Aug
Risk Of Colon Cancer
Colon cancer is believed to be one of the most deadly types of cancers that afflicts loads of individuals every year. What makes it so bad is how tough it is for individuals to understand the symptoms and the ability for Physicians to catch it when it is in the early stage. When discovered too late there is little to nothing that anybody can do to address it.
One of the best ways that you can learn to recognize this disease early is to understand the risk factors. This will serve you to understand whether you are regarded – by medical terms – to be a high or low risk. If you believe that you are high risk you need to have regular check ups and screenings planned with your physician.
Age – Reports show that close to 90% of people who are diagnosed with this condition are fifty years or more. However, it is still possible for younger people to have it – it is merely not as common.
Personal History – If you are somebody who is diagnosed with colon cancer and have treated it successfully than you are at a high risk for colon cancer. This is because your body is susceptible to the polyps that occur during this health condition and it is very potential it will reoccur.
Intestinal Conditions – There are definite problems of the intestines that will cause inflammation of the colon. A couple of these are Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis.
Genetics – There are numerous conditions that are passed down through genetics and this is considered to be of them. Seek to study your family’s history and notice if any of them have had colon cancer. If more then one of them have been diagnosed with it then this can increase your risk even more.
There are many variables in the cosmetic surgery prices that can increase or decrease your overall cost. You will ultimately save money by having all of the work you want done at once provided that your physician feels that it is safe for you to do so.
Folliculinum is made from Oestrone, a synthetic form of oestrogen. The source we are using today comes from Dr Donald Foubist (1). Although there have been no organised provings in the traditional method, millions of women have been proving it since the discovery of synthetic hormones in the 1940s. Dr Léa De Mattos has done exhaustive clinical studies on the remedy, and has published her work in French (2). You can also find a good picture in Julian’s Materia Medica (3). Much of what I will be relating here, however, comes from my own experience with the remedy, especially the mental picture. I have been using it a great deal over the past four years, with remarkable success.
The other indicator towards inherited disease, through hormone abuse involves a drug called Diesthylstilbestrol (DES). This is a man made oestrogen. Beginning in 1940, it was given to pregnant women who had histories of miscarriages, premature births, diabetes or hypertension, or showed signs of bleeding in the early stages of pregnancy. We don’t know how many women were given this drug in the UK, but in the US, it numbered well over a million. It was well known as early as 1953 that DES did not prevent miscarriage, but it’s use for this purpose was continued into the 70′s. A previously rare form of cancer, vaginal clear-cell adenocarcinoma, has been found in increasing numbers of daughters of women who were given DES. Over 500 cases have been diagnosed with a direct link to the hormone. Although these cancers can start as early as age eight, many are not triggered off until the girl is exposed to more hormones, i.e. the Pill, or other hormonal treatment. (Perhaps this is a case of an acquired miasm triggering off an inherited one?) There is growing evidence to show a sharp increase in breast cancer, and as much as a five-fold increase of cervical dysplasia, in DES daughters. A high percentage of those who have not yet developed cancer have a condition in which glandular type tissue is found in the vagina, which is normally found in the mouth, a matter of confusion in differentiation. They can have a whole range of abnormalities including incompetent cervix which prematurely dilates, causing miscarriage, a higher chance of having difficult menstrual problems, and a lower level of fertility. Abnormalities of the genitals have now been found in male children also together with small testes, infertility, subfertility; and as high as 40% of DES sons have low sperm counts or abnormally shaped sperm.