3 MONTH CHECK UP TODAY

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Comments

  • norma2
    norma2 Member Posts: 479
    kkstef said:

    So Happy for you!
    Norma....what great news! Know how happy and relieved you must be! Keep dancing!!
    Nothing like having a room full of docs "peeking in there"! You should feel confident that if there was anything amiss, ONE of the 6 would have found it!!

    Again, wonderful news....I like that!

    Cheers!

    Karen

    thats what I figured too,
    thats what I figured too, Karen. Lots of professional eyes looking for the least thing wrong. thanks for the dance!!! {{{Karen}}}
  • norma2
    norma2 Member Posts: 479

    yea norma!

    that's the best possible news, may it be the only news you ever get.....that's funny about all those men (any women among them?) peeking in to take a look, but when it's such good news, who cares? one does tend to lose one's modesty in these kinds of situations.

    so, lots of dancing and dancing to be done. hope ned has time to dance with the rest of us as well.

    sisterhood,
    maggie

    Glad you asked, Maggie
    the gyn/oncology center at MD Anderson has more women rotating through the service than men. Nurse praticitioners, residents, and doctors. I remember when they made rounds when I had my surgery the only male in the room was my gyn/onc who is a professor at the University of Texas. The rest of the 5 doctors were women. I was impressed. This recent visit there were 4 doctors, 2 nurse praticioners, and my attending physician. 2 males and 4 females...we ladies are making strides in the medical profession.
  • norma2
    norma2 Member Posts: 479
    Ro10 said:

    Norma what great news
    So happy for you. May you dance for a very long time. Celebrate.

    I too never had any symptoms before I was diagnosed with UPSC Stage III- C, so it is not reassuring when I have no symptoms now. But yet my CA 125 continues to rise. In peace and caring.

    {{{RO}}}
    I hope your CA125 goes down!!! I will be praying for you.
  • norma2
    norma2 Member Posts: 479
    Kaleena said:

    Happy Happy Happy Dancin!
    I am sooooo happy for you! Keep smiling! Sending hugs your way!

    {{{{{Hugs}}}}

    Kathy

    thank you, Kathy!!
    hugs rightbackatcha...{{{{Kathy}}}
  • norma2
    norma2 Member Posts: 479

    Wonderful news - dance on,
    Wonderful news - dance on, dance on!!!
    I'm with you on what to report - how do I know what is relevant. I also am treated at a teaching hospital/clinic - but never had quite that large an entourage. The things we never thought we'd get used too, lol. Enjoy your summer!!! Annie

    Thanks!!! Annie
    You have a great summer too, sweetie....
  • norma2
    norma2 Member Posts: 479
    jazzy1 said:

    Here for you~
    That's what I love about this site, we're all a group who hold hands and help support each and everyone....wonderful!

    Didn't read your bio as had no clue you have one...dah! I've noticed many don't fill in a bio, and I find it quite helpful...just I don't always remember to check first. Read yours! You and I have similar setups with cancer, I've got the more aggressive one which was in the uterus tumors, but when it moved to the 1 pelvic node (like you) it wasn't but the same cancer as you've got. So I'm a bit of a mixed breed of cancers...hum? In all honesty I don't think about what type, etc, just know I'm a fighter and will never, ever give up...I'll fight the fight to the end!!

    Interesting comment when you saw the docs at appt yesterday....about the turmeric, etc. That's really what my doc would have mentioned to me -- just don't have research on this stuff so do in moderation and probably won't hurt me. I just do what I think is best and don't really ask my doc anymore. They're so schooled in medicine that the alternative options aren't part of their understanding. At least mine was honest.


    You'll know the symptoms???? Hum that's quite interesting from the nurse. Who would have thought I had cancer last year, as had some minor spotting (pinkish not RED) and I was feeling great. The spotting could have been attributed to perio-menopause per my doc....just so happened I had doc appt for yearly exam.

    Congrats!
    Jan

    fight on Jan
    You are a fighter...and I know you are beating this thing!!! Fight on, honey!!
  • norma2
    norma2 Member Posts: 479

    Ahhh! THAT's the good stuff! THAT's the news we like to hear!
    Congratulations, kiddo! 3 glorious months to be free of treatments and to push cancer from the forefront of your mind! DANCE ON AND ON AND ON!!

