Edited by
Jonathan D. Kantrowitz
Published by
Tsadek Press
Copyright, Jonathan Kantrowitz 2014
This book is a compendium of reports on all the latest research on the ways to avoid, or mitigate the harm caused by, cancer. It's not readily apparent that there are many life-saving techniques , often easy to apply, that can have such a huge influence on your future health. This book may open your eyes to new ways to protect yourself and your family from the scourge of cancer. Don't wait another minute to order and read it!
8.5 x 11, 180 pages
$14.95
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3 Tsadek Press books $24.95
2 Tsadek Press books $19.95
3 Tsadek Press books $24.95
Call 1-800-232--2224 to order a pdf of this title
Table of Contents
Aspirin `
Chocolate
Coffee
Exercise
Fiber
Fish and Fish Oil
Fruits and Vegetables
Mediterranean Diet
Moderate Alcohol Consumption
Olive Oil, Nuts, Whole
Grains
Vitamin D
Miscellaneous Vitamins, Minerals and Supplements
Foods To Avoid
Sample Reports
Aspirin for
Primary Prevention in Men When Cancer Mortality Benefit Added
While
aspirin has been shown to be effective in preventing heart attacks in men, it
also increases the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding and possibly stroke, even
at low doses. As such, national guidelines suggest that aspirin be used for
prevention only in men at higher risk for cardiovascular events, so that the
benefits of aspirin are greater than its adverse effects.
Recent
data suggest that aspirin may also be effective for reducing cancer deaths.
Would the possible combined health benefits of reducing heart attacks and
cancer outweigh the risks of gastrointestinal bleeding and stroke for
middle-aged men?
A
research team, including UNC scientists, reports that including the positive
effect of aspirin on cancer mortality influences the threshold for prescribing
aspirin for primary prevention in men. The benefit of aspirin for cancer
mortality prevention would help offset the risks and thus lower the age and
increase the number of men for whom aspirin is recommended.
Their
results were published in the June 2013 issue of the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
Michael
Pignone, MD, MPH, and study lead author, says, “We found that including a risk
reduction for cancer deaths had a substantial impact on the overall benefits of
aspirin, especially for early middle-aged men from 45 to 55 years of age. Based
on this effect, several million men who were not previously good candidates for
aspirin prevention would now become eligible.
The
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, of which Dr. Pignone is a recently
appointed member, recommends aspirin for primary prevention in men “when the
potential benefit of a reduction in myocardial infarctions outweighs the
potential harm of an increase in gastrointestinal hemorrhage.” This
recommendation was issued in 2009, before the potential benefits for cancer reduction
were recognized.
Coffee
Reduces Breast Cancer Risk
Recently
published research shows that coffee drinkers enjoy not only the taste of their
coffee but also a reduced risk of cancer with their cuppa. More detailed
research published May 10, 2011 in BioMed Central's open access journal Breast Cancer Research shows that
drinking coffee specifically reduces the risk of antiestrogen-resistant
estrogen-receptor (ER)-negative breast cancer.
Researchers
from Sweden compared lifestyle factors and coffee consumption between women
with breast cancer and age-matched women without. They found that coffee
drinkers had a lower incidence of breast cancer than women who rarely drank
coffee. However they also found that several lifestyle factors affected breast
cancer rates, such as age at menopause, exercise, weight, education, and a
family history of breast cancer. Once they had adjusted their data to account
for these other factors they found that the protective effect of coffee on
breast cancer was only measurable for ER-negative breast cancer.
The
group from Karolinska Institutet explained that, "There is often
conflicting information about the beneficial effects of coffee -- when we
compared our results to that of a German study we discovered that their data
showed the same trend, but the relationship was much weaker. We suggest that
this may have something to do with the way the coffee was prepared, or the type
of bean preferred. It is unlikely that the protective effect is due to
phytoestrogens present in coffee since there was no reduction in the incidence
of ER-positive cancer in this study."
So
while it is evident that coffee may have beneficial effects in protecting women
from ER negative breast cancer the exact mechanism and compounds involved are
not yet clear and not all types of coffee are the same.
Exercise and
rest reduce cancer risk
Exercise is good for more than just
your waistline. A recent study presented at the American Association for Cancer
Research's Seventh Annual International Conference on Frontiers in Cancer
Prevention Research suggests that regular physical activity can lower a woman's
overall risk of cancer – but only if she gets a good night's sleep. Otherwise,
lack of sleep can undermine exercise's cancer prevention benefits.
"Greater participation in
physical activity has consistently been associated with reduced risk of cancer
incidence at several sites, including breast and colon cancers," said
James McClain, Ph.D., cancer prevention fellow at the National Cancer Institute
and lead author of the study. "Short duration sleep appears to have opposing
effects of physical activity on several key hormonal and metabolic parameters,
which is why we looked at how it affected the exercise/cancer risk
relationship."
Even though the exact mechanism of
how exercise reduces cancer risk isn't known, researchers believe that physical
activity's effects on factors including hormone levels, immune function, and
body weight may play an important role. The study examined the link between
exercise and cancer risk, paying special attention to whether or not getting
adequate sleep further affected a women's cancer risk.
Researchers assessed the association
between physical activity energy expenditure (PAEE), sleep duration and
incidence of overall, breast, and colon cancer in 5,968 women at least 18 years
old with no previous cancer diagnoses. The women completed an initial survey in
1998 and were then tracked through the Washington County Cancer Registry and
Maryland State Cancer Registry for nearly 10 years.
The results pointed to a
sleep-exercise link. "Current findings suggest that sleep duration
modifies the relationship between physical activity and all-site cancer risk
among young and middle-aged women," he said.
Out of those 5,968 women, 604
experienced a first incidence of cancer, including 186 breast cancer cases. Women
in the upper 50 percent of PAEE showed significantly reduced risk of overall
cancer and breast cancer. Among women 65 or younger when surveyed and in the
upper half of PAEE, sleeping less than seven hours a day increased overall
cancer risk, negating much of the protective effects of physical activity on
cancer risk for this group.
The next step, says McClain, would
be to confirm current findings and investigate potential mechanisms underlying
the interaction between sleep and exercise in order to better understand their
roles in cancer prevention.
Research is expanding rapidly on the
effect of insufficient and prolonged sleep duration on many health outcomes
although few studies have examined the association of sleep duration with
cancer risk. This novel study examining the interaction of sleep and physical
activity suggests another future focus of research on health behaviors and
cancer outcomes.
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