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Lymphoma Rising Needlessly |
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The dramatically lower incidence of lymphoma in Sri Lanka, China and Japan - and the much higher incidence of lymphoma in the industrialized nations (see
CANCER RATES COMPARISON) - provides a very strong indication that nutrition - and more specifically, the lack of over 60 vitally important trace elements in our daily food - may well be the cause of lymphoma. | |
This conclusion is underscored by the fact that Japan is more highly industrialized, and therefore more polluted, than any other country in this world, yet the incidence of lymphoma is still 40% lower than in the Western industrialized nations.
This conclusion remains to be proven, though. But since the typical diets of these countries are so profoundly healthy in every respect, I would make the presence of the complete range of the 72+ trace elements in my nutrition my first priority, if I had any lymph problems. Please note that it is NOT the typical diet of these countries as such, but the presence of the 72+ trace elements in the ingredient of their daily nutrition which keeps them so supremely healthy. So, even if such a diet is adopted here, it would not work with the severely trace element deficient ingredients as generated by our Western agriculture.
Meanwhile, and as always, these are as yet unproven conclusions, and under no circumstances is this any sort of substitute for proper medical care by licensed physicians.
A Baffling rise in Lymphoma - Feb. 2000
It started with flu-like symptoms that M. L. just couldn't shake. Then an egg-shaped lump ballooned on his jaw, and his doctor knew - the New York man was a victim of the nation's baffling rise in lymphoma. Even as many other types of cancer have leveled off or even dropped, this mysterious immune-system cancer has been making a stealthy but astounding rise; rates have nearly doubled since the 1970s. Is diet to blame? Pesticides? Air pollution? Viruses? Obesity? Nobody knows. Cancer
experts are launching major studies worldwide to find what's behind this cancer's march.
Some 62,300 Americans will be diagnosed this year with lymphoma, in which vital immune cells stored in the lymph system become malignant. Over 27,000 will die this year. It's a cancer that doesn't make many headlines - lung, prostate, breast and colon cancer strike more often. Yet some 450,000 Americans are estimated to already be living with lymphoma, one of the few cancers still rising, and unlike many other cancers, doctors can offer no advice on preventing lymphoma and have no early-detection tests.
About 7,400 of the new cases will be the often curable Hodgkin's disease. The rest are non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, a catchall term that encompasses some 30 cancer subtypes whose prognosis and treatment all differ. Some are so slow-growing that patients survive many years, cycling between therapy and remission and yet more therapy.
Others are highly aggressive and rapidly fatal. Still others fall in between.
Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma is the type rising so dramatically, not just here but in most industrialized countries, said Dr. Marshall Lichtman of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. The AIDS virus caused some of the increase. Lymphoma is much more common in people with weakened immune systems.
The list of other suspects is long but unproven: herbicides, pesticides, benzene-polluted air, the Epstein-Barr virus. One recent study suggests being overweight increases risk. A new theory that sunburns lower immune function has scientists considering a lymphoma link. On the flip side, University of California, San Francisco,
scientists recently discovered people with bad allergies might be at lower risk. The theory is that allergies might indicate a vigorous immune system that can handle lymphoma. "The immune perturbations that give you lymphoma are pretty complex. This is not going to be the equivalent of lung cancer and smoking - it's going to be a little more subtle to tease out,'' cautions NCI epidemiologist Patricia Hartge, who just began a large study in Detroit, Los Angeles, Seattle and Iowa to pinpoint risk factors.
Similar studies are planned in Spain, Germany, Italy and Britain. But the big news is in experimental immunotherapy - genetically engineering cells called "monoclonal antibodies'' that seek out cancer and trigger the immune system to attack it. One, called Rituxan, already is sold, targeting lymphomas that carry an antigen called CD20. Now scientists are developing monoclonal antibodies to target CD30, CD22 and CD25 antigens - and
thus treat more types of lymphoma. Bexxar is poised to become the first radiation-tagged monoclonal
antibody, carrying radioactive iodine to zap lymphoma cells. Manufacturer Coulter Pharmaceutical Inc. will soon seek government approval for Bexxar to treat certain "low grade'' lymphomas that relapse after chemotherapy; doctors now are studying if it works against other types.
Many lymphoma symptoms are common to other illnesses and hard to pin down, but see your doctor if the following occur for more than two weeks, advises the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society:
- Painless swelling of lymph glands in the neck, armpit or groin
- Fatigue, recurrent high fever, night sweats, itching and/or
general aches, sometimes described as flulike.
- Weight loss, loss of appetite, indigestion and abdominal pain
or a sense of fullness, which could come from an enlarged spleen or
lymph nodes.
Prognosis and treatment depends on the patient's specific subtype and stage of lymphoma, and there are new standards to help classify patients properly, said Dr. Wyndham Wilson of the National Cancer Institute. He advises seeing oncologists who treat large numbers of lymphoma patients, as they are most likely to be up-to-date on those standards and the latest treatments. For information, including clinical trials of experimental immunotherapy, check the NCI's CancerNet and CancerTrials Web pages at www.nci.nih.gov. For information on experimental Bexxar treatment, check www.coulterpharm.com/product/pr.html.
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