    I know what you mean about the request to report any symptoms. It's crazy because who can guess where in your body that a recurrence would even occur, so what little twinges count and which are just gas bubbles or a surgery adhesion? I had no symptoms BEFORE my cancer the 1st time, and none related to my recurrences at all either. (& that little bit of vaginal bleeding I had was 100% UNrelated to my recurrence in my armpit & just a radiation side effect,...so that's not always an indicator either!) So, I guess we all just report everything odd and let them sort it out.

    So, DON'T be afraid of every twinge. LIVE! ASSUME you are cured and live with joy! Life is good.

    dear Linda!! You are my inspiration!
    Thanks so much!!! you are right!!! Life is good!!!
  • nempark
    nempark Member Posts: 681

    Ahhh! THAT's the good stuff! THAT's the news we like to hear!
    Congratulations, kiddo! 3 glorious months to be free of treatments and to push cancer from the forefront of your mind! DANCE ON AND ON AND ON!!

    I know what you mean about the request to report any symptoms. It's crazy because who can guess where in your body that a recurrence would even occur, so what little twinges count and which are just gas bubbles or a surgery adhesion? I had no symptoms BEFORE my cancer the 1st time, and none related to my recurrences at all either. (& that little bit of vaginal bleeding I had was 100% UNrelated to my recurrence in my armpit & just a radiation side effect,...so that's not always an indicator either!) So, I guess we all just report everything odd and let them sort it out.

    So, DON'T be afraid of every twinge. LIVE! ASSUME you are cured and live with joy! Life is good.

    Linda
    This is exactly what is happening to me----being afraid of every twinge. I am going to take your advice and LIVE AND ASSUME I am cured and live with joy! life is really good!!!
    You will be better soon. Love and hugs June
  • nempark
    nempark Member Posts: 681
    norma2 said:

    THANK YOU!! THANK YOU!! LADIES
    I wish I could hug each of you around the neck!!! Soooo comforting to come home to all the sweet messages!!! You guys are the best!!

    The good news is that I am fine. My doctor at MD Anderson Cancer Center is the head of the department. So when he comes to visit there is always an entourage of people. 5 doctors crammed in this tiny room, me legs up on stirrups and exposed to the world. They each take a look...I felt like asking if they wanted to invite folks from the waiting room for a gander. There was even a visiting doctor from China who just smiled and nodded a lot. Seriously I like being treated at a teaching hospital. Lots of opinions and ideas.

    I asked about the sugar and turmeric. Concensus was it can't hurt to take the turmeric and could possibly help. As for the sugar they said everything in moderation. Eating a healthy diet is important.

    My CA 125 was between 10 to 13 during chemo and radiation Nov thru Feb.10 Was 23 last visit 3 months ago which was one month post chemo. Yesterday it had gone down to 17.9. Yippee!!! It all looks good and I am doing the NED DANCE!!!

    Next visit in 3 months they will do a CAT Scan with contrast.
    Again thanks to all you wonderful gals who sent encouragement {{{ Kathy, Karen, Jan, Amanda, Maggie, Nempark, Kumar, and Cecile}}} !!!

    You go girl
    Good for you Norm. You will have many more of these good news. Love ya. June
  • clscurnutt
    clscurnutt Member Posts: 26
    norma2 said:

    THANK YOU!! THANK YOU!! LADIES
    I wish I could hug each of you around the neck!!! Soooo comforting to come home to all the sweet messages!!! You guys are the best!!

    The good news is that I am fine. My doctor at MD Anderson Cancer Center is the head of the department. So when he comes to visit there is always an entourage of people. 5 doctors crammed in this tiny room, me legs up on stirrups and exposed to the world. They each take a look...I felt like asking if they wanted to invite folks from the waiting room for a gander. There was even a visiting doctor from China who just smiled and nodded a lot. Seriously I like being treated at a teaching hospital. Lots of opinions and ideas.

    I asked about the sugar and turmeric. Concensus was it can't hurt to take the turmeric and could possibly help. As for the sugar they said everything in moderation. Eating a healthy diet is important.

    My CA 125 was between 10 to 13 during chemo and radiation Nov thru Feb.10 Was 23 last visit 3 months ago which was one month post chemo. Yesterday it had gone down to 17.9. Yippee!!! It all looks good and I am doing the NED DANCE!!!

