hug and add it to the one I'm sending,

    Jim
    DX: DLBL 4/2011, Chemo completed 10/2011, currently in remission. :)
  • anliperez915
    anliperez915 Member Posts: 770
    Forgot
    Hi Zoi29,
    Forgot to mention this book I'm reading its called Eating Well Through Cancer by Holly Clegg & Gerald Miletello, M.D.
    It has easy recipes and recommendations for people going through chemo and after treatment. Try to look for it..

    Good luck,

    Sincerely,
    Liz
  • ta8631
    ta8631 Member Posts: 40
    i also have never liked
    i also have never liked sweets but could eat a tub of ice cream a night if i thought it wouldn't go straight to my thighs :) I have had serious cravings and most of it is stuff i never would have eaten before. I have gained about 12 lbs since starting treatment which is hard to understand because most of the time i have a really hard time eating anything at all even though i crave everything. My oncologist isn't concerned about by weight gain (i obviously am) and told me to eat appropriately and try not to over indulge. Its a hard battle but we will all manage through i guess :)
  • Max Former Hodgkins Stage 3
    Max Former Hodgkins Stage 3 Member Posts: 3,803 Member
    ta8631 said:

    i also have never liked
    i also have never liked sweets but could eat a tub of ice cream a night if i thought it wouldn't go straight to my thighs :) I have had serious cravings and most of it is stuff i never would have eaten before. I have gained about 12 lbs since starting treatment which is hard to understand because most of the time i have a really hard time eating anything at all even though i crave everything. My oncologist isn't concerned about by weight gain (i obviously am) and told me to eat appropriately and try not to over indulge. Its a hard battle but we will all manage through i guess :)

    Weight

    Ta,

    As Jim mentioned above, this sounds like Prednisone at work. My sister-in-law is taking it for a non-cancerous tumor. She is about 5'5", and has gained 60 pounds !

    Never having taken the drug, this is incomprehensible to me. For about a month I ate very little solid food, but drank breakfast drinks when I could. No "weight gain" for this boy at that time. I hope the cravings balance out for you,

    max
  • nikkig43
    nikkig43 Member Posts: 73
    Hello
    I asked my husband's oncologist about nutritional supplements during treatment. His exact words in CAPS:
    He takes a multivitamin, but are there extra "cancer fighters" he should
    take or anything to boost his immune system?
    NO. THERE IS NO CONVINCING SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE THAT ANY OF THESE THINGS
    REALLY HELP AND SEVERAL OF THEM (SELENIUM, VITAMIN E, GREEN TEA, ETC) HAVE
    BEEN SHOWN IN RIGOROUS STUDIES TO ACTUALLY NULLIFY THE EFFECTS OF SOME
    CHEMOTHERAPY DRUGS.  PLEASE DO NOT TAKE ANY OF THESE THINGS TILL HE IS DONE
    WITH THE CHEMOTHERAPY, OR THEY MAY LOWER THE CHANCES OF CURE I QUOTED
    My husband stayed away from nutritional drinks, supplements and green tea.
    I also asked him about sugar. He said there is no evidence that sugar "feeds cancer".
    Take care, Nikki.
  • jimwins
    jimwins Member Posts: 2,107
    nikkig43 said:

    Hello
    I asked my husband's oncologist about nutritional supplements during treatment. His exact words in CAPS:
    He takes a multivitamin, but are there extra "cancer fighters" he should
    take or anything to boost his immune system?
    NO. THERE IS NO CONVINCING SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE THAT ANY OF THESE THINGS
    REALLY HELP AND SEVERAL OF THEM (SELENIUM, VITAMIN E, GREEN TEA, ETC) HAVE
    BEEN SHOWN IN RIGOROUS STUDIES TO ACTUALLY NULLIFY THE EFFECTS OF SOME
    CHEMOTHERAPY DRUGS.  PLEASE DO NOT TAKE ANY OF THESE THINGS TILL HE IS DONE
    WITH THE CHEMOTHERAPY, OR THEY MAY LOWER THE CHANCES OF CURE I QUOTED
    My husband stayed away from nutritional drinks, supplements and green tea.
    I also asked him about sugar. He said there is no evidence that sugar "feeds cancer".
    Take care, Nikki.

