Posts tagged cancer

Men may need colon cancer screening earlier than women do

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Study: Men may need colon cancer screening earlier than women do

Men may need to begin colon cancer screening earlier than women, new research suggests.

The study found that men were far more likely to have potentially precancerous lesions (also called polyps or adenomas) in their colon — 24.9 percent of men compared to 14.8 percent of women — and to have them at an earlier age.

“In our study, analysis of age- and sex-specific prevalence of adenomas, advanced adenomas and colorectal cancers indicates a significantly higher rate of these lesions among men compared with women in all age groups, suggesting that male sex constitutes an independent risk factor for colorectal carcinoma and their precursor lesions, and indicating new sex-specific age recommendations for screening colonoscopy,” said study author Dr. Monika Ferlitsch, an associate professor of medicine at the Medical University of Vienna in Austria.

But, at least one U.S. expert says that screening guidelines don’t need to be changed based on these findings alone.

“This is a very interesting, very well-done study that included a lot of people. But, I have a lot of concerns about making changes to currently accepted screening guidelines that are well thought-out,” said Dr. David Bernstein, chief of the division of gastroenterology at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, N.Y.

“There were very few people under 50 in this study, and all of those were referred because they have a high risk of colon cancer,” noted Bernstein, who said all of these people would have been referred for screening in the United States because of their higher risk anyway. He added that while the issue might warrant further investigation, he doesn’t see any need to make gender-based screening recommendations for colorectal cancer.

Young Cancer Survivors

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Author Geralyn Lucas puts a fresh face on cancer survival

There are way too many young people getting cancer—

Sixteen years ago, Lucas received a breast cancer diagnosis. The 44-year-old author of “Why I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomy” is among Gen X survivors helping to de-stigmatize the disease.

Learning from Cancer Survivors

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10 Things I Learned From People Who Survive Cancer

When I interviewed women who had survived breast cancer for my art project The Woman Inside, I noticed that they all shared one remarkable thing in common.

They had all faced down death and decided to live every day like it might be their last. And then they all beat cancer.

The more interviews I did, the more I noticed that these women were living differently than most of the people I knew who had not been diagnosed with cancer. Here’s what I learned from those survivor women. Learning these lessons changed my life, and I hope they’ll change yours.

Cancer Patients use Nurse Navigators

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When a Doctor Isn’t Enough

Nurse Navigators Help Patients Through Maze of Cancer-Treatment Decisions, Fears

When Judith Nakamura tried to see a surgeon to follow up on her treatment for breast cancer recently, she was told it would be a two-month wait. Colleen Sullivan-Moore stepped in and got Ms. Nakamura an appointment the following week.

Ms. Sullivan-Moore, at Presbyterian Healthcare Services in Albuquerque, N.M., heads a team of nurse navigators. Their job: to help steer cancer patients through the medical-system maze.

 

 

Over the course of Ms. Nakamura’s seven months of treatment, Ms. Sullivan-Moore helped her understand the diagnosis and overcome her fears. She was in the recovery room when Ms. Nakamura awoke after her surgeries. And Ms. Sullivan-Moore directed the patient where to buy a wig before she lost her hair to chemotherapy treatment.

I Had Cancer Community

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Great new community I Had Cancer in the news. Having been a caregiver, I can tell you finding a community easily that gets what you are going through is really important. You have all these questions and no one place to find the answers in most cases. It’s nice to talk to others who have been there and can relate —

New social network deals with cancer through digital connections

By all accounts, dealing with cancer can be one of life’s most isolating experiences. Despite the fact that the American Cancer Society estimates that one-half of American men and one-third of American women will have cancer at some point in their lives, many find that the topic is still difficult to talk about.

So Mailet Lopez, a breast cancer survivor, decided that the time had come for the world’s first social networking site to connect those affected by cancer —ihadcancer.com.

Get the book: TWICE: How I Became a Cancer-Slaying Super Man Before I Turned 21…for FREE!

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A few weeks ago I wrote about Ben – who is a cancer survivor and wrote a book about his experience — and now —

You can now own his e-book, TWICE: How I Became a Cancer-Slaying Super Man Before I Turned 21…for FREE!

Just follow these simple steps:

1.  Click the following link to visit my book on Smashwords: http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/53689
2.  Click “Add to Cart” on the right
3.  Enter the following coupon code: FS38W
4.  Click Update
5.  Checkout
6.  Now you own my book, TWICE, for free
7.  Please share this coupon code or email with others

No e-reader is required: if you’re able to read this email then you can read my e-book (via web browser, .pdf, and other formats). And of course TWICE is still available in hardcover from Woodley Books or personalized directly through me at a huge discount, at only $22.00 + shipping. It’s also available for $3.99 on most e-readers, including Kindle and Nook.