    Next visit in 3 months they will do a CAT Scan with contrast.
    Again thanks to all you wonderful gals who sent encouragement {{{ Kathy, Karen, Jan, Amanda, Maggie, Nempark, Kumar, and Cecile}}} !!!

    A day late, but I'm so happy
    A day late, but I'm so happy to hear your results. I'll send along this song as I did to Kumar from an old Three Dog Night Song...

    CELEBRATE! CELEBRATE! DANCE TO THE MUSIC!!!

    Lynn
    Never give up! Never surrender!
  • daisy366
    daisy366 Member Posts: 1,458 Member
    norma2 said:

    {{{RO}}}
    I hope your CA125 goes down!!! I will be praying for you.

    smiling for you Norma
    I'm so happy you got good news.

    You should have charged all those docs for the privilege of "getting a gander"!!!!

    Enjoy, Mary Ann
  • norma2
    norma2 Member Posts: 479
    daisy366 said:

    smiling for you Norma
    I'm so happy you got good news.

    You should have charged all those docs for the privilege of "getting a gander"!!!!

    Enjoy, Mary Ann

    Thanks Mary Ann
    thanks for the encouragement Mary Ann!!! I appreciate it very much.
  • TiggersDoBounce
    TiggersDoBounce Member Posts: 408
    norma2 said:

    Thanks Mary Ann
    thanks for the encouragement Mary Ann!!! I appreciate it very much.

    Norma Great News!!!!
    Celebrate!!!

    Laurie
  • california_artist
    california_artist Member Posts: 816 Member
    norma2 said:

    Thanks Mary Ann
    thanks for the encouragement Mary Ann!!! I appreciate it very much.

    Norma
    A wonderful moment to take a deep breath. sometimes we are so caught up the whole process that we forget to breathe. I wil be breathing with you.

    claudia

    P.S. It's the combo of turmeric and black pepper that is the kicker. the studies are being done at M.D. Anderson so someone there knows quite a bit about it. I'll see if I can get the doctor's name. Also, if you get a few minutes in the book Foods that fight Cancer along with the mention of how pepper makes the turmeric 2,000 times more useable by the body is the suggestion that it be heated mildly in olive oil. I like to add all three to spaghetti sauce.

    Again, what a wonderful time for you and us, as no cancer for one of us is great news for all of us.

    There is a more recent study than this. I just wish they would combine it with pepper and olive oil to make it more potent. They often do studies combining chemo drugs, so perhaps they'll get around to doing that here.

    I googled md anderson turmeric, here's the study:
    From OncoLog, September 2007, Vol. 52, No. 9 Printer-friendly version

    Can a Common Spice Be Used to Treat Cancer?
    by Dianne C. Witter


    Dr. Aggarwal is conducting laboratory studies on the apparent anticancer activity of curcumin, which is the main ingredient of the curry spice turmeric.

    Razelle Kurzrock, M.D., rigorously evaluates the laboratory data behind any new pharmaceutical agent she considers moving into clinical trials at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center. As a physician, she is cautious; as a scientist, she’s a skeptic; she wants unbiased, evidence-based information. And that, to her own surprise, is how she became interested in studying curcumin—the primary ingredient of the curry spice turmeric—as a possible anticancer agent in humans.

    “Dr. Bharat Aggarwal, chief of the cytokine research laboratory in the Department of Experimental Therapeutics, came to me and said, ‘I want to show you some great results we’ve gotten in the lab with an exciting new agent,’” said Dr. Kurzrock. “But he wouldn’t tell me what the agent was—he wanted me to see the data first.”

    Dr. Kurzrock, professor in and chair ad interim of M. D. Anderson’s Department of Investigational Cancer Therapeutics (formerly the Phase I Clinical Trials program), was impressed with the data. “It was clear that this agent was just as potent at killing tumor cells in the lab as any experimental drug I’d seen from pharmaceutical companies,” she said. When Dr. Aggarwal told her this active agent was curcumin, she was intrigued and began designing a clinical study to test curcumin’s efficacy in humans.

    Shutting down the master switch

    Curcumin’s anti-inflammatory properties have been valued in Eastern medicine for centuries, but its specific mechanism of action has only recently been identified. In 1995, Dr. Aggarwal and colleagues demonstrated that curcumin shuts down nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kB), which is involved in the regulation of inflammation and many other processes.

