It's cheap, widely available, and no prescription is necessary.
There seems to be some new discovery concerning cancer on a daily bases but this might actually be the most interesting.
Scientists from the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo recently announced they've found a drug that reduces risk of cervical cancer by nearly 50 percent.
It's cheap, widely available, and no prescription is necessary.
It's
also said to prevent heart attacks and reduce the risk of several other
cancers, including breast, colon, endometrial, pancreatic, and skin.
In
a comprehensive meta-analysis of studies, it was discovered that this
simple medicine remedy cuts risk of all cancers by 20 percent.
Don't look too far. Your cabinet probably holds this magical drug; Aspirin!
There's
also a great deal of research that shows aspirin can help prevent
subsequent heart attacks after you've had one, adding the leading killer
in the country to the list of diseases daily aspirin might benefit.
However, the Food and Drug Administration
recently made an announcement stating they no longer advise taking
aspirin daily as a preventative therapy for first heart attacks, since
research only supports it for heart problems following a heart attack.
Many doctors consider aspirin a "wonder drug," says Jack Jacoub, M.D., medical director of OC Blood & Cancer Care in California.
"For years, we've heard about its benefits for heart disease, and now we're seeing those benefits go far beyond that."
Aspirin
works as a blood thinner and has the ability to reduce systemic
inflammation, one of the leading causes of illness including lifestyle
diseases like diabetes, heart disease, and metabolic syndrome.
"Aspirin inhibits both inflammation and the genes which promote inflammation, genes which are directly linked to cancer," says Mitchell Gaynor, M.D., an integrative oncologist and author of The Gene Therapy.
"Given
that we are living in a country where one in three Americans will hear
the words 'you have cancer' in their life, and this is expected to
increase to one in two Americans over the next three years, I think that
my patients benefit from doing everything possible to reduce their
risk."
The problem is that the helpful, blood
thinning properties that make it great for preventing a second heart
attack, for example, are the same properties that can cause internal
bleeding, which is a risk for all patients taking aspirin, whether for
heart or cancer protection.
"The research on
aspirin isn't contradictory; the real message is that doctors need to
take an individual patient's history into account and decide if the
risks are worth the rewards," says Steven Willey, M.D., author of Reprogram Your Life: Bioscience for a Healthier You.
Our
bodies' immune systems are powerful tools. When they're working as they
should, they mount a powerful defense against invaders but in the wrong
situation, they can overreact and end up targeting inward.
When
this happens on a small scale, you're left with inflammation; on a
larger scale, it could mean helping pre-cancerous cells grow and spread
in our bodies.
"Not only does aspirin lessen
inflammation, it targets the interaction between the immune system and
cancerous cells, short-circuiting the vicious cycle", Jacoub says.
This assertion was backed up by a 2011 meta-analysis that found aspirin to be a powerful immune-system regulator.
"Research
has shown that aspirin can delay or prevent the progression of some
benign growths into cancerous tumors, something we've really seen with
colon cancer, it's incredible," Jacoub adds.
Gaynor says
he also sees potential for aspirin in fighting diabetes, an area of
growing interest, thanks to how often heart disease and diabetes occur
together.
A root cause of both can be Systemic inflammation.
So make a choice wisely, putting into consideration your health history.
No comments :
Post a Comment
Dear BsB Reader, Please drop your comments and do visit us again