Friday 12 August 2016

Pancreatic Cancer

English: Pancreatic cancer
Malay: Kanser pankreas
Indonesian: Kanker pankreas


Q1. What is pancreatic cancer?

Q2. Who gets pancreatic cancer?
  • Some people are more prone than others to get pancreatic cancer. 
  • There are multiple risk factors associated with pancreatic cancer; it does not necessarily mean that if someone has any of these risk factors they will get pancreatic cancer. These risks factors have only a weak link to pancreatic cancer.
  • Sometimes there are none of the risk factors in pancreatic cancer patients.

Q3. Why does pancreatic cancer occur in some patients and not others? What causes pancreatic cancer?
  • Multiple risk factors are linked to pancreatic cancer.
  • Genetics. Approximately 5% to 10% of pancreatic cancer patients have an immediate family member who also has pancreatic cancer. It should not mean that pancreatic cancer runs in families. Although genes have been associated with increased risk of pancreatic cancer, nevertheless, no pancreatic cancer gene has been identified. 
  • Diabetes. Pancreatic cancer is linked to diabetes, but not all diabetics have pancreatic cancer. 
  • Smoking. Smoking is linked to pancreatic cancer, but not all smokers have pancreatic cancer.
  • Obesity. Pancreatic cancer patients are obese initially and lose weight constantly. 
  • Ethnicity. Over 80% of pancreatic cancers develop between the ages of 60 and 80 years, in African-American Black population.
  • http://www.webmd.com/cancer/pancreatic-cancer/causes-pancreatic-cancer

Q4. How does pancreatic cancer develop?
  • All cells contain DNA except mature red blood cells (mature erythrocytes). 
  • DNA can be damaged by constant exposure to radiation and by chemicals in the food we eat and the environment we live in. 
  • This damage is described as a mutation in the DNA. 
  • When the DNA has mutated, it produces certain proteins that can trigger new protein formation. 
  • These are abnormal proteins, which can trigger cells to proliferate. 
  • When cells proliferate at an uncontrollable rate, it can lead to a mass of cells that form a tumour. 
  • A tumour can be either benign or malignant. 
  • Tumours can spread (metastasize) via the lymphatic system (vessels that contain lymph) or the general circulatory system (vessels that contain blood). 
  • In this way, a single tumour cell can re-establish in another organ far away from the initial tumour site and start a new tumour growth. 
  • How fast or slow a tumour grows depends on what nutrients are supplied in the diet and what nutrients eventually reach the tumour. 
  • Tumours love loads of sugar in the food that we eat. 
  • Reducing sugar intake and making correct dietary adjustment to food intake can help in stopping tumour spread and get rid of the cancer itself.
  • https://youtu.be/SM2VYx510y8
  • https://youtu.be/6xLkhDJsDGo

Q5. What are the signs and symptoms of pancreatic cancer?


Q6. Pancreatic cancer investigations and diagnosis.

Q7. Conventional pancreatic cancer treatment:

Q8. What does the pancreatic cancer patient feel? Does the patient feel pain? Yes.
  • Pain is in the middle of the top segment of the abdomen. 
  • Patients take painkillers to cover pain and forgot that there is a cure for it.
  • https://youtu.be/IBIhbqSZ51Y

Q9. Are there cures for pancreatic cancer? Yes.
  • There are two options. 
  • There is conventional treatment (surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy). 
  • There is an alternative DIY therapy, a self-taught, more herbal routine that has worked for patients. 
  • You can try the techniques of these successful patients or DIY (do it yourself). 
  • There is no one cure that will heal pancreatic cancer. 
  • There is no one pancreatic cancer that will respond well to all known therapies. 
  • There is always room for innovation and improvement for pancreatic cancer.
  • https://youtu.be/NZUUYARQonI


Q10. Are there effective cures for treating pancreatic cancer? Yes. You can read about some of these but be careful of what you decide:

Q11. Will pancreatic cancer go away for good? Yes and No.

  • If you look after yourself well after curing cancer, the cancer will stay away from you.
  • If you don't look after yourself after curing cancer, the cancer will return.
  • Stay on a right diet, live peacefully and happily, stick to your faith and live a life of no worries.


Q12. Will pancreatic cancer kill? Is it fatal? Yes and No.

  • Yes, if you do nothing about your pancreatic cancer. It will kill you because you did nothing and just ignored it and just took painkillers.
  • No, if you did something to stop it and reverse it. You need to learn how to by understanding your cancer, how it happened, its symptoms etc. Then read about how others have successfully managed to heal their pancreatic cancer. 
  • Even an elderly 74-year-old lady knows how to cure her pancreatic cancer. You decide what you want to do.
  • https://youtu.be/LL3WmXIRNKg


Q13. Are there pancreatic cancer survivors? How long can they survive? Yes.
  • In 2000, she had stage 4 pancreatic cancer and refused conventional treatment. https://youtu.be/xh1pOB2h97U
  • In 2003, an elderly 74-year-old lady created a record for herself. She cured herself of stage 4 pancreatic cancer with her own routine. She shares her experience and routines with other pancreatic cancer patients and the world. https://youtu.be/LHKaVd_twIE
  • In 2012, she had stage 4 pancreatic cancer and survived chemotherapy. She had her own natural DIY cure https://youtu.be/hdWatSJEcbM

Q14. What will happen to pancreatic cancer in the future?

  • The future of pancreatic cancer is now a living past. 
  • We already have cures for pancreatic cancer today. 
  • Conventional treatment cures 40% of pancreatic cancer cases. The remainder 60% of pancreatic cancer patients have can resort to alternative DIY routines as a form of therapy to cure themselves. DIY pancreatic cancer therapies will certainly need time, commitment and patience. Nothing comes easy. Perseverance usually gives the best results. As the Arabic saying goes: Haste makes waste. There is no cure if you are going to rush things.


Q15. What is the prognosis of pancreatic cancer? Bad and Good.

  • Depends on how you look at it. 
  • Any cancer diagnosis comes with a negative cloud and frightens patients as if it is the end of their world. This must stop. 
  • Patients must come to know that there are conventional treatment and alternative DIY cures for pancreatic cancer.
  • The prognosis of a metastatic pancreatic cancer 5-year survival rate is 2%.
  • https://youtu.be/FmZqiBo8fPw


Q16, Pancreatic cancer Q&A



Q17. Pancreatic cancer diary



Q18. Pancreatic cancer Patient's Guide.



Q19. Cancer Care therapy for pancreatic cancer

Q20. Eat the right food



1 comments:

madison said...

At the Pittodrie Podiatry Practice we understand the importance of finding the right team of professionals for you, your family and your staff.The Pittodrie Podiatry Practice in Aberdeen provides high quality Chiropody treatments Aberdeen with fully qualified Podiatrists.