Friday, September 14, 2018

Breast Cancer – Everything you need to know about the causes, treatments, and prevention


Breast cancer will affect 1 in 8 women during their lifetime — and it is the fourth-leading cause of cancer death in the United States.
But 8 in 8 women are being exploited by those looking to monetize the disease. They tell women to “put your breast foot forward,” to “feel for lumps; save your bumps.”
The reality of breast cancer is not a catchphrase — not even for those who seek to “save second base.” Or those who champion “big or small, let’s save ’em all!” With such pithy advertising ploys, how can we not believe “the breast is yet to come”?
The 5-year relative survival rate for breast cancer ranges from 98.8 percent (Stage 1) to 26.3 perifamecent (Stage IV). [1]
The chances for breast cancer begin rising at age 40. Women 70 and older are those most likely diagnosed with breast cancer. The median age is 59 for African-American women, compared to 63 for whites. Fewer than 5 percent of women diagnosed with breast cancer in the United States are younger than 40.
In 2017, the estimate among U.S. women is there will be:
  • 252,710 new cases of invasive breast cancer,
  • and 40,610 breast cancer deaths.
Forty thousand people — that’s about the population of Hickory, N.C. Or San Gabriel, Calif. Or Hagerstown, Md. Or Crystal Lake, Ill. Or Sherman, Texas.
Imagine all the people in any of those towns vanishing from the earth in one year. … That should be sobering.
Instead, the choice of many is to exploit in the name of raising money for cancer “research.” Among the one-liners we’ve all heard under the guise of fund-raising:
Thanks for the mammories. … Real men wear pink for the cure. … Boobs, sweat, and tears. … We are fighting to keep a breast of the competition. … Yes my boobs are fake, my real ones tried to kill me.
According to its website, up to 75 percent of the net income from a Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure stays in the community. The money funds breast cancer health education, screening, and treatment programs.
The remaining 25 percent supports Komen’s national research and training grants program.
Put another way: Sick care is more profitable than health care.
Orthodox medicine most often promotes surgery (lumpectomy, mastectomy, lymph node removal), chemotherapy, or radiation to treat breast cancer. Each of those treatments come with mental and physical side effects which may last a lifetime.
Dr. Véronique Desaulniers and Dr. Leigh Erin Connealy, among others, promote natural therapies and Digital Infrared Thermographic Imaging (DITI) — also known as thermography — as a complementary tool for early detection.
1 in 8. … Think about the women in your life. You know more than eight women. There is a 100 percent chance a loved one will experience breast cancer.
You can treat breast cancer. You can prevent breast cancer. There are natural and integrative ways to protect yourself — starting right now, and beginning with your immune system.

Five Tips to Help Prevent Breast Cancer

1. Get regular daily exercise
Studies have shown people who exercise for a total of four hours each week have a significantly lower risk of developing breast cancer. Exercise also helps with weight management, which is widely known to have a positive impact on countless aspects of your health.
2. Limit your alcohol intake
Consuming more than four servings of alcohol each week raises the risk of breast cancer. For those who want to be on the safe side, just say no to alcohol. But for those who don’t want to abstain or who want the benefits afforded by health-promoting antioxidants in wine, limit yourself to no more than one glass four times per week. Or get those antioxidants without the alcohol by consuming some red grapes or a glass of grape juice instead.
3. Spend at least 20 minutes each day in the sun
This helps increase your levels of Vitamin D. Research shows that postmenopausal women with the highest levels of Vitamin D had a lower risk of developing breast cancer when compared to those with the lowest levels. A simple blood test can tell you if you need more Vitamin D3. If that turns out to be the case, your doctor can suggest appropriate dosage.
4. Take a daily dose of iodine
Supplemental iodine has been shown to eliminate abnormal cells that are destined to become cancerous, as well as early cancer cells. Dr. Leigh Erin Connealy often recommends i-Throid, which should be available in health food stores. Just follow the dosage instructions on the supplements.
5. Eat at least two cups of broccoli each week
Broccoli contains a substance known as indol-3 carbinol (I3C), which supports healthy estrogen balance throughout your body and protects breast cells. Cauliflower and Brussels sprouts also contain significant amounts of I3C.

What is breast cancer?

Cancer can be defined as an uncontrolled growth or reproduction of abnormal cells in the body. Normal cells multiply when the body needs them and die when the body doesn’t need them. This is called apoptosis or programmed death of cells. Cancerous cells seem to divide and grow out of control and forget how to die.
Breast cancer starts when cells in the breast begin to grow out of control. These cells usually form a tumor, often seen on an X-ray or felt as a lump.
Benign tumors are not considered cancerous. The cells are close to normal in appearance, grow, and do not invade nearby tissues or metastasize. Malignant tumors are cancerous. Left unchecked, malignant cells can spread to other parts of the body.
Breast cancer usually begins in cells of the:
  • lobules (milk-producing glands),
  • or ducts (passages that carry milk from the lobules to the nipple).
Breast cancer also can begin in the stromal tissues. These include the fatty and fibrous connective tissues of the breast.