    Thanks
    Thanks Nikki.

    My oncologist also told me to stay away from certain supplements
    as well. She said anti-oxidants could interfere with the chemo.

    Hugs and hpe you guys are doing well,

    Jim
  • jimwins
    jimwins Member Posts: 2,107
    Adding....

    If you have diabetes or any other medical condition that requires
    a special diet then you should follow those guidelines.

    I gained a litle weight during my treatment (not much) and it
    was largely due to increased appetite from the prednisone.

    My real point was that you should be kind to yourself right now
    and eat what you want/like (within reason) :).

    I hope you didn't mind my "McHumor" ;). It's important to be able
    to smile and laugh when you can. I know how hard and scary this is.
    Know that you are not alone here and you can always share, vent, rant,
    laugh, cry, celebrate, ask questions, and of course give and receive hugs too...


    Jim
  • Aaron
    Aaron Member Posts: 237
    jimwins said:

    Thanks
    Thanks Nikki.

    My oncologist also told me to stay away from certain supplements
    as well. She said anti-oxidants could interfere with the chemo.

    Hugs and hpe you guys are doing well,

    Jim

    Weight
    I'm starting to think I'm the only one to lose weight during chemo, I'm down around 10 lbs sence I started and thats only through 3 treatments. I hope I don't lose 40 by the time it's over.
  • Max Former Hodgkins Stage 3
    Max Former Hodgkins Stage 3 Member Posts: 3,803 Member
    Aaron said:

    Weight
    I'm starting to think I'm the only one to lose weight during chemo, I'm down around 10 lbs sence I started and thats only through 3 treatments. I hope I don't lose 40 by the time it's over.

    Apples and Oranges
    Aaron,

    Remember that abvd is way different from chop. There is no Prednisone in what you are on. There is no "up" period on abvd. I lost 12% of my weight, and perhaps should have lost more. Most people on chemo lose significant weight, if they are not on Prednisone or something similiar.

    How are you since Wednesday ?

    Max
  • Max Former Hodgkins Stage 3
    Max Former Hodgkins Stage 3 Member Posts: 3,803 Member
    jimwins said:

    Adding....

    If you have diabetes or any other medical condition that requires
    a special diet then you should follow those guidelines.

    I gained a litle weight during my treatment (not much) and it
    was largely due to increased appetite from the prednisone.

    My real point was that you should be kind to yourself right now
    and eat what you want/like (within reason) :).

    I hope you didn't mind my "McHumor" ;). It's important to be able
    to smile and laugh when you can. I know how hard and scary this is.
    Know that you are not alone here and you can always share, vent, rant,
    laugh, cry, celebrate, ask questions, and of course give and receive hugs too...


    Jim

    Strongly Agree

    I could not agree more with Jim here. A person on chemo is already in a titan struggle. I did not nit-pick over what I ate, or when I ate (which was not often).

    Within reason, if something tastes good to you, have at it. Similiarly, I meet and talk to so many people who are terminal and yet worry about pain meds. What is the logic of that ? Of course, no one on this thread is terminal, but the argument is similiar for anyone hurting. The doc gave me tranqualizers and Loritab, and if I needed one, it went down the hatch -- no second thoughts.

    Aside: I never heard about studies concerning anti-oxidants. I probably drank 50 gallons of green tea during treatment, because it was one of the few things I could stand the taste of at the time. Also, I took anti-oxidant supplements daily. My tumors melted away like butter in a microwave, nonetheless. Perhaps I would have done better without them. I won't ever know. But, that is the value of Boards like these.

