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Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spread

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As most of you know, I totally disapprove of chemo, after watching it basically kill Vera. Then I watched it debilitate my Father after one treatment. He has never regained his strength back completely. He only regained maybe 50 %. I will never use chemo, personally. Joy

http://www.naturalnews.com/029042_cancer_cells_chemotherapy.html

Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spreadTuesday, June 22, 2010 by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor

NaturalNews) Chemotherapy is known to come with a long list of side effects -- from debilitating nausea and hair loss to extreme fatigue -- and in many cases, it does not cure or even stop cancer from progressing. But what if chemotherapy does something no one has realized before during all the decades it has been in use? What if chemo actually encourages cancer to spread throughout the body, the process known as metastasis?Researchers with the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Comprehensive Cancer Center and UAB Department of Chemistry have just been awarded a $805,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program to see if the answer to those questions is "yes". The study is investigating the very real possibility that dead cancer cells left over after chemotherapy spark cancer to spread to other parts of the body."What if by killing cancer cells with chemotherapy we inadvertently induce DNA structures that make surviving cancers cells more invasive? The idea is tough to stomach," Katri Selander, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor in the UAB Division of Hematology and Oncology and co-principal researcher on the grant, said in a statement to the media. "Fundamentally this question must be answered to advance the knowledge base and to know all the risks and benefits of cancer treatment. This research has the potential to reach across numerous scientific disciplines, and may one day improve the lives of patients worldwide."The UAB scientists are concentrating on inactivated or altered genetic material (DNA) left in the body after breast-cancer cells are exposed to chemotherapy. The research team stated that the resulting altered DNA could be the deadly factor that sparks the dreaded process of metastasis through a specific molecular pathway. Finding out whether chemotherapy could cause cancer spread is hugely important to the field of oncology because metastasis is the number one cause of cancer recurrence and treatment failure.Dead cancer cells have been found to activate a pathway in the body mediated as a protein dubbed toll-like receptor 9, or TLR9, that is present in the immune system and in many kinds of cancer. "If TLR9 boosts metastasis, then researchers will work on finding targeted therapies that block or regulate this molecular pathway," Dr. Selander stated.For more information:http://main.uab.edu/Sites/MediaRela...http://www.naturalnews.com/chemothe...

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Hi Joy,

I have a pulled rotator cuff [[[ spell ]]]

I might have to do one of the x ray things you lay in and it goes around you...

is this a bad thing??

I am seeing my chiroprator and it seems to help a little but in the morning I wake up in pain,I guess I roll over and re-pull it..

and NO,i will not tie myself up to sleep!!!! ha ha ha

Marty

living in the cosmic swirl,going round and round,singing my song,Dancing my dance...Stompingelk,

From: Joyce Hudson <bjoyful@...>Subject: [ ] Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spread Date: Tuesday, June 22, 2010, 6:35 PM

As most of you know, I totally disapprove of chemo, after watching it basically kill Vera. Then I watched it debilitate my Father after one treatment. He has never regained his strength back completely. He only regained maybe 50 %. I will never use chemo, personally. Joy

http://www.naturaln ews.com/029042_ cancer_cells_ chemotherapy. html

Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spreadTuesday, June 22, 2010 by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor

NaturalNews) Chemotherapy is known to come with a long list of side effects -- from debilitating nausea and hair loss to extreme fatigue -- and in many cases, it does not cure or even stop cancer from progressing. But what if chemotherapy does something no one has realized before during all the decades it has been in use? What if chemo actually encourages cancer to spread throughout the body, the process known as metastasis?Researchers with the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Comprehensive Cancer Center and UAB Department of Chemistry have just been awarded a $805,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program to see if the answer to those questions is "yes". The study is investigating the very real possibility that dead cancer cells left over after chemotherapy spark cancer to spread to other parts of the body."What if by killing cancer cells with chemotherapy we inadvertently

induce DNA structures that make surviving cancers cells more invasive? The idea is tough to stomach," Katri Selander, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor in the UAB Division of Hematology and Oncology and co-principal researcher on the grant, said in a statement to the media. "Fundamentally this question must be answered to advance the knowledge base and to know all the risks and benefits of cancer treatment. This research has the potential to reach across numerous scientific disciplines, and may one day improve the lives of patients worldwide."The UAB scientists are concentrating on inactivated or altered genetic material (DNA) left in the body after breast-cancer cells are exposed to chemotherapy. The research team stated that the resulting altered DNA could be the deadly factor that sparks the dreaded process of metastasis through a specific molecular pathway. Finding out whether chemotherapy could cause cancer spread is hugely important to

the field of oncology because metastasis is the number one cause of cancer recurrence and treatment failure.Dead cancer cells have been found to activate a pathway in the body mediated as a protein dubbed toll-like receptor 9, or TLR9, that is present in the immune system and in many kinds of cancer. "If TLR9 boosts metastasis, then researchers will work on finding targeted therapies that block or regulate this molecular pathway," Dr. Selander stated.For more information:http://main. uab.edu/Sites/ MediaRela. ..http://www.naturaln ews.com/chemothe ...