Breast cancer symptoms

Breast cancer symptoms include:
  • Changes in how the breast or nipple feels.
  • Changes in the breast or nipple appearance.
  • Any nipple discharge — particularly clear or bloody discharge.
If you have any of these symptoms, tell your healthcare provider. The problem should be diagnosed and treated.
OK, so you have felt a lump in your breast. Yes, your mind will begin racing — and you will ask, “Do I have breast cancer?”
But, it is important that if you feel a lump to speak with a medical professional. Discuss any changes in your breasts with a doctor.
As Dr. Leigh Erin Connealy notes, “Hundreds of thousands of women (and some men) who will be diagnosed with breast cancer don’t need harmful, costly, and sometimes disfiguring interventions. Why? Because up to 30 percent of all breast cancer diagnoses are for premalignant conditions. Prime examples are ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS).
These abnormal cells were undetectable until a few years ago. Today’s technology finds them easily. The problem is that many doctors order a biopsy, as well as treatment and removal, just to be safe. But wait. What are the chances of DCIS becoming cancer at its worst? About 20 percent. And LCIS? It’s also non-malignant and ranked 0 on a 0-to-4 threat scale.”
Cancerous lumps feel firm or solid and often are painless. In a small percentage of women, a painful breast lump turns out to be cancer.
Yet, it is impossible to tell by touch whether a lump is cancer.
According to the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, there are two other types of lumps to be aware of [2]:
  • Cysts are fluid-filled lumps and are benign. They form when fluid builds up inside breast glands, and tend to be smooth or round. Cysts are most common in women under 40.
  • Fibroadenomas are benign tumors made up of glandular and connective breast tissue. These usually are smooth and firm or rubbery to the touch. Fibroadenomas are most common in women in their 20s and 30s.

Breast cancer causes and risk factors

Hormones seem to play a role in many cases of breast cancer, but just how this happens is not fully understood. Normal breast cells become cancerous because of changes (mutations) in DNA. Some DNA mutations are inherited. This means the mutations are in every cell in your body and can dramatically increase the risk of developing certain cancers. But most DNA changes related to breast cancer are acquired in breast cells during a woman’s life rather than having been inherited.

Breast cancer risk factors

Just being a woman is the biggest risk factor for developing breast cancer. Other risk factors include:
  • Age
  • Family History
  • Genetics
  • Personal History of Breast Cancer
  • Radiation to Chest or Face Before Age 30
  • Certain Breast Changes
  • Race/Ethnicity
  • Being Overweight
  • Pregnancy History
  • Breastfeeding History
  • Menstrual History
  • Using HRT (Hormone Replacement Therapy)
  • Drinking Alcohol
  • Having Dense Breasts (women with dense breasts have more dense [supportive] tissue than fatty tissue)
  • Lack of Exercise
  • Smoking

