Natural healing, natural wellness

Cancer

$7 Anti-Fungal Drug Can Halve Chemo Needed

You have cancer and chemotherapy is required. Don’t you wish that the administration of these cytotoxic poisons could be kept to as low a dosage as possible to minimize both side-effects and costs, while not compromising on the desired outcome? Well, here’s some good news.

Scientists In Singapore have reported that chemotherapy concentration and costs for advanced breast cancer patients can be halved by incorporating the use of an anti-fungal drug, ketoconazole, which costs around Singapore $12 (about US$7). The drug, which is normally used to treat ordinary infections such as dandruff and athlete’s foot, complements chemotherapy treatment as it blocks an enzyme in the body from breaking down docetaxel, a drug used to treat breast, stomach, lung and prostate cancers.

Each cycle of docetaxel, given once every three weeks, can cost between S$1,800 – S$2,500. A typical course can involve four cycles. By pairing ketoconazole with docetaxel, researchers from the Cancer Science Institute of Singapore were able to lower the concentration level of the chemotherapy by 40%, thereby reducing costs as well as chemotherapy side effects, while still achieving the desired results.

The results of this clinical trial were published in the April 2010 Annals of oncology, the official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology and the Japanese Society of Medical Oncology.

Principal investigator Lee Soo Chin and her colleagues conducted the trial between July 2005 and September 2006. The anti-fungal treatment was administered to 31 patients in advanced stages of breast cancer or with large tumors for three days before chemotherapy cycles started. 51 patients treated with the conventional method of 100mg to 140mg of docetaxel between April 2002 and July 2005 formed the control group.

One breast cancer patient who participated in the “cocktail” trial was 58-year old housewife Gladys Goh. In June 2006, she was diagnosed with stage 3 breast cancer and went through four cycles of the anti-fungal and chemotherapy drugs. “After the first cycle, my tumor was greatly reduced and after all four I was able to go for surgery to have it removed”, she said.

Said principal investigator Lee: “With this finding, this would make an expensive treatment like docetaxel more affordable”. She also said: “these two drugs are existing ones, so doctors can apply them to their patients suffering not only from breast cancer but also from stomach, lung and prostate cancers. But they have to be mindful their patients may be on other medication and our study here is on only two singular drugs.”

Yeah for lower cancer treatment costs and fewer side effects!

Fight Cancer – Go Native!

When you think about it, most communities which follow a native diet and lifestyle STRICTLY have very low cancer rates, if at all. It’s the people who adulterate this “formula” who start getting all kinds of sicknesses, including cancer. Let’s look at the elements which are common to relatively cancer-free societies, whether they are Asian, European or African:

1. They eat foods native to their territory, whether it be plant or animal in origin. Don’t forget that the Mongolians and Eskimos eat a predominantly meat and fat based diet, with hardly any plant food. The Mongolians, in addition, eat plenty of dairy foods. Many traditional European, Middle-Eastern and Indian diets also feature dairy products and meats.

2. Each native group obviously adapted to their respective diets, eating whatever was naturally available in order to stay alive. This is why a diet abundant in meat and fat was not harmful to the Eskimos or the Mongolians. In fact, it was protective for them, living in their harsh, wintry environments.

3. The foods they ate and beverages they drank were organic, unprocessed, unrefined and free from artificial additives like chemicals, hormones and antibiotics. Meat and dairy were completely natural and uncontaminated.

4. Foods were generally eaten fresh, freshly harvested or freshly killed. Any food preservation or storage was usually limited to salting, fermenting, drying or pickling. Modern societies tend to eat food which has been canned, packaged in some way or frozen for quite some time.

5. Cooking methods were completely natural. Nothing strange like microwaving or “nuking” in any way.

6. Kitchen utensils, cookware and materials used were also completely natural (clay, leaves, wood etc). Certainly no plastic.

7. Condiments, spices and flavorings were kept simple and natural. Nothing artificial.

8. In Asia, if oil was used for cooking, it was what was indigenous to the territory eg. peanut oil, coconut oil, soya bean oil, ghee (clarified butter), or lard (made from animal fat). “Healthy” fats like olive oil or grapeseed oil were unheard of.

9. If a sweetener was used, it was natural eg. cane sugar, palm sugar or honey.

10. Carbohydrates were fine and even essential, but they were usually natural, unrefined and free from artificial additives eg. tapioca, sweet potatoes, corn, beans, nuts, seeds, potatoes and other tubers.