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are you speaking about an MRI? MRI's aren't so bad, just that you have to lay still, but if you are claustrophobic they do recommend you take some sort of relaxer pill to lay quiet. I had a few MRI's in the past so I know how it is, this is the only way they can see damage to the muscles, and disc's... plain Xrays don't show this, only bone damage.Hope you feel better Marty.Michele

From: Joyce Hudson <bjoyfuliglou (DOT) com>Subject: [ ] Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spread Date: Tuesday, June 22, 2010, 6:35 PM

As most of you know, I totally disapprove of chemo, after watching it basically kill Vera. Then I watched it debilitate my Father after one treatment. He has never regained his strength back completely. He only regained maybe 50 %. I will never use chemo, personally. Joy

http://www.naturaln ews.com/029042_ cancer_cells_ chemotherapy. html

Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spreadTuesday, June 22, 2010 by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor

NaturalNews) Chemotherapy is known to come with a long list of side effects -- from debilitating nausea and hair loss to extreme fatigue -- and in many cases, it does not cure or even stop cancer from progressing. But what if chemotherapy does something no one has realized before during all the decades it has been in use? What if chemo actually encourages cancer to spread throughout the body, the process known as metastasis?Researchers with the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Comprehensive Cancer Center and UAB Department of Chemistry have just been awarded a $805,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program to see if the answer to those questions is "yes". The study is investigating the very real possibility that dead cancer cells left over after chemotherapy spark cancer to spread to other parts of the body."What if by killing cancer cells with chemotherapy we inadvertently

induce DNA structures that make surviving cancers cells more invasive? The idea is tough to stomach," Katri Selander, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor in the UAB Division of Hematology and Oncology and co-principal researcher on the grant, said in a statement to the media. "Fundamentally this question must be answered to advance the knowledge base and to know all the risks and benefits of cancer treatment. This research has the potential to reach across numerous scientific disciplines, and may one day improve the lives of patients worldwide."The UAB scientists are concentrating on inactivated or altered genetic material (DNA) left in the body after breast-cancer cells are exposed to chemotherapy. The research team stated that the resulting altered DNA could be the deadly factor that sparks the dreaded process of metastasis through a specific molecular pathway. Finding out whether chemotherapy could cause cancer spread is hugely important to

the field of oncology because metastasis is the number one cause of cancer recurrence and treatment failure.Dead cancer cells have been found to activate a pathway in the body mediated as a protein dubbed toll-like receptor 9, or TLR9, that is present in the immune system and in many kinds of cancer. "If TLR9 boosts metastasis, then researchers will work on finding targeted therapies that block or regulate this molecular pathway," Dr. Selander stated.For more information:http://main. uab.edu/Sites/ MediaRela. ..http://www.naturaln ews.com/chemothe ...

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Thanks Michele,

yes i do think this is what I will need,I am not afraid to do this,

just do not want all the bad they gave Joy and Her dad and all others!!

Marty

living in the cosmic swirl,going round and round,singing my song,Dancing my dance...Stompingelk,

From: Joyce Hudson <bjoyfuliglou (DOT) com>Subject: [ ] Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spread Date: Tuesday, June 22, 2010, 6:35 PM

As most of you know, I totally disapprove of chemo, after watching it basically kill Vera. Then I watched it debilitate my Father after one treatment. He has never regained his strength back completely. He only regained maybe 50 %. I will never use chemo, personally. Joy

http://www.naturaln ews.com/029042_ cancer_cells_ chemotherapy. html

Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spreadTuesday, June 22, 2010 by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor

NaturalNews) Chemotherapy is known to come with a long list of side effects -- from debilitating nausea and hair loss to extreme fatigue -- and in many cases, it does not cure or even stop cancer from progressing. But what if chemotherapy does something no one has realized before during all the decades it has been in use? What if chemo actually encourages cancer to spread throughout the body, the process known as metastasis?Researchers with the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Comprehensive Cancer Center and UAB Department of Chemistry have just been awarded a $805,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program to see if the answer to those questions is "yes". The study is investigating the very real possibility that dead cancer cells left over after chemotherapy spark cancer to spread to other parts of the body."What if by killing cancer cells with chemotherapy we inadvertently

induce DNA structures that make surviving cancers cells more invasive? The idea is tough to stomach," Katri Selander, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor in the UAB Division of Hematology and Oncology and co-principal researcher on the grant, said in a statement to the media. "Fundamentally this question must be answered to advance the knowledge base and to know all the risks and benefits of cancer treatment. This research has the potential to reach across numerous scientific disciplines, and may one day improve the lives of patients worldwide."The UAB scientists are concentrating on inactivated or altered genetic material (DNA) left in the body after breast-cancer cells are exposed to chemotherapy. The research team stated that the resulting altered DNA could be the deadly factor that sparks the dreaded process of metastasis through a specific molecular pathway. Finding out whether chemotherapy could cause cancer spread is hugely important to

the field of oncology because metastasis is the number one cause of cancer recurrence and treatment failure.Dead cancer cells have been found to activate a pathway in the body mediated as a protein dubbed toll-like receptor 9, or TLR9, that is present in the immune system and in many kinds of cancer. "If TLR9 boosts metastasis, then researchers will work on finding targeted therapies that block or regulate this molecular pathway," Dr. Selander stated.For more information:http://main. uab.edu/Sites/ MediaRela. ..http://www.naturaln ews.com/chemothe ...

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Marty, DON'T use that arm much. No lifting or doing heavy duty work. It could tear it more. When I tore mine, I could barely use that arm. It hung almost lifeless at my side, due to 5 tears. The body can heal a small to medium tear, but I had over done mine. You are talking about an MRI. I think having an MRI or X-ray, once every few years, isn't going to hurt you much. But that's my opinion. Like chemo, I wouldn't have radiation treatments at all. The chiropractor will help, but keep in mind it will only be a temporary fix, if the arm is used a lot. Babying it for a couple of months, will allow it to heal.

Have you been having problems with it since we talked a few months ago? Or is this a new problem with the same shoulder. By the way, try not to reach from the side or behind you. That's how I tore mine.

[ ] Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spread Date: Tuesday, June 22, 2010, 6:35 PM

As most of you know, I totally disapprove of chemo, after watching it basically kill Vera. Then I watched it debilitate my Father after one treatment. He has never regained his strength back completely. He only regained maybe 50 %. I will never use chemo, personally. Joy

http://www.naturaln ews.com/029042_ cancer_cells_ chemotherapy. html

Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spreadTuesday, June 22, 2010 by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor

NaturalNews) Chemotherapy is known to come with a long list of side effects -- from debilitating nausea and hair loss to extreme fatigue -- and in many cases, it does not cure or even stop cancer from progressing. But what if chemotherapy does something no one has realized before during all the decades it has been in use? What if chemo actually encourages cancer to spread throughout the body, the process known as metastasis?Researchers with the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Comprehensive Cancer Center and UAB Department of Chemistry have just been awarded a $805,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program to see if the answer to those questions is "yes". The study is investigating the very real possibility that dead cancer cells left over after chemotherapy spark cancer to spread to other parts of the body."What if by killing cancer cells with chemotherapy we inadvertently induce DNA structures that make surviving cancers cells more invasive? The idea is tough to stomach," Katri Selander, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor in the UAB Division of Hematology and Oncology and co-principal researcher on the grant, said in a statement to the media. "Fundamentally this question must be answered to advance the knowledge base and to know all the risks and benefits of cancer treatment. This research has the potential to reach across numerous scientific disciplines, and may one day improve the lives of patients worldwide."The UAB scientists are concentrating on inactivated or altered genetic material (DNA) left in the body after breast-cancer cells are exposed to chemotherapy. The research team stated that the resulting altered DNA could be the deadly factor that sparks the dreaded process of metastasis through a specific molecular pathway. Finding out whether chemotherapy could cause cancer spread is hugely important to the field of oncology because metastasis is the number one cause of cancer recurrence and treatment failure.Dead cancer cells have been found to activate a pathway in the body mediated as a protein dubbed toll-like receptor 9, or TLR9, that is present in the immune system and in many kinds of cancer. "If TLR9 boosts metastasis, then researchers will work on finding targeted therapies that block or regulate this molecular pathway," Dr. Selander stated.For more information:http://main. uab.edu/Sites/ MediaRela. ..http://www.naturaln ews.com/chemothe ...