    By blocking the activity of this “master switch,” curcumin appears to interfere with the cancer process at an early point, impeding multiple routes of development: reducing the inflammatory response, inhibiting the proliferation of tumor cells, inducing their self-destruction, and discouraging the growth of blood vessels feeding tumors. These effects can shrink tumors and inhibit metastasis. Furthermore, shutting down NF-kB can enable traditional chemotherapy drugs to destroy cancer cells more effectively.

    Hundreds of laboratory studies by Drs. Aggarwal and Kurzrock and others have demonstrated that curcumin is biologically active against many types of cancer cells—melanoma, and breast, bladder, brain, pancreatic, and ovarian carcinomas, to name just a few. “In the lab, we haven’t yet found a type of cancer it doesn’t show activity against,” Dr. Aggarwal said.

    While it’s a long road from lab to clinic, Dr. Aggarwal sees promise in curcumin both as a possible preventive agent and as a cancer treatment. As a medicinal agent, its potential extends far beyond cancer. Laboratory studies have demonstrated curcumin’s promise in a number of different diseases that are also affected by inflammation, including arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, autoimmune diseases, and others. In light of these findings, the number of clinical studies of curcumin has grown substantially in the past few years and continues to rise.

    Studying activity in cancer patients

    The clinical research on curcumin in cancer is new but promising. Early studies at M. D. Anderson and elsewhere have shown curcumin to be well tolerated and non-toxic at high oral doses.


    Dr. Kurzrock is designing clinical trials of curcumin, based on promising lab results.

    Dr. Kurzrock and colleagues recently conducted a trial of curcumin in 49 patients with advanced pancreatic cancer, which is notoriously resistant to treatment. Two of those patients had clinically meaningful responses and remained stable for 8 months and more than 22 months, respectively. Another had a brief but dramatic response (73% reduction in tumor size).

    “In advanced pancreatic cancer, the response rate to the Food and Drug Administration-approved treatments is only about 5%, so we were very encouraged that we saw any activity at all in this group,” said Dr. Kurzrock. “That tells us curcumin does have biologic activity in pancreatic cancer—there was a true antitumor effect. It’s too soon to know if it will affect survival rates, but more study is definitely warranted.” The fact that some patients benefited is encouraging, since there were questions about whether therapeutic concentrations could be achieved with oral administration.

    To address the issue of absorption, Dr. Kurzrock is leading the development of an intravenous, liposome-encapsulated delivery system for curcumin that she says has so far been “very potent” in the lab. Liposomal curcumin would be given intravenously, thereby circumventing the problem of poor absorption.

    “The fact that the curcumin did show some activity in the study even though it was poorly absorbed suggests that if we can develop a more effective method to get it to the tumors, it may well have promise as an anticancer treatment,” said Dr. Kurzrock. She hopes to have the liposome-encapsulated delivery system ready to test in a phase I clinical trial for patients with a variety of cancers in 2008. Whether the intravenous formulation would have more side effects in patients because of the higher blood levels of the agent is not yet known, but preliminary testing in mice has shown no toxicity, even at maximum doses.

    Currently under way at M. D. Anderson is a clinical trial of curcumin in multiple myeloma, and researchers are seeking funding for a trial in breast cancer. Trials of curcumin in colorectal cancer and in myelodysplastic syndrome are in progress at other institutions. Curcumin is also in clinical trials as a treatment for non-cancer diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease, arthritis, and psoriasis.

    Food for thought

    Dr. Aggarwal, for one, is not surprised at the evidence that curcumin may have efficacy in treating cancer. He feels curcumin has the potential to one day be an inexpensive and nontoxic alternative to harsher oncology drugs; a chemopreventive agent; and an adjunct to chemotherapy. But he notes that progress in developing curcumin for medical use is likely to be much slower than for pharmaceutical agents because curcumin can’t be patented on a broad scale and therefore is unlikely to attract the interest and the funding of pharmaceutical companies.

    For his part, Dr. Aggarwal takes a curcumin tablet every day, and he offers this food for thought: “The combined rate of the four most common cancers in the United States—lung, prostate, breast, and colon—is at least 10 times lower in India, where curry is a staple in the diet.”

    For more information, call Dr. Aggarwal at 713-794-1817 or Dr. Kurzrock at 713-794-1226.

