Headwear Etc Blog

March 25, 2007

Recurrent and Metastatic Cancer

Filed under: Cancer in the News — Marilyn Robinson @ 2:13 pm

Recurrent and Metastatic Breast Cancer
We know you really don’t want to be here, reading about breast cancer recurrence or metastasis. If you’ve had breast cancer, the possibility of recurrence and spread (metastasis) of breast cancer stays with you. You may be here because you fear this possibility. Or you may be here because it’s already happened.

Keep in mind that a recurrence of breast cancer or metastatic (advanced) disease is NOT hopeless. Many women continue to live long, productive lives with breast cancer in this stage. It is also likely that your experience with treatment this time will be somewhat different from last time. There are so many options for your care and so many ways to chart your progress as you move through diagnosis, treatment, and beyond.

www.headwearetc.com

March 17, 2007

Chemotherapy and Your Mouth

Filed under: Hair Loss Information, Cancer in the News — Marilyn Robinson @ 11:14 am

Chemotherapy and Your Mouth
From Lisa Fayed,
Your Guide to Cancer.
Stay up to date!
Oral Care Tips to Use Before, During and After Chemotherapy
When most people think of the side effects of chemotherapy, hair loss and nausea are usually the first things that come to mind, not dental and oral complications.
But chemotherapy can cause problems in the mouth, such as:

mouth sores
infections
dry mouth
bleeding of the gums and lining of the mouth
general soreness and pain of the mouth
Chemotherapy works by killing rapidly growing cells. In someone with cancer, the cancer cells are typically the fastest growing cells in his or her body. Unfortunately, chemotherapy also may attack certain healthy cells which normally also grow quickly. For instance, the cells lining the oral cavity are fast growing and can be damaged by chemotherapy.

Oral Side Effects of Chemotherapy Can Be Serious

Breast Cancer Treatments
It is much harder to fight an infection during chemotherapy because the immune system is not as strong. Serious infections can cause treatment delays and the lowering of drug dosages.
Eating and swallowing also may become difficult, possibly causing nutritional deficiencies. Foods may taste different because of effects on the tongue and taste buds by chemotherapy.

Preventing Oral Problems During Chemotherapy
Prevention of oral problems during chemotherapy begins before treatment even starts. Your doctor may suggest you see a dentist and dental hygienist a few weeks before chemotherapy begins. He or she may refer you to a dentist that specializes in caring for patients undergoing chemotherapy.

Avoid food with sharp edges like chips that could possibly scratch or cut the gums or inner lining of the mouth. You may also want to cut out spicy or acidic foods and drinks because they can cause mouth irritation. Alcoholic beverages and tobacco products should be avoided as well.

Maintaining normal oral hygiene like brushing at least twice a day and flossing is important. Brushing with a soft head toothbrush may prevent unnecessary irritation and bleeding by the gums. Mouthwashes can be used, but do not use a type that contains alcohol.

Experts recommend sipping water, eating ice chips, and keeping mouth moist by chewing
www.headwearetc.com

March 10, 2007

HAIR LOSS

Filed under: Hair Loss Information — Marilyn Robinson @ 7:33 pm

Hair Loss

Topic Overview
From Healthwise
Is hair loss normal?
Everyone has some hair loss every day. In fact, it is normal to lose up to 100 hairs a day. However, some people lose a lot of hair early in life because it runs in their family (inherited) or because of disease, medications, stress, injury, or damage to the hair.

What causes hair loss?
The most common cause of hair loss is genetics—you inherit the tendency to lose hair from either or both of your parents. This is called male-pattern or female-pattern hair loss, or androgenetic alopecia. (Alopecia is the medical term for hair loss.) About half of all people have this type of hair loss by about 50 years of age.1, 2

See an illustration of typical inherited hair loss.

Other common causes of hair loss include:

Ringworm of the scalp (tinea capitis), which is common in children.
Mental stress or physical stress, such as recent surgery, illness, or high fever.
Chemotherapy, the use of medication to destroy cancer cells.
Pulling your hair back too tightly, wearing tight braids or ponytails, or using curling irons or dyes.
Age. As you age, you grow less hair. It is also thinner and tends to break more easily.
Poor nutrition, especially lack of protein or iron in the diet.
Thyroid diseases including hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism.
What are the symptoms?
Hair loss can occur as thinning (you may not notice hairs falling out) or as shedding, with clumps of hair falling out. It can be general—you lose hair all over your scalp—or focal, which means you lose it in one area only. In inherited hair loss, men generally develop bald spots on the forehead area or on the top of the head, while women have an overall thinning of the hair throughout the scalp.

Because hair is an important part of appearance, hair loss can result in loss of self-esteem and feeling unattractive, especially in women and teens.