The link between dental work and breast cancer

The complexity of dealing with breast cancer can be directly caused by dental infections. [3] Routine dental work such as root canals, tooth extractions, etc., can cause massive infections in the mouth. These infections, in turn, lead to very dangerous toxins (which are the waste products of the microbes which cause the infections).
In addition, the infections in the dental area can spread to the liver, which is a large incubator for microbes. Thus, the breasts are getting infectious agents both from the mouth and the liver.
Many breast cancer patients who die do so because of the infections which work their way down from the mouth to the liver and breast(s).
Bill Henderson preached about dental work as a cause of cancer for several years.
Cancer Tutor founder Webster Kehr saw a thermograph that showed a massive red blob in the mouth (a dental infection) and a massive red blob in the right breast or liver (which is also on the right side of the body). This demonstrated how the infection spread from the mouth to the breast and liver.
In fact, a very thin red line led from the mouth to the breast and/or liver via a red arc which could be seen on the thermograph. This red arc was the infection spreading from the mouth via the lymph system. In other words, the infection spread via the lymph system to the right breast.
Because cancer is caused by a nasty microbe, it is possible in many cases that the microbe actually comes from the mouth. A root canal literally creates a “safe haven” for microbes; the blood system, the lymph system, and, most importantly, the immune system cannot reach — and thus cannot kill — microbes living inside a root canal.
In a study of 150 breast cancer patients in Switzerland by Dr. Thomas Rau, 147 had had root canals on the same meridian as the breast cancer. The other three also had dental problems on the same meridian, but they were not caused by root canals; they were infections in the jawbone caused by some other dental procedure.
Root canals create a safe-haven for cancer-causing bacteria. These cancer-causing microbes do not originate in the root canals. Rather, the microbe originates in the body (i.e. most likely the microbe that causes cancer is Helicobacter Pylori which lives in the stomach but can spread anywhere in the body because it is frequently in the bloodstream) and the root canals allow some of them to live the “good life” while hiding in the root canal(s), free from interference of the immune system. Actually, many types of microbes are involved in different aspects of cancer.
The statistics indicate the constant re-infection prevents the body from successfully fighting the breast cancer. Apparently, when a woman (or a man in some cases) gets breast cancer, the body is generally able to fight it off, unless the person also had a root canal on the same meridian. The root canal(s) apparently allow cancer to win the battle.
Essentially what likely happens is this: A woman will have the cancer microbe spreading harmlessly in the bloodstream. Because of a root canal, or other dental procedure, some of the microbes get inside of the jawbone or empty tooth and have a safe haven. They then spread via the lymph to the breast and/or liver and create an infection in the breast, which leads to normal cells having these microbes inside of them. Once these microbes get inside of normal cells, the cells will become cancerous. As these cells divide, both daughter cells will have these bacteria and both cells will be cancerous.
As if this weren’t enough, in the root canal teeth and liver the microbes breed uncontrollably creating massive amounts of toxins. These toxins alone could kill some patients.
This is one reason why the High RF Frequency Generator with Plasma Amplifier (part of the Cellect-Budwig Protocol) also deals with microbes in the body and bloodstream and perhaps inside the root canal teeth.
• Read: What Causes Cancer
• Also: Four Women Against Cancer, by Dr. Alan Cantwell, M.D., for even more evidence that microbes cause cancer.
The point is that it is virtually impossible to totally get rid of breast cancer in many cases without removing all root canals, infections in the jawbones, etc.
While soaking your root canal teeth twice a day in 3 percent food grade hydrogen peroxide can kill microbes inside the root canal teeth, most root canal teeth also have a crown which does not allow liquids inside the tooth except at the bottom of the crowns. So be careful about relying on the hydrogen peroxide solution if your root canal teeth have crowns.
(Soaking your root canal teeth: put 3 percent food grade hydrogen peroxide in your mouth so that your root canal teeth are soaking in the solution for 2 or 3 minutes at a time.)
And while the electrical signal of the High RF Frequency Generator with Plasma Amplifier easily penetrates root canal teeth, the microbes must be in enough liquid in order for the signal to vibrate and kill the microbes. Inside of cancer cells, or in the bloodstream, this is easy, but inside of a dry root canal tooth, it may not be totally successful. This is why highly specialized dentists may be needed.
The best solution is to have a highly qualified dentist safely remove the infections from your mouth. While these dentists are usually biological dentists or holistic dentists, most biological dentists and holistic dentists are not qualified to do this procedure. The dentists who can do this procedure are specially trained.
However, the cost of the dental work can be very high. It frequently costs more than $10,000 to have this dental work done. When they do this procedure they also remove mercury, infected tooth extractions, root canals (usually replaced with bridges), etc. All of these are very important things that need to be done.
To determine if you need this procedure, a simple thermograph — taken from the nose to waist — likely will reveal the need for the procedure. If you see red blobs in the mouth and the breast (especially if you see a faint red line between them), it is almost a certainty that you need the dental procedure.
• Read: Dental Issues and Cancer
For those who cannot afford the entire procedure, they may wish to go to a biological dentist and have their mercury removed. However, there are urgent warnings about having your mercury removed.

Breast cancer and bacteria

One in eight women in the U.S. are diagnosed with breast cancer during their lifetimes, but its origins remain unknown in most cases. Age, genetic predisposition, and environmental changes often are implicated — and according to a growing body of research, bacteria may be one of those environmental factors. [4]
Researchers from Western University in Ontario, Canada, discovered in 2014 that a variety of bacteria were detected in breast tissue regardless of the location samples — tissue from close to the nipple to as far back as the chest wall.
The scientists discovered that in the women with breast cancer, there were significantly higher levels of Enterobacteriaceae, Staphylococcus, and Bacillus bacteria.
The participants without breast cancer, on the other hand, had higher incidences of Lactococcus and Streptococcus bacteria, which are thought to have strong anticarcinogenic properties.

Breast cancer screening (medical tests and self-exam)

According to bioenergetic chiropractor and breast cancer survivor Dr. Véronique Desaulniers, the advances in early detection of cancer are exciting.
“I think one of the biggest advances has been in the blood work, and our ability to detect cancer at a very, very minute rate,” she says. “So, first of all, the ONCOblot test.”
The ONCOblot is a test that measures the ENOX2 protein that cancer cells produce, according to Dr. V.
“Healthy cells do not produce that, so when you have ENOX2 floating around in your blood, you have cancer in your body,” she explains. “Now, it may be the size of a pinhead, but it’s still producing enough to be detected. So that’s a very, very early detection. Another type of test which is also beneficial is the RGCC test or the Greek test.
“And this is a lab that’s been in business for 10 years, in the country of Greece. It’s a 55,000 square foot facility. And they basically can detect the number of circulating tumor cells that you have, even if after you’ve done traditional medicine and they’ve told you you’re cancer-free. You’re not cancer free if you have circulating tumor cells.”
Thermography is another diagnostic tool that Dr. V feels very strongly about.
“We started using thermography 15 years ago before it was really popular,” she says. “And it’s great to see that more and more women are recognizing early detection is. … I mean, mammograms are not early detection, because by the time they see it on the scan, it’s been there five to 10 years.
“A Canadian study done on 50,000 women, it was a 25-year study on 50,000 women in Canada, and the conclusion was that mammograms did not lower breast cancer mortality, not even by 1 percent, and it was just as effective as a self-breast exam. So things like that, I mean, that’s just exciting to see. To know that there’s proof that these things are actually very effective and beneficial.”

 

No comments:

Post a Comment