Don’t forget to “like” or “follow” him  on Facebook and Twitter (links below).

Facebook: www.facebook.com/benjyruby
Twitter: www.twitter.com/benrubenstein
Blog: www.cancerslayerblog.com
Site: www.benjaminrubenstein.com

Even if the cancer is gone, it’s never gone.

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A Limp, A Shaky Hand, A Missing Colon: Getting Used to a Post-Cancer Body

A woman I know has grown frustrated that her husband hasn’t returned to full health since he completed his brutal treatment regime for nasal cancer. His port came out two months ago, so according to her, he should have recovered by now. What she doesn’t realize is that cancer treatment casts a very long shadow.

Most people know that surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation are dreadful to endure, but many do not appreciate how profoundly changed our bodies are at the end of the process.

Many of us leave the cancer center with missing parts, altered functions, and angry scars that may never heal. And though our cancer souvenirs may not be visible—we tend to keep them well hidden under clothes and behind doors—they can affect us for years after treatment is done.

This comes as an especially big shock to young survivors. We thought we were in great shape when a random lump, blood test, or x-ray suddenly revealed otherwise. I was enjoying an easy pregnancy when I got diagnosed. One survivor I spoke to had just mastered ice climbing and another played competitive hockey when they learned they had the disease.

Suddenly we go from being at the peak of our physical ability to having serious physical limitations. We know we are lucky to be alive, but living in these new bodies isn’t always easy.

Elan was a 27-year old jock who thought his sciatic nerve was acting up. The pain became so bad he finally had an MRI. Only then did he realize he had a malignant tumor the size of a football lodged between his sacrum and hip bone. During a 15-hour surgery, doctors removed the tumor, but they also took out a significant amount of pelvic bone and musculature.

Elan’s recovery began in a wheelchair. When I met him a year later, he had progressed to a cane. A few years later, he dropped the cane, but walked with a limp.

“I was a 27-year-old guy who loved sports and loved being active. I associated that with my personality. It was a relief to be able to walk again, but I miss all the other stuff I did. There are a lot of sports I can’t do now. Some I have to do lightly, because I can’t put myself out there in an aggressive way. It has been difficult to let go of that part of myself.”

Even some of us who didn’t have major surgeries find ourselves impaired in surprising ways. One young mother I spoke to discovered that the chemo she had taken for ovarian cancer left her with neuropathy in her feet. For months she felt so unstable she couldn’t carry her baby. Several musicians I know have been rendered similarly shaky at their instruments.

Limps and unstable hands and feet can broadcast the fact that we have health problems. Yet enduring private side effects brings its own burden: people think you have left cancer behind when in fact you still have to deal with its fallout.

If you met Michelle, you would be struck by how energetic and accomplished she is. From the outside, it appears this successful businesswoman has put cervical cancer behind her, but the truth is that the radiation she had to cure cervical cancer left her with colitis.

“All of the sudden, it comes over me and I feel an uncontrollable sense that I have to go the bathroom that second. I end up leaving panties in trash cans all over the place. Once it happened on an airplane in First Class. It was during landing and I couldn’t get up. I was sitting next to a very distinguished businessman, and I just wanted to crawl into a hole and die. I try to make light of these things and remind myself I am alive. But this will define my life. These physical aspects have changed how I see myself.”

And that is one of the hardest parts of dealing with ongoing side effects: they remind us that we have been permanently altered.

Jeff, another jock in his twenties, had his colon removed after he got diagnosed with colon cancer. He now has to go the bathroom about 10 times a day. An avid rugby player, he has to take Imodium before he hits the field so he doesn’t have to go to the bathroom in the middle of a match. He has adjusted to these new routines, but he says, “Every single day, 10 times a day, I am reminded of cancer.”

When we are sitting in the oncologist’s office, learning about our treatment plans and wondering if we will live or die, we don’t focus on the aftermath of the cure. We just want to live. And when we finish the toxic regimes and the hair grows back, our loved ones want to believe we are as good as new.

That isn’t possible for all of us. We may never be able to play football, go jogging, or play the piano like we used to. We know it is great to be alive, but we also struggle with losing physical abilities we expected to maintain for decades to come. Maybe if our friends and family knew that, they would be a little more patient with us when we chafe in our new skin. And maybe we would be more patient with ourselves.

Marriage helps Colon Cancer Survival Rate

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Marriage Improves Odds of Surviving Colon Cancer

ScienceDaily (June 21, 2011) — A new study shows that being married boosts survival odds for both men and women with colon cancer at every stage of the disease. Married patients had a 14 percent lower risk of death according to researchers at Penn State’s College of Medicine and Brigham Young University. That estimate is based on analysis of 127,753 patient records.