How is hair loss diagnosed?
Hair loss is diagnosed through a medical history and physical examination. Your health professional will ask you questions about your hair loss, such as whether your parents have hair loss, when your hair loss started, and how much hair you are losing. He or she will also look at the pattern of your hair loss, examine your scalp, and may tug gently on a few hairs or pull some out.

If the reason for your hair loss is not clear, your health professional may take a sample of your hair or scalp to examine under a microscope, or do a blood test to identify a disease source.

How is it treated?
Some people choose to treat hair loss with medications or surgery, such as hair transplantation. Others choose to wear hairpieces (wigs or toupees) or use different methods of hair styling (dyeing or combing). The approach you use depends on the cause of your hair loss and how you feel about it. Some people feel they need treatment, while others are not as concerned about thinning hair or baldness.

Hair loss that is caused by a controllable factor, such as stress or a medication, is treated by eliminating the cause.

Will my hair grow back?
Whether your hair grows back depends on the cause of your hair loss. If you have inherited hair loss, you would need treatment to regrow your hair. It will not grow back naturally. But treatment to regrow hair does not work for everyone. If your hair loss is caused by medication, stress, or damage, hair often grows back after the cause is removed, although sometimes treatment may be needed.

www.headwearetc.com

March 9, 2007

Cancer Resources for the Family

Filed under: Cancer in the News — Marilyn Robinson @ 10:33 am

4. FAQ OF THE MONTH: I am a mother of two young children, and I have breast cancer. What are some resources that can help me and my children through this experience?
Coping with breast cancer is difficult for any family, and especially for those with children. Thankfully, there are resources out there to help meet the unique needs of mothers with cancer. Below are some examples of places parents can turn to find support for themselves and their children. If you know of other resources to add to this list, please send them our way.

Kids Cope
is an organization that helps children and families understand cancer through educational books and videos.

Hurricane Voices publishes a family reading list for parents and children who are coping with cancer.
www.headwearetc.com

March 4, 2007

Vitamin C, K3 Maximize Chemotherapy

Filed under: Cancer in the News — Marilyn Robinson @ 1:36 pm

Vitamins Affect Bladder Cancer Treatment
Vitamins C, K3 Maximize Chemotherapy

In a recent study, researchers evaluated the anti-tumor effects of vitamins C and K3 in bladder cancer. They also looked at the possibility of combining the vitamins to make bladder tumors more sensitive to chemotherapy.

Significance of results

Metastatic urothelial cancer of the bladder typically is treated with various combinations of systemic chemotherapy. However, most patients with distant metastatic bladder cancer do not survive more than one to two years despite treatment with the most effective regimens available.

To improve the results of bladder cancer treatment, nontoxic agents that make chemotherapy more effective are needed.

Background

Urothelial cancer of the bladder is the fourth most common solid malignancy in men and the ninth most common malignancy in women in the United States. In 2004, more than 12,000 people in the United States died from this cancer.

Investigators are studying certain vitamins that hold promise in treating bladder cancer. An emerging body of evidence has demonstrated the benefit of combining vitamins C and K3 for cancer treatment.

“Vitamins C and K3 have shown significant anti-tumor activity when used in combination against breast cancer cells and other solid malignancies,” says Wassim Kassouf, M.D., a former fellow of the Urologic Oncology program at M. D. Anderson and an investigator on the study directed by Ashish Kamat, M.D., assistant professor in the Department of Urology. “These biological effects of the vitamins initiated our interest.”

Vitamin C is an antioxidant that is known to be effective against several types of cancer cells, including melanoma, neuroblastoma and epidermoid.

Vitamin K3 has shown promise in treatment of lung, colon and cervical cancer.

Research methods

In the laboratory, scientists examined the effects on bladder cancer cells of:

Vitamin C
Vitamin K3
Vitamins C and K3
Gemcitabine (a chemotherapy drug)
Gemcitabine with vitamins C and K3
They also injected laboratory mice with one of the following for four weeks:

Saline (salt water)
Vitamins C and K3
Gemcitabine
Gemcitabine plus vitamins C and K3
Primary results

This study, which was published in The Journal of Urology in October 2006, showed that vitamins C and K3 have significant effects on bladder cancer cells when used together. The combination also enhances the effectiveness of gemcitabine against bladder cancer at the cellular level.

In the laboratory, the following percentages of cancer cells were killed:

32% with gemcitabine plus vitamins C and K3
5.3% with gemcitabine
15.8% with vitamins C and K3
What’s next?

Further studies are being conducted to define exactly how vitamins C and K3 act in bladder cancer cells.

“These clinical data provide evidence to consider vitamins C and K3 as a means of enhancing the efficacy of gemcitabine-based chemotherapy in bladder cancer,” Kassouf says.
www.headwearetc.com