    Other articles in OncoLog, September 2007 issue:
  • norma2
    norma2 Member Posts: 479

    Norma
    A wonderful moment to take a deep breath. sometimes we are so caught up the whole process that we forget to breathe. I wil be breathing with you.

    claudia

    P.S. It's the combo of turmeric and black pepper that is the kicker. the studies are being done at M.D. Anderson so someone there knows quite a bit about it. I'll see if I can get the doctor's name. Also, if you get a few minutes in the book Foods that fight Cancer along with the mention of how pepper makes the turmeric 2,000 times more useable by the body is the suggestion that it be heated mildly in olive oil. I like to add all three to spaghetti sauce.

    Again, what a wonderful time for you and us, as no cancer for one of us is great news for all of us.

    There is a more recent study than this. I just wish they would combine it with pepper and olive oil to make it more potent. They often do studies combining chemo drugs, so perhaps they'll get around to doing that here.

    I googled md anderson turmeric, here's the study:
    From OncoLog, September 2007, Vol. 52, No. 9 Printer-friendly version

    Can a Common Spice Be Used to Treat Cancer?
    by Dianne C. Witter


    Dr. Aggarwal is conducting laboratory studies on the apparent anticancer activity of curcumin, which is the main ingredient of the curry spice turmeric.

    Razelle Kurzrock, M.D., rigorously evaluates the laboratory data behind any new pharmaceutical agent she considers moving into clinical trials at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center. As a physician, she is cautious; as a scientist, she’s a skeptic; she wants unbiased, evidence-based information. And that, to her own surprise, is how she became interested in studying curcumin—the primary ingredient of the curry spice turmeric—as a possible anticancer agent in humans.

    “Dr. Bharat Aggarwal, chief of the cytokine research laboratory in the Department of Experimental Therapeutics, came to me and said, ‘I want to show you some great results we’ve gotten in the lab with an exciting new agent,’” said Dr. Kurzrock. “But he wouldn’t tell me what the agent was—he wanted me to see the data first.”

    Dr. Kurzrock, professor in and chair ad interim of M. D. Anderson’s Department of Investigational Cancer Therapeutics (formerly the Phase I Clinical Trials program), was impressed with the data. “It was clear that this agent was just as potent at killing tumor cells in the lab as any experimental drug I’d seen from pharmaceutical companies,” she said. When Dr. Aggarwal told her this active agent was curcumin, she was intrigued and began designing a clinical study to test curcumin’s efficacy in humans.

    Shutting down the master switch

    Curcumin’s anti-inflammatory properties have been valued in Eastern medicine for centuries, but its specific mechanism of action has only recently been identified. In 1995, Dr. Aggarwal and colleagues demonstrated that curcumin shuts down nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kB), which is involved in the regulation of inflammation and many other processes.

    By blocking the activity of this “master switch,” curcumin appears to interfere with the cancer process at an early point, impeding multiple routes of development: reducing the inflammatory response, inhibiting the proliferation of tumor cells, inducing their self-destruction, and discouraging the growth of blood vessels feeding tumors. These effects can shrink tumors and inhibit metastasis. Furthermore, shutting down NF-kB can enable traditional chemotherapy drugs to destroy cancer cells more effectively.

    Hundreds of laboratory studies by Drs. Aggarwal and Kurzrock and others have demonstrated that curcumin is biologically active against many types of cancer cells—melanoma, and breast, bladder, brain, pancreatic, and ovarian carcinomas, to name just a few. “In the lab, we haven’t yet found a type of cancer it doesn’t show activity against,” Dr. Aggarwal said.

    While it’s a long road from lab to clinic, Dr. Aggarwal sees promise in curcumin both as a possible preventive agent and as a cancer treatment. As a medicinal agent, its potential extends far beyond cancer. Laboratory studies have demonstrated curcumin’s promise in a number of different diseases that are also affected by inflammation, including arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, autoimmune diseases, and others. In light of these findings, the number of clinical studies of curcumin has grown substantially in the past few years and continues to rise.

    Studying activity in cancer patients

    The clinical research on curcumin in cancer is new but promising. Early studies at M. D. Anderson and elsewhere have shown curcumin to be well tolerated and non-toxic at high oral doses.


    Dr. Kurzrock is designing clinical trials of curcumin, based on promising lab results.