    I guess the point is that chemo is a damn tough ordeal, and little things that give a moment's pleasure should not be fretted over. My opinion, at least.

    max

    .
  • Aaron
    Aaron Member Posts: 237

    Apples and Oranges
    Aaron,

    Remember that abvd is way different from chop. There is no Prednisone in what you are on. There is no "up" period on abvd. I lost 12% of my weight, and perhaps should have lost more. Most people on chemo lose significant weight, if they are not on Prednisone or something similiar.

    How are you since Wednesday ?

    Max

    Hey max
    I'm doing ok, I haven't got as much energy back for my "good week" as I did in my first 2 infusions but I'm getting there. I'm hoping those shots worked so I can get my treatment on time next week. The stomach is not liking me right now but other than that and some added fatigue I'm doing fine. How are you? You mentioned some possible malidays a few weeks ago but nothing sence. I hope all is well with you my friend, keep me posted :). Aaron
  • Max Former Hodgkins Stage 3
    Max Former Hodgkins Stage 3 Member Posts: 3,803 Member
    Aaron said:

    Hey max
    I'm doing ok, I haven't got as much energy back for my "good week" as I did in my first 2 infusions but I'm getting there. I'm hoping those shots worked so I can get my treatment on time next week. The stomach is not liking me right now but other than that and some added fatigue I'm doing fine. How are you? You mentioned some possible malidays a few weeks ago but nothing sence. I hope all is well with you my friend, keep me posted :). Aaron

    Update
    I am blessed, Aaron.

    Your fatigue will get worse, most likely. I am just letting you know. When you get tired, sleep (Sounds profound, right ?)

    I found very little difference between the days in my cycle, except that on infusiuon day I felt like the Michelin Man, bloated with so much fluid. The rest is just an indiscriminate blur.

    I tested negative for Hep C (or any forms of Hep), and my liver enzymes seem to be returning to normal, so I dodged another bullet there. Thank you for recalling my concern.

    About a week after your third or fourth infusion, they most likely will send you for a CT, to see how things are coming along. I know you are going to be fine; I just have an intuition about these things, and have never been wrong to date. I recall that at my first CT on therapy, the tumors had shrunk about 60-70 %, which the doc said was fantastic, and well on schedule for CR.

    Bless you guys,

    max
  • Max Former Hodgkins Stage 3
    Max Former Hodgkins Stage 3 Member Posts: 3,803 Member
    Aaron said:

    Hey max
    I'm doing ok, I haven't got as much energy back for my "good week" as I did in my first 2 infusions but I'm getting there. I'm hoping those shots worked so I can get my treatment on time next week. The stomach is not liking me right now but other than that and some added fatigue I'm doing fine. How are you? You mentioned some possible malidays a few weeks ago but nothing sence. I hope all is well with you my friend, keep me posted :). Aaron

    Upcoming

    I wrote a longer reply but it crashed.

    I am blessed. Your fatigue will increse with additional treatments. You most likely will go for a CT after this or the next treatment to see how things are working. I have nothing but good vibes about your treatment, and I am very seldom wrong.

    I tested negative for any form of Hep, and my enzymes are getting back to normal, so I dodged another bullet. I give thanks.

    The neulasta is almost always very effective. Do you take En-med for nausea ? It is highly effective -- I never had nausea that I can recall.

    Bless you guys,

    max
  • po18guy
    po18guy Member Posts: 1,461 Member
    Sugar?
    Cancer cells use a lot of energy in their hyper-cloning process. So, it seems to make sense that by limiting sugar intake, you can also limit cancer's ability to clone itself. Except that each normal cell in your body also uses energy to replace itself. We need a level of blood sugar, within a normal range, in order to maintain even a healthy body. If you eliminate dietary sugar completely, your liver will then begin using stored fat in its effort to maintain your blood sugar level. Once your fat runs out, it seeks other sources. Not good. No, fighting cancer requires us to eat when we can, what we can, as even less-than optimum food is better than none at all. Certainly, we can expend some effort to ensure that we are not provoking the cancer by eating food with pesticide or herbicide residues on it. While neither may cause cancer directly, they are associated with various forms of lymphoma. The bottom line is that we cannot starve the cancer without also starving the rest of our bodies.
  • Zoi29
    Zoi29 Member Posts: 11
    jimwins said:

    Sending you many "McHugs" ☺ ♥
    Hi Zoi29,

    I suspect prednisone is impacting your appetite and cravings.