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Hi Joy,

same pain as a couple months ago..I have CoQ10 and the bottle is almost empty,so I have been taking them plus others that Sandy gets for me.

it seems like it got better then worst again..sleeping seems like is when I aggravate it,I am asleep and wake up hurting because I rolled on it...

I have complete faith in my Chiro..

we have used him before and trust him fully. He is going to re-evaluate me Friday.

live well

Marty

living in the cosmic swirl,going round and round,singing my song,Dancing my dance...Stompingelk,

From: Joyce Hudson <bjoyfuliglou (DOT) com>Subject: [ ] Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spread Date: Tuesday, June 22, 2010, 6:35 PM

As most of you know, I totally disapprove of chemo, after watching it basically kill Vera. Then I watched it debilitate my Father after one treatment. He has never regained his strength back completely. He only regained maybe 50 %. I will never use chemo, personally. Joy

http://www.naturaln ews.com/029042_ cancer_cells_ chemotherapy. html

Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spreadTuesday, June 22, 2010 by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor

NaturalNews) Chemotherapy is known to come with a long list of side effects -- from debilitating nausea and hair loss to extreme fatigue -- and in many cases, it does not cure or even stop cancer from progressing. But what if chemotherapy does something no one has realized before during all the decades it has been in use? What if chemo actually encourages cancer to spread throughout the body, the process known as metastasis?Researchers with the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Comprehensive Cancer Center and UAB Department of Chemistry have just been awarded a $805,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program to see if the answer to those questions is "yes". The study is investigating the very real possibility that dead cancer cells left over after chemotherapy spark cancer to spread to other parts of the body."What if by killing cancer cells with chemotherapy we inadvertently

induce DNA structures that make surviving cancers cells more invasive? The idea is tough to stomach," Katri Selander, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor in the UAB Division of Hematology and Oncology and co-principal researcher on the grant, said in a statement to the media. "Fundamentally this question must be answered to advance the knowledge base and to know all the risks and benefits of cancer treatment. This research has the potential to reach across numerous scientific disciplines, and may one day improve the lives of patients worldwide."The UAB scientists are concentrating on inactivated or altered genetic material (DNA) left in the body after breast-cancer cells are exposed to chemotherapy. The research team stated that the resulting altered DNA could be the deadly factor that sparks the dreaded process of metastasis through a specific molecular pathway. Finding out whether chemotherapy could cause cancer spread is hugely important to

the field of oncology because metastasis is the number one cause of cancer recurrence and treatment failure.Dead cancer cells have been found to activate a pathway in the body mediated as a protein dubbed toll-like receptor 9, or TLR9, that is present in the immune system and in many kinds of cancer. "If TLR9 boosts metastasis, then researchers will work on finding targeted therapies that block or regulate this molecular pathway," Dr. Selander stated.For more information:http://main. uab.edu/Sites/ MediaRela. ..http://www.naturaln ews.com/chemothe ...

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Glucosamine/Chrondroitin/MSM will help a lot. Glad you are on the CoQ10. Anyone over 50 should be on it, because our bodies quits making it. Also, the heart really needs it.

I have to be careful when I sleep on my side. I actually use a pillow to lie on from my waist to my armpit. This relieves a lot of stress on my shoulders. Just be sure to move it, if you flip to your back.

I would be totally lost without my Chiropractor. He even tells me, that fixes are temporary if we keep doing the same things that irritates them. At least he helps. By the way, the surgery for my rotator cup, was out patient. It felt better immediately and I had to do therapy.

[ ] Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spread Date: Tuesday, June 22, 2010, 6:35 PM

As most of you know, I totally disapprove of chemo, after watching it basically kill Vera. Then I watched it debilitate my Father after one treatment. He has never regained his strength back completely. He only regained maybe 50 %. I will never use chemo, personally. Joy

http://www.naturaln ews.com/029042_ cancer_cells_ chemotherapy. html

Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spreadTuesday, June 22, 2010 by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor

NaturalNews) Chemotherapy is known to come with a long list of side effects -- from debilitating nausea and hair loss to extreme fatigue -- and in many cases, it does not cure or even stop cancer from progressing. But what if chemotherapy does something no one has realized before during all the decades it has been in use? What if chemo actually encourages cancer to spread throughout the body, the process known as metastasis?Researchers with the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Comprehensive Cancer Center and UAB Department of Chemistry have just been awarded a $805,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program to see if the answer to those questions is "yes". The study is investigating the very real possibility that dead cancer cells left over after chemotherapy spark cancer to spread to other parts of the body."What if by killing cancer cells with chemotherapy we inadvertently induce DNA structures that make surviving cancers cells more invasive? The idea is tough to stomach," Katri Selander, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor in the UAB Division of Hematology and Oncology and co-principal researcher on the grant, said in a statement to the media. "Fundamentally this question must be answered to advance the knowledge base and to know all the risks and benefits of cancer treatment. This research has the potential to reach across numerous scientific disciplines, and may one day improve the lives of patients worldwide."The UAB scientists are concentrating on inactivated or altered genetic material (DNA) left in the body after breast-cancer cells are exposed to chemotherapy. The research team stated that the resulting altered DNA could be the deadly factor that sparks the dreaded process of metastasis through a specific molecular pathway. Finding out whether chemotherapy could cause cancer spread is hugely important to the field of oncology because metastasis is the number one cause of cancer recurrence and treatment failure.Dead cancer cells have been found to activate a pathway in the body mediated as a protein dubbed toll-like receptor 9, or TLR9, that is present in the immune system and in many kinds of cancer. "If TLR9 boosts metastasis, then researchers will work on finding targeted therapies that block or regulate this molecular pathway," Dr. Selander stated.For more information:http://main. uab.edu/Sites/ MediaRela. ..http://www.naturaln ews.com/chemothe ...

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Marty, unless you have an MRI or X-ray frequently, the accumulation of the gamma rays, won't hurt you. The article was about doctors using MRI and X-rays frequently, to see how a patient was coming along with their treatments, as in chemo and radiation. It was one treatment of chemo that harmed Dad. Too many times, people have been burned with radiation treatments. Vera had both, chemo and radiation. Both did more damage than helped. I will never have chemo or radiation. But when needed, I will get an MRI or X-ray. Which might happen, every 2 years, because of the orthopedic checking on my artificial hip.

-- [ ] Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spread Date: Tuesday, June 22, 2010, 6:35 PM

As most of you know, I totally disapprove of chemo, after watching it basically kill Vera. Then I watched it debilitate my Father after one treatment. He has never regained his strength back completely. He only regained maybe 50 %. I will never use chemo, personally. Joy

http://www.naturaln ews.com/029042_ cancer_cells_ chemotherapy. html

Cancer cells killed by chemotherapy may cause cancer to spreadTuesday, June 22, 2010 by: Sherry Baker, Health Sciences Editor

NaturalNews) Chemotherapy is known to come with a long list of side effects -- from debilitating nausea and hair loss to extreme fatigue -- and in many cases, it does not cure or even stop cancer from progressing. But what if chemotherapy does something no one has realized before during all the decades it has been in use? What if chemo actually encourages cancer to spread throughout the body, the process known as metastasis?Researchers with the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Comprehensive Cancer Center and UAB Department of Chemistry have just been awarded a $805,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program to see if the answer to those questions is "yes". The study is investigating the very real possibility that dead cancer cells left over after chemotherapy spark cancer to spread to other parts of the body."What if by killing cancer cells with chemotherapy we inadvertently induce DNA structures that make surviving cancers cells more invasive? The idea is tough to stomach," Katri Selander, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor in the UAB Division of Hematology and Oncology and co-principal researcher on the grant, said in a statement to the media. "Fundamentally this question must be answered to advance the knowledge base and to know all the risks and benefits of cancer treatment. This research has the potential to reach across numerous scientific disciplines, and may one day improve the lives of patients worldwide."The UAB scientists are concentrating on inactivated or altered genetic material (DNA) left in the body after breast-cancer cells are exposed to chemotherapy. The research team stated that the resulting altered DNA could be the deadly factor that sparks the dreaded process of metastasis through a specific molecular pathway. Finding out whether chemotherapy could cause cancer spread is hugely important to the field of oncology because metastasis is the number one cause of cancer recurrence and treatment failure.Dead cancer cells have been found to activate a pathway in the body mediated as a protein dubbed toll-like receptor 9, or TLR9, that is present in the immune system and in many kinds of cancer. "If TLR9 boosts metastasis, then researchers will work on finding targeted therapies that block or regulate this molecular pathway," Dr. Selander stated.For more information:http://main. uab.edu/Sites/ MediaRela. ..http://www.naturaln ews.com/chemothe ...

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