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Sugar...

Posted by Denise @denisesongs, May 23, 2019

https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2019/05/food-cancer/589714/

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Carol,
You are a special person who has the strength to handle a whole family’s worth of health issues, including your own. You have taught us all to stay the course no matter what, and I truly believe your guidance gave me the strength to go into treatment with confidence. I know how much peace the beach gives you, so I’m very glad you’re headed there. My friend, I know you and yours will make it through this time. Cancer, etc. really does suck. But the experience has turned my life around, and I treasure each day more and more. Xoxo

REPLY
@carolcowan

Charles is so right about the sugar. All foods feed cancer. Don't feed it and watch your fat and muscle disappear. You'll also cause your body to be unable to fight.
I've received a couple of private inquiries about my health, my ex-husband's, and Jason's melanoma in his eye. I guess it's time to update.
Jason's tumor was shrunk by brachytherapy (radiation inside the eye) to about half of its original size. The tumor was encapsulated and they discussed whether or not to remove the eye because if he was injured the capsule could leak and cause metastasis. There was no rush about making that decision. Recently he learned that the tumor has become slightly larger. I think they may do the brachytherapy again. For now, that's all I know. I can't/won't be the "decider", I continue to look for anything new, I listen to Jason's feelings, and will support his decision when he makes it. He's 44 yrs old and understands his options.
My ex-husband who was diagnosed with stage 4 colorectal cancer that metastasized to his lungs, liver, bones, peritoneum, and pleural cavity is doing well with chemo. All tumors have become smaller. He's eating and his weight is stable, he has actually gained a couple of pounds. Our 3 children are responsible for his survival as much as treatments are. They've supported him in every aspect of his life. I'm very proud of them.
My situation is complicated. There's a 1 cm thin-walled cyst in the lower left lobe of my lung. They will rule out lung cancer (I hope!) There's a 5 mm thing "they can't characterize" in the head of my pancreas. My stage 3, grade 3 liver disease is now stage 4 and it's now cirrhosis and the NASH is continuing to destroy my liver. I have hepatomegaly (enlarged liver) and splenomegaly (enlarged spleen). Those have caused portal hypertension (high blood pressure in that area). There are varices as a result. Those are stretched thin twisted veins in my esophagus that like to rupture. I'm quite anemic. I just learned that my kidneys are damaged. I have stage 3 chronic kidney disease (stage 5 is kidney failure). That is probably why I'm anemic.The only cure is a kidney transplant. Both kidneys have "low density lesions smaller than 1 cm in diameter". All of that came to light because I fell, injured my knee, and had a CT scan that found some problems. There's no treatment plan, things are still being tested. I'm fighting all that I can. My two youngest children's father has Alzheimer's that's progressing. They are 24 and 25. I'm very aware that all 5 of my children have fathers who are terminally ill. I need to support them, not add to their burden.
So, I'll do what needs doing. I took a step in the right direction and expanded my month long beach vacation to 2 months, July and August . That's the best therapy/treatment that exists, my beach and my family being there.
Carol

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Prayers to you Carol!🙏🏻🙏🏻

REPLY
@carolcowan

Charles is so right about the sugar. All foods feed cancer. Don't feed it and watch your fat and muscle disappear. You'll also cause your body to be unable to fight.
I've received a couple of private inquiries about my health, my ex-husband's, and Jason's melanoma in his eye. I guess it's time to update.
Jason's tumor was shrunk by brachytherapy (radiation inside the eye) to about half of its original size. The tumor was encapsulated and they discussed whether or not to remove the eye because if he was injured the capsule could leak and cause metastasis. There was no rush about making that decision. Recently he learned that the tumor has become slightly larger. I think they may do the brachytherapy again. For now, that's all I know. I can't/won't be the "decider", I continue to look for anything new, I listen to Jason's feelings, and will support his decision when he makes it. He's 44 yrs old and understands his options.
My ex-husband who was diagnosed with stage 4 colorectal cancer that metastasized to his lungs, liver, bones, peritoneum, and pleural cavity is doing well with chemo. All tumors have become smaller. He's eating and his weight is stable, he has actually gained a couple of pounds. Our 3 children are responsible for his survival as much as treatments are. They've supported him in every aspect of his life. I'm very proud of them.
My situation is complicated. There's a 1 cm thin-walled cyst in the lower left lobe of my lung. They will rule out lung cancer (I hope!) There's a 5 mm thing "they can't characterize" in the head of my pancreas. My stage 3, grade 3 liver disease is now stage 4 and it's now cirrhosis and the NASH is continuing to destroy my liver. I have hepatomegaly (enlarged liver) and splenomegaly (enlarged spleen). Those have caused portal hypertension (high blood pressure in that area). There are varices as a result. Those are stretched thin twisted veins in my esophagus that like to rupture. I'm quite anemic. I just learned that my kidneys are damaged. I have stage 3 chronic kidney disease (stage 5 is kidney failure). That is probably why I'm anemic.The only cure is a kidney transplant. Both kidneys have "low density lesions smaller than 1 cm in diameter". All of that came to light because I fell, injured my knee, and had a CT scan that found some problems. There's no treatment plan, things are still being tested. I'm fighting all that I can. My two youngest children's father has Alzheimer's that's progressing. They are 24 and 25. I'm very aware that all 5 of my children have fathers who are terminally ill. I need to support them, not add to their burden.
So, I'll do what needs doing. I took a step in the right direction and expanded my month long beach vacation to 2 months, July and August . That's the best therapy/treatment that exists, my beach and my family being there.
Carol

