ZeroCancer.com – fight cancer through knowledge

Cancer news

Two international cancer prevention groups think the online community can -- and should -- take a stab at the worldwide cancer epidemic. In honor of World Cancer Day, Feb. 4, Stand Up To Cancer and the Union for International Cancer Control are launching a Facebook app that they hope will create a digital buzz that will reduce the spread of the disease.
To many people, breast cancer screening means a mammogram. But for millions of poor, mostly young women who visit Planned Parenthood, it is usually just a physical exam by the only health professional they may ever see.
Saturday, Feb. 4 is World Cancer Day, but for me, and for countless people around the globe, every day is Cancer Day ? because you or someone you love has the disease
AUSTIN, TX-- - To mark World Cancer Day, LIVESTRONG ® today announced a new initiative to help cancer survivors facing exceptional challenges. Jose Antonio Ventura , a bone cancer survivor and resident ...
After she was diagnosed with breast cancer when she was three weeks pregnant, Lynette Bisconti, president of The Gateway for Cancer ResearchSM www.demandcurestoday.org, began an aggressive personal campaign to beat the deadly disease.
FRIDAY, Feb. 3 (HealthDay News) -- Soy supplements do not protect women against breast cancer, a new study suggests.
Survivors share experiences on World Cancer Day
A major US breast cancer foundation Friday reversed its decision to stop funding Planned Parenthood after outcry over the move sparked a political and fundraising backlash by women's health advocates.
Northern Ireland's bowel cancer screening programme is to be extended with more people being targeted across all of the health trusts.
Prostate cancer drug is currently available through the Cancer Drugs Fund, but funding issues mean patients could either have to buy it themselves or take out health insurance Men in England with late-stage prostate cancer could soon be stopped from accessing "breakthrough" drug abiraterone unless they can afford to buy the drug themselves or pay for private medical insurance. Trials of ...

Can you fight cancer with a healthy diet?

by Neal Barnard

Q: I know that diet plays a role in the risk of developing cancer. But what about people who already have been diagnosed: What will–or won’t–diet changes do for them?

A:

That’s a great question and a very important one since as many as one in three people in North America will get cancer at some point.

As far back as the early 1960s, researchers observed that women in Japan were much less likely than Americans to develop breast cancer and, even if they got it, were less likely to die from it. The traditional Japanese diet, very low in fat and rich in grains and vegetables, seemed to offer a possible explanation.

Then in 1985, researchers at the State University of New York at Buffalo analyzed the eating habits of women who had been diagnosed with advanced breast cancer. They found that women with the lowest fat intake lived longer. The risk of dying from cancer increased by 40 percent for every 1,000 grams of fat the women had consumed per month.

Other studies found much the same thing. And earlier this year, the Women’s Intervention Nutrition Study, a major trial funded by the National Cancer Institute, reported results from 2,500 postmenopausal breast cancer patients. Women who had–after diagnosis–begun a low-fat diet (33 grams of fat daily) and maintained it for several years had a lower risk of the cancer coming back and better survival rates than those who didn’t change their diets (and averaged 51 grams of fat daily).

The benefit of a low-fat diet is apparently due to its effect on estrogens, the female sex hormones that stimulate the growth of breast tissue at puberty and can accelerate cancer cell growth later in life. When a woman cuts her fat intake, estrogen levels in the bloodstream fall (why isn’t clear), although there is still enough estrogen to maintain good health. That means there is less stimulus for cancer cells to grow.

Adding fiber also helps the body eliminate excess hormones. Here’s how: The liver filters excess estrogens out of the bloodstream and sends them into the intestinal tract where fiber absorbs them and carries them away. Eating 30 grams of fiber or more daily helps flush out the excess estrogens. But women who eat a low-fiber diet will actually reabsorb these risky waste estrogens.

Low-fat, high-fiber diets also help with weight control. That’s important because women who are close to their ideal weight have much better cancer survival rates than women who are very overweight. Diets rich in vegetables and fruits may also strengthen the white blood cells that seek out and attack cancer cells.

Much the same results have emerged in men who have prostate cancer. In 2002, Dean Ornish, MD–who by then had already demonstrated the life-saving benefits of a very low-fat vegetarian diet in heart patients–tested a low-fat vegan diet in prostate cancer patients. For three months, one group of 42 men are normally, and, on average, their prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels rose, a sign that the disease was progressing. (PSA levels are used to track the growth of prostate cancer.) But the PSA levels in a second group of 42 men, who all are a vegan diet, actually fell slightly, a sign that the cancer was not advancing; none of these men required further treatment.

Using diet to help fight other forms of cancer hasn’t been well studied. However, it is likely that the diets that can help with breast or prostate cancers may also help alleviate cancers in other hormone-responsive organs (such as uterine, ovarian or testicular cancer). And high-fiber diets might help cancers in the digestive tract.

So what does a cancer-fighting diet look like? It appears to avoid animal products, keep oils very low (minimizing fats), favor whole grains over refined grain products (maximizing fiber) and include plenty of vegetables and fruits.

A few cautions: First, diet changes should be made in addition to medical diagnosis and treatment, not instead of them, and should always be done in close consultation with the physician involved.

Second, remember that 10 years or more can elapse between the time cancer cells first arise and the point at which a tumor becomes large enough to be diagnosed. So it’s a good idea to follow a cancer-fighting diet before cancer is ever an issue. The same good eating habits that help combat cancer can also help prevent it.

30 NUMBER OF GRAMS OF FIBER DAILY THAT HELP FIGHT BREAST CANCER

FIBER kings

The following easy-to-use foods are not only flavorful, they’re powerful sources of fiber–an important element of a cancer-fighting diet.

FIBER kings
The following easy-to-use foods are not only flavorful, they’re
powerful sources of fiber–an important element of a cancer-fighting
diet.

FOOD SERVING FIBER (GRAMS)

Navy beans, cooked          1 cup        19.1
Kidney beans, canned        1 cup        16.4
Split peas, cooked          1 cup        16.3
Lentils, cooked             1 cup        15.6
Black beans, cooked         1 cup        15.0
Wheat flour, whole grain    1 cup        14.6
Dates                       1 cup        14.2
Refried beans, canned       1 cup        13.4
Chickpeas, cooked           1 cup        12.5
Tomato paste, canned        1 cup        11.8
Raspberries, frozen         1 cup        11.0
Cornmeal                    1 cup        10.2
Artichokes, cooked          1 cup         9.1
Blackberries, fresh         1 cup         7.6
Spinach, frozen             1 cup         7.0

Source: USDA National Nutrient Database

Neal Barnard, MD, is the author of The Survivor’s Handbook, which can
be downloaded for free at cancerproject.org under “Resources.”

COPYRIGHT 2005 Vegetarian Times, Inc. All rights reserved.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group

Tags: , , ,

▼ Show related feed