    Dr. Kurzrock and colleagues recently conducted a trial of curcumin in 49 patients with advanced pancreatic cancer, which is notoriously resistant to treatment. Two of those patients had clinically meaningful responses and remained stable for 8 months and more than 22 months, respectively. Another had a brief but dramatic response (73% reduction in tumor size).

    “In advanced pancreatic cancer, the response rate to the Food and Drug Administration-approved treatments is only about 5%, so we were very encouraged that we saw any activity at all in this group,” said Dr. Kurzrock. “That tells us curcumin does have biologic activity in pancreatic cancer—there was a true antitumor effect. It’s too soon to know if it will affect survival rates, but more study is definitely warranted.” The fact that some patients benefited is encouraging, since there were questions about whether therapeutic concentrations could be achieved with oral administration.

    To address the issue of absorption, Dr. Kurzrock is leading the development of an intravenous, liposome-encapsulated delivery system for curcumin that she says has so far been “very potent” in the lab. Liposomal curcumin would be given intravenously, thereby circumventing the problem of poor absorption.

    “The fact that the curcumin did show some activity in the study even though it was poorly absorbed suggests that if we can develop a more effective method to get it to the tumors, it may well have promise as an anticancer treatment,” said Dr. Kurzrock. She hopes to have the liposome-encapsulated delivery system ready to test in a phase I clinical trial for patients with a variety of cancers in 2008. Whether the intravenous formulation would have more side effects in patients because of the higher blood levels of the agent is not yet known, but preliminary testing in mice has shown no toxicity, even at maximum doses.

    Currently under way at M. D. Anderson is a clinical trial of curcumin in multiple myeloma, and researchers are seeking funding for a trial in breast cancer. Trials of curcumin in colorectal cancer and in myelodysplastic syndrome are in progress at other institutions. Curcumin is also in clinical trials as a treatment for non-cancer diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease, arthritis, and psoriasis.

    Food for thought

    Dr. Aggarwal, for one, is not surprised at the evidence that curcumin may have efficacy in treating cancer. He feels curcumin has the potential to one day be an inexpensive and nontoxic alternative to harsher oncology drugs; a chemopreventive agent; and an adjunct to chemotherapy. But he notes that progress in developing curcumin for medical use is likely to be much slower than for pharmaceutical agents because curcumin can’t be patented on a broad scale and therefore is unlikely to attract the interest and the funding of pharmaceutical companies.

    For his part, Dr. Aggarwal takes a curcumin tablet every day, and he offers this food for thought: “The combined rate of the four most common cancers in the United States—lung, prostate, breast, and colon—is at least 10 times lower in India, where curry is a staple in the diet.”

    For more information, call Dr. Aggarwal at 713-794-1817 or Dr. Kurzrock at 713-794-1226.

    Other articles in OncoLog, September 2007 issue:

    Breathing with you too, Claudia dear
    Dear Claudia,
    thanks for this article. When I went for my check up at MD Anderson last week they had this article in the lounge for people to read. I don't know if you have ever been there but, MD Anderson is a wonder of a care center. You would love the Alternative Medicine Department (yep, there is a whole section headed by a doctor and staff that promotes alternative forms of treatment.) Yoga, accupuncture, massage therapy, music therapy, and others. Each day there are classes that are free to patients. The accupuncture and massage therapy do have nominal fees attached but, they are affordable.) There are also support groups that are promoted. The Uterine Cancer Group meets once a month. Someone from the staff usually attends to answer questions if needed. I have gone to several of these.

    In September of this year there is going to be a 2 day seminar there where the author of the Anti-Cancer Book and others will be hosting numerous discussions. I am going to try and attend. Right now the Anti-Cancer diet is all the rage there.

    My CA 125 had been between 13 and 17 during chemo and treatment. It went up to 23 for my post treatment check up and kind of scared me. I started taking a turmeric 500 mg cap in the mornings. Did so for the next 3 months and when I went for my 3 month check up it had dropped to 18 and they found me in remission. I like to think the turmeric helped. I also cook with it. Cauliflower lightly sauteed in olive oil sprinkled with the turmeric and black pepper. Sprinkle it on my eggs with black pepper too...very tasty.

    You are a doll to share your information, Claudia. I have read lots of your posts and they are a big help. I love your fighter attitude. Like the Simon and Garfunkle song "THE BOXER" we are fighters. Lets all keep on fighting and winning. Each day we gain is a victory.