Jump to this post

Hello Carol,
I am new here. I am just blown away by your post. I will add all of your family to my prayers,. Thank you for sharing
Cheryl Witherell

REPLY
@carolcowan

Charles is so right about the sugar. All foods feed cancer. Don't feed it and watch your fat and muscle disappear. You'll also cause your body to be unable to fight.
I've received a couple of private inquiries about my health, my ex-husband's, and Jason's melanoma in his eye. I guess it's time to update.
Jason's tumor was shrunk by brachytherapy (radiation inside the eye) to about half of its original size. The tumor was encapsulated and they discussed whether or not to remove the eye because if he was injured the capsule could leak and cause metastasis. There was no rush about making that decision. Recently he learned that the tumor has become slightly larger. I think they may do the brachytherapy again. For now, that's all I know. I can't/won't be the "decider", I continue to look for anything new, I listen to Jason's feelings, and will support his decision when he makes it. He's 44 yrs old and understands his options.
My ex-husband who was diagnosed with stage 4 colorectal cancer that metastasized to his lungs, liver, bones, peritoneum, and pleural cavity is doing well with chemo. All tumors have become smaller. He's eating and his weight is stable, he has actually gained a couple of pounds. Our 3 children are responsible for his survival as much as treatments are. They've supported him in every aspect of his life. I'm very proud of them.
My situation is complicated. There's a 1 cm thin-walled cyst in the lower left lobe of my lung. They will rule out lung cancer (I hope!) There's a 5 mm thing "they can't characterize" in the head of my pancreas. My stage 3, grade 3 liver disease is now stage 4 and it's now cirrhosis and the NASH is continuing to destroy my liver. I have hepatomegaly (enlarged liver) and splenomegaly (enlarged spleen). Those have caused portal hypertension (high blood pressure in that area). There are varices as a result. Those are stretched thin twisted veins in my esophagus that like to rupture. I'm quite anemic. I just learned that my kidneys are damaged. I have stage 3 chronic kidney disease (stage 5 is kidney failure). That is probably why I'm anemic.The only cure is a kidney transplant. Both kidneys have "low density lesions smaller than 1 cm in diameter". All of that came to light because I fell, injured my knee, and had a CT scan that found some problems. There's no treatment plan, things are still being tested. I'm fighting all that I can. My two youngest children's father has Alzheimer's that's progressing. They are 24 and 25. I'm very aware that all 5 of my children have fathers who are terminally ill. I need to support them, not add to their burden.
So, I'll do what needs doing. I took a step in the right direction and expanded my month long beach vacation to 2 months, July and August . That's the best therapy/treatment that exists, my beach and my family being there.
Carol

Jump to this post

As a newly-diagnosed breast cancer patient, I am in awe of you. You are my hero! We seem to be on the same level with caregiving — I finally gave in and told my parents yesterday and I’m as concerned for them as they are for me. Keep fighting the good fight!

Dawn

REPLY

A major problem with sugar, among others, is it feeds yeast. Yeast, specifically Candida in turn compromises the immune system of which over 70% is in the gut. While a cancer-sugar connection is debated the Candida-sugar connection is not. A strong immune system is critical to fight cancer. My wife has Myelofibrosis now. Prior to this she had high platelets. The medication controlled them but could not lower the platelets and had strong side effects. I searched to see what would help. It turned out that form of vitamin E called Tocotrienol from red palm reduced her platelets to the normal range. Tocotrienol also has a role against breast cancer and others as well. Tocopherol, regular vitamin E, degrades tocotrienol and should be taken several hours apart.

https://www.intechopen.com/books/vitamin-e-in-health-and-disease/-tocotrienol-reversal-of-epithelial-to-mesenchymal-transition-in-human-breast-cancer-cells-is-mediathttps://nutritionandmetabolism.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1743-7075-11-52
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