Some more studies and food for thought

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  • RozHopkins
    RozHopkins Member Posts: 578 Member
    Mmm
    You know everyone, anything could at this point in time help the onset of cancer, and probably more than one single thing. You can go from smoking to freezing food in plastic containers. Drinking to using a microwave or watching TV too much (radiation). Food additives to drinking coffee/tea. Depression to obsessive behavior and the dreaded stress. Meat eating to belly fat. I believe everything in moderation, none of us are perfect, me for sure. I enjoy the odd doughnut, a good steak, and a drink or two. I also, only drink decaff, dont use butter, only skimmed milk, no chips or sweet things in the house unless for a treat. Never smoked, do a lot of Yoga and fun (not heavy) classes. Eat lots of veg and beans, leanest of meat, fish including sardines (no sauces). Natural wheat bread, every casserole or gravy I use low sodium bases or salt free tomato purees etc. Herbs instead of salt. Wasn't always this good until my hubby had a heart attack (Yea). We must just use our common sense,I wouldn't dream of pushing my living habits on any other person including my children. Life should be fun dont you think.
  • phoenixrising
    phoenixrising Member Posts: 1,508

    P.S.
    Here is a US government (AHRQ, division of dept of HHS) review of 20 studies (5 human and 15 animal). The review is trying to determine why alcohol is linked to breast cancer. Note they are well beyond it being an "hypothesis". Anotherwords, we know alcohol is linked to breast cancer--now we just need to figure out why alcohol is so deleterious to breast cancer survivors.

    Alcohol Consumption and Cancer Risk: Understanding Possible Causal Mechanisms for Breast and Colorectal Cancers

    http://ftp.ahrq.gov/clinic/tp/alccantp.htm

    @CypressCynthia, thanks for
    @CypressCynthia, thanks for the article...I kinda thought this was old news, but then it resurfaced again...new studies, I guess. The link is with ER+ breast cancer, not sure if your article states that or not. Alcohol raises estrogen so whether that puts one over the edge or not is up to their personal genetics. Because of this I don't think alcohol affects those that are ER-. A doc once said to me that I had exceeded my lifetime quota for estrogen. This makes sense to me as I had spent a number of years handling/transporting dangerous goods.

    I lost interest in alcohol a few months before dx and I'm glad for it. Personally I haven't gone through 5 horrible years of a hormone blocker to turn around and increase that hormone by drinking. However, if I choose to, it will be with 'eyes wide open'.

    Thank you for all your research and articles. I enjoy and appreciate them. We all have the choice to do what we want but once we know the facts, there is no going back.

    hugs
    jan
  • SIROD
    SIROD Member Posts: 2,194 Member
    For Cynthia: Pros & Cons - Don't You Just Love It!
    When I read the following article, I got such a kick out of it.

    Now I learn, I should have consumed alcohol and that would have prevented cancer in my lungs.

    However, these were mice and I'm not a mouse. I still believe moderation in all things and hope for the best!

    Doris



    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45348447/ns/health-cancer/#

    Alcohol may thwart breast cancer's spread

    By Rachael Rettner

    Although drinking alcohol appears to increase the risk of developing breast cancer, drinking may be beneficial for those who already have the disease, a new study of mice suggests.

    Of the mice in the study that had breast cancer, those that were given moderate to high levels of alcohol had fewer instances of cancer spreading to other parts of the body than alcohol-free mice did.

    The study is one of the first to look at the effect of drinking on cancer metastasis, said study researcher Gary Meadows, a professor of pharmacy at Washington State University.

    However, Meadows said it's important to conduct further studies so that doctors can best advise breast cancer patients on the risks and benefits of consuming alcohol after diagnosis. Whether humans would experience the same effect is unknown, and in any case, it could be impractical as a treatment: The mice that fared best in the study drank so much alcohol that if they were people, they probably would be considered alcoholics, Meadows said.

    The findings were presented Nov. 3 at the American Institute for Cancer's annual meeting in Washington, D.C.

    For the study, tumors were injected into mice's mammary glands (where breast cancer usually originates), and the mice were then divided into four groups. Three groups drank water mixed with differing levels of alcohol (low, moderate or high), and the fourth group drank only water.

    After four weeks, the researchers checked the mice to see if the cancer had spread to their lungs.

    Mice who drank water spiked with a high dose of alcohol were 60 percent less likely to develop metastases in their lungs than those that drank plain water.

    Some protection against metastases was seen in mice in the moderate-dose group, but none was seen in the low-dose group.

    The researchers aren't sure how alcohol, which is carcinogenic, may act to suppress breast cancer's spread. The study showed alcohol did not affect the growth of tumors in the breast. So it may have affected the spread of the tumor in a different way, such as allowing the immune system to better attack the cancer at other sites in the body.

    Although we don't know what effect alcohol has on metastases in people, the study "provides some clues as to what could potentially occur," said Somdat Mahabir, a nutritional epidemiologist at the National Institutes of Health, who was not involved with the study.

    Previous studies showed alcohol can reduce metastases in animals with certain types of skin cancer.

    Although alcohol has toxic effects, it could still theoretically be a treatment.

    "I'm not opposed to anything that may have a therapeutic effect," Mahabir said. "But we need to weigh the risks versus the benefits."

    Studies that ask questions about alcohol consumption before and after cancer diagnosis, and that follow patients over time, could provide a better idea of how alcohol affects cancer metastases in people, Mahabir said.

    Pass it on: High doses of alcohol suppress the spread of breast cancer tumors in mice.

    Follow MyHealthNewsDaily staff writer Rachael Rettner on Twitter @RachaelRettner. Find us on Facebook.