    During treatment and for a week after I generally avoided acidic foods
    to prevent mouth irritation. If my counts were down (neutropenic), I of course
    didn't eat anything that was not cooked properly. Largely due to the prednisone
    I was hungry often and ate well and a lot. I ate whatever I wanted if I wasn't
    neutropenic or trying to avoid acidic foods as I mentioned. This included
    sweets, desserts (love pie), ice cream on occasion and I usually had a nice
    steak dinner with my sister and her husband in between treatment cycles.

    Some people have made comments like "sugar feeds cancer" but I did research
    and I didn't find any evidence of this. Maybe some people think this because
    of the sugary stuff you're given to drink before a PET scan that makes
    cancer cells light up as they are metabolizing it?

    I think you should eat whatever you would like to eat or you crave.
    Do it within reason of course - I mean don't eat a whole bucket of fried
    chicken or drink a pitcher of margaritas ;).

    These are my opinions - you might want to ask your oncologist but I think
    they would pretty much tell you the same. It's normal to want to do
    the "right" things to help kick cancer's butt. However, if you're stressing
    about it (your diet), it may be doing more harm than good.

    You can always tweak your diet after you complete and recover from your treatment.
    I hope you have some McNuggets and fries if that's what you want. Just don't eat
    it three times a day every day ☺.

    Be good to yourself and treat yourself on occasion.
    You are absolutely worth it ! I'm thankful you have an appetite
    and are eating.

    McPrednisone Bears


    Give youself a big hug and add it to the one I'm sending,

    Jim
    DX: DLBL 4/2011, Chemo completed 10/2011, currently in remission. :)

    Hi Jim,
    You are so sweet and

    Hi Jim,

    You are so sweet and considerate. I read your posts everyday and you are always the one to give best advice and be there for all of us. Thank you for that.

    I agree, prednistone is doing this to me and as I finish taking it, my energy level goes down drastically. I have always been petite but now I am 97 lbs, (slightly less than my usual weight). This weight has been consistent since I started chemo treatments (already had 4), and I hope I won't lose any weight by the end of this. I guess I will rely on prednistone for that.

    It's weird, I can eat at all times and don't feel hungry or stuffed but certain foods such as fish I can't stand. I loved fish before but now I can't even smell it.

    I am dealing with a lot just by having this terrible disease at the age of 29 so I should just eat whatever I feel like. Time to treat myself...



    Jim big hug back to you and thanks for tkain your time and helping all of us deal with the terrible disease.
  • Folks24
    Folks24 Member Posts: 106
    Weight to Gain
    My onocologist and nurse just told me to eat anything I have a mind to. I am taking prednisone for 5 days (5 pills) after each chemo treatment and it has not made me a bit hungry or helped me gain weight. I am 5' and normally 105 lbs. I am down to 92 lbs on my 5th of 6th chemo treatment.

    By the way, fast food has the most calories in it - especially Culver's if you have one. I got a calorie book to help me eat what has the most calories.

    Unless your doctor has nixed it, I would eat anything that tastes good to gain the weight and calories and your mouth can handle. That is if you need to put it on like I do.
    Good Luck!
  • Zoi29
    Zoi29 Member Posts: 11
    ta8631 said:

    i also have never liked
    i also have never liked sweets but could eat a tub of ice cream a night if i thought it wouldn't go straight to my thighs :) I have had serious cravings and most of it is stuff i never would have eaten before. I have gained about 12 lbs since starting treatment which is hard to understand because most of the time i have a really hard time eating anything at all even though i crave everything. My oncologist isn't concerned about by weight gain (i obviously am) and told me to eat appropriately and try not to over indulge. Its a hard battle but we will all manage through i guess :)