11. No leftover food was kept. Everything was made fresh and finished in one sitting, so food did not have a chance to deteriorate further.

12. Usually, native people ate only what they needed, or even starved at times for a while. Excess was a luxury, and generally reserved for special occasions. Modern people are literally indulging themselves to death.

13. With the exception of people living in harsh environments like the Mongolians and Eskimos – where meat and fat was more readily available than plant foods – most native diets are dominated by plant foods. Meat was considered a luxury item to be eaten sparingly or reserved for special occasions. If seafood was available, that was eaten more often than meat. Modern societies consume far more meat than our forefathers did, and the meat we eat today is mostly adulterated and contaminated.

14. Almost all native societies have some fermented foods. These foods are rich in anti-cancer properties. Think sauerkraut, kimchi, miso, tempeh and yoghurt.

15. Almost all native societies have a rich tradition of using herbs for food, healing and beauty. The Chinese, for instance, have a vast variety of herbal teas, using herbs, flowers, roots, tree bark, fungi etc. I grew up drinking herbal teas and soups, but switched to Western concoctions and drugs and soda pop from my early teens. Now that I’m older and (hopefully) wiser, I’m beginning to rediscover Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) and learning how to use traditional herbs at home.

16.The true native lifestyle is physically active, even rigorous, on a daily basis. Exercise was a way of life. People living in urban societies are very sedentary, and obesity has become an epidemic.

17 The environment and air was clean and pure. There was no exposure to modern contaminants like chemicals, radiation, electrical currents, vehicle and industrial emissions etc.

18. Furniture, building materials, fabrics etc was all organic.

19. There was no obsession with cleaning or enhancing body or home with products saturated with chemicals, unlike today.

20. People slept early and woke up early. Their sleeping environments were completely dark and quiet, except perhaps for the sounds of nature. No night lights, street lights, blinking lights, TV etc. Perfect for melatonin production.

These are just a few of my observations. As I said in my opening paragraph, the people who adulterate this “formula” are the ones who start getting all kinds of sicknesses, including cancer. Of course, observing a strict native diet and way of life is challenging in an urban society. But I believe we need to try our level best, in order to be cancer-free, even if it means re-locating. Major miracles often require major changes.

So, should we consume green tea, or soy, or turmeric, or flaxseed, or berries, or cruciferous vegetables, or iodine, or dark chocolate etc. or load up on more supplements? I think we know by now that each in itself CANNOT defeat cancer. Diet alone won’t cut it. Even vegetarians and exercise fanatics get cancer, right? A radical, holistic approach is required, and this may include some medical intervention. To keep cancer and other diseases at bay, it’s back to basics, back to our roots.

GO NATIVE, as far as it makes sense. In other words, if you’re a Mongolian working in a nice, cushy office in New York, the traditional Mongolian diet may not be healthy for you in this context. Adapt it to your present living environment, eliminating elements which are harmful (eg. unnatural foods, high-fat diet, chemicals, being sedentary) and adding those which are protective (eg. daily exercise, lots of plant foods, natural foods, fresh foods, safe personal care and household care products, conducive sleeping environment and times).

As long as your foods are natural and your way of life is as native as possible, a little dairy food or meat or dessert once in a while is not going to kill you. Just make sure it is pure, unrefined, unprocessed and fresh. Food which has travelled a long way to get to you is often “preserved” in some way to make it last the journey and storage. They also lose their nutritional value with each passing day.

Avoid anything artificial or unnatural, eat fresh, don’t over-indulge, lose weight, learn how to use herbs for everything, eat some fermented foods regularly, live in a pure and uncontaminated environment, sleep well and exercise everyday. GO NATIVE!

Angiogenesis Inhibiting Drug Danger

After further research on angiogenesis inhibitors, especially those in the form of drugs, I’m beginning to think that cancer patients should use them with caution. This is because some studies show that while they do initially cause tumors to shrink, the cancer cells may later invade healthy tissue nearby because the angiogenesis inhibiting drugs were too effective. By preventing the growth and spread of the blood vessel network tumors need to derive their nutrients from, the angiogenesis inhibitors were, in effect, starving them. In a survival reflex, the cancer fights back by trying to establish itself in other areas of the body.

Angiogenesis inhibitors are not cytotoxic, meaning that they do not attack and kill the tumors per se. In conventional cancer treatment, they are normally used together with other therapies, such as chemotherapy and even aromatase inhibitors, to fight the cancer. It looks like the goal should still be to kill the tumor outright, rather than just deprive it of its blood network and food supply.