Similar to studies of other types of cancers, the researchers did find that married people were diagnosed at earlier stages of colon cancer and sought more aggressive treatment. The researchers took those and other factors into account before calculating the benefit of marriage on survival odds.

“Controlling for the stage that the cancer was detected is key,” said Sven Wilson, a study coauthor and professor at Brigham Young University. “Without that, it’s hard to know whether the analysis is just picking up a diagnosis effect.”

Colon cancer is the fourth most common type of cancer in the United States for both men and women. Curiously, the marriage benefit seen in the new study was nearly identical for both men and women.

 

Cancer Sucks! Cure by Design Event tonite!

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Great WOD today compliments of Coach Nate at CrossFit Impavidus. My brother Jon is in town so I brought him a long as well.

Warmupx2
Sampson Stretch
10 Pass thrus
10 Whirly Birds
10 Bendy Whirly Birds
10 Hollow Rocks
10 OHS

Skill
Rope Climb

WOD
w/Partner Mike K
800m run
100m tire flips
move 300# 50m
100m Sleds
5 rope climbs or 20 burpee pull ups for each climb substituted
40m bear crawl
800m run
time: 33:08  Mike ended up doing 2 rope climbs so we did a lot of burpee pull ups. I believe I did 37 and holy crap, it was torture!

Mobility stretches

Now I have to go get ready for Cure By Design and my husband, Scott’s catwalk debut! I’m so excited for this event — to honor those that have survived cancer is so important and it benefits a great cause because we all know Cancer Sucks.

Cure by Design is an event in which the fashion, design and retail communities join forces with the local corporate community to benefit the American Cancer Society. The focus of this special evening is a fashion show that spotlights designer fashions and, more importantly, the cancer survivors who model them. These survivor models are living proof of the strides we are making in the fight against cancer, and their vibrant smiles portray a message of hope for the cure.
The money raised at Cure by Design enables the American Cancer Society to fund cutting-edge research, early detection and prevention education, advocacy efforts, and life-affirming patient services. By supporting Cure by Design, you are partnering with the American Cancer Society to help cancer patients in your community.

Education Matters in Cancer Outcome

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When it Comes to Dying of Cancer, Education Matters

The American Cancer Society is out with its annual stats on how many people get and die from the disease in the U.S.

Incidence and death rates are on the decline, though this year, the report estimates, there will still be almost 1,597,000 new cases of cancer and 571,950 deaths.

But beyond the big-picture view, this year’s report digs into the disparities between the least- and most-educated. And they’re big. In 2007, cancer death rates for the least-educated were 2.6 times those of the most-educated. We asked one of the report’s authors, Ahmedin Jemal, ACS’s vice president of surveillance research, to help us understand why.

The number of years spent in school isn’t important because there’s some mandatory course for college freshmen that explains how to prevent cancer. Instead, it’s a proxy for socioeconomic status. Jemal tells the Health Blog that it’s a more permanent indicator than income or employment status, both of which can vary over a lifetime. And practically speaking, it’s available on death certificates, which is where the stats are drawn from.

Socioeconomic status affects cancer incidence and mortality in a bunch of different ways, he says. First, he says, the more-educated are much less likely to engage in high-risk behaviors such as smoking. “Knowledge matters,” he says. Indeed, 31% of men with 12 or fewer years of education are current smokers, vs. 12% of college grads and 5% of those with a graduate degree. And consequently, the lung-cancer death rate is five times higher in the least educated than in the most.

Obesity rates, too, are higher in people with lower socioeconomic status. People know less about nutrition. They have less access to affordable healthful foods. And it’s harder to get exercise — less access to safe running or biking areas near to home or to gyms.

People of lower socioeconomic status are also less likely to see a doctor regularly, particularly if they’re uninsured. “Having insurance is really everything in terms of access to care,” says Jemal. “They’re less likely to get preventive services, early detection and adequate treatment in a timely manner.”

Finally, he says illiteracy contributes to the disparities. People with low reading ability “are less likely to successfully navigate the health-care system and less likely to follow a doctor’s orders,” often because they don’t understand things like dosing instructions, he says.

The report discusses racial disparities, too. But underscoring the importance of socioeconomic status, it says that closing the gap between the most- and least-educated African-Americans could “potentially avert twice as many premature cancer deaths as eliminating racial disparities between blacks and whites.” Across the U.S., if death rates among the least-educated were the same as those among the most-educated, 60,370 premature deaths in 2007 amongst people aged 25-64 could have been prevented, the report estimates.

 

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