    Hi Ta,
    We are in the same

    Hi Ta,

    We are in the same boat. I feel exactly like this, 'most of the time i have a really hard time eating anything at all even though i crave everything.' Sometimes, I just keep on trying million things and nothing satisfies me so I don't even end up having a proper meal. Luckily, it has been okay lately, may be because I stopped taking prednistone 3 days ago. If you ever want to chat send me an e-mail. ;-)

    Xoxo
  • Zoi29
    Zoi29 Member Posts: 11

    Strongly Agree

    I could not agree more with Jim here. A person on chemo is already in a titan struggle. I did not nit-pick over what I ate, or when I ate (which was not often).

    Within reason, if something tastes good to you, have at it. Similiarly, I meet and talk to so many people who are terminal and yet worry about pain meds. What is the logic of that ? Of course, no one on this thread is terminal, but the argument is similiar for anyone hurting. The doc gave me tranqualizers and Loritab, and if I needed one, it went down the hatch -- no second thoughts.

    Aside: I never heard about studies concerning anti-oxidants. I probably drank 50 gallons of green tea during treatment, because it was one of the few things I could stand the taste of at the time. Also, I took anti-oxidant supplements daily. My tumors melted away like butter in a microwave, nonetheless. Perhaps I would have done better without them. I won't ever know. But, that is the value of Boards like these.

    I guess the point is that chemo is a damn tough ordeal, and little things that give a moment's pleasure should not be fretted over. My opinion, at least.

    max

    .

    Hi Max,
    Thank you for your

    Hi Max,

    Thank you for your advice.

    I will definitely start being easier on myself. After all, I am only 97 lbs and don't want to lose any weight anyway.

    I have also taken anti-oxidants during the first two chemotherapy treatments, and according to the x-ray, the tumor shrank drastically. I am still waiting for CT Scan results. After my 2nd treatment, I have stopped taking anti--oxidants because I kept on hearing that 'it could interfere with chemo' constantly. I just wanted to be on the safe side for now. I will take antioxidants when I complete all my treatments (had 4 so far).

    There is too much information out there and it's just hard to concentrate on things that are crucial and relevant when it comes to cancer.
  • jimwins
    jimwins Member Posts: 2,107
    Zoi29 said:

    Hi Jim,
    You are so sweet and

    Hi Jim,

    You are so sweet and considerate. I read your posts everyday and you are always the one to give best advice and be there for all of us. Thank you for that.

    I agree, prednistone is doing this to me and as I finish taking it, my energy level goes down drastically. I have always been petite but now I am 97 lbs, (slightly less than my usual weight). This weight has been consistent since I started chemo treatments (already had 4), and I hope I won't lose any weight by the end of this. I guess I will rely on prednistone for that.

    It's weird, I can eat at all times and don't feel hungry or stuffed but certain foods such as fish I can't stand. I loved fish before but now I can't even smell it.

    I am dealing with a lot just by having this terrible disease at the age of 29 so I should just eat whatever I feel like. Time to treat myself...



    Jim big hug back to you and thanks for tkain your time and helping all of us deal with the terrible disease.

    Thanks for being so kind
    Thank you for being so kind in saying that but I think others here deserve
    that praise :). I am currently not working so I have the time to read and
    post. I'm so thankful to those on this site who were there for me and I want
    to give back. I'm just as scared and human as everyone here.

    I often use humor and I hope it's never offensive to anyone but my thought is
    sometimes just being able to smile or laugh can really take the sting out
    of things or briefly unravel the twisted, knotty mess of emotions and stress
    that come with this journey. I've had a tough year and a half - being diagnosed
    with cancer, having surgery, going through chemo and then losing my youngest
    sister just before Christmas to a brain aneurysm.

    There are so many good people here and I'm thankful for every one of them.
    Thank you again for the kind words and the hug - I needed them today.

    I'm getting hungry too - maybe I'll go to Mickey D's in your honor ;).

    Hugs backatcha,

    JIm