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Home Opinion

Reducing Your Breast Cancer Risk

October 31, 2016
in Opinion
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As October being the Breast Cancer Awareness month, the awareness campaign does an awful lot of good. But there is much more you can do to actively reduce your risk of breast cancer, without harming your body or increasing your risk for any disease or illness.

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This is what you have to do to reduce your breast cancer risk.

1. Naturally boost your cancer-killing hormone. One of your hormones’ most important jobs is telling your cells when and how they should multiply. Your breast cancer risk is largely tied to your hormones. But just as easily as hormones can increase your cancer risk, they can also slash it significantly. There is one naturally occurring hormone that has the proven ability to help your body fight cancer — especially breast cancer: melatonin. A study published in 2014 in the journal PLoS One found that melatonin put a stop to tumor growth and cancerous cell production in mice with triple-negative breast cancer. And there have been numerous other studies that have shown that melatonin can kill cancer cells, whether in a Petri dish, in a mouse or in the human body.

2. Get your share of vitamin D. Getting enough vitamin D may be the most important way to reduce this risk. It has been shown to block the growth of breast cancer tumors. Vitamin D’s active form, calcitriol, provides numerous benefits against cancer: It encourages diseased cells to die and it can limit blood supply to tumors and restrict cancer spread. Most of our vitamin D is made by the skin in response to sunlight. Only a small amount comes from diet. When choosing a supplement, get vitamin D3.

3. Stop eating this cancer-causing food. If you want to reduce your risk of developing breast cancer — give up sugar. Many studies appear to conclusively identify sugar consumption, specifically table sugar and high-fructose corn syrup, as a major risk factor for breast cancer and its metastasis. And Ghanaians are especially at risk because we consume 30 percent more fructose than we did 20 years ago, and the amount has increased year after year.

4. Take oral hygiene very seriously. A recent study shows that women with periodontal disease are more likely to develop breast cancer than women who do not have the disease. And, a bit of information from the study that’s not as surprising but compounds the threat — a history of smoking significantly affected the women’s risk.

5. Lose weight. Many studies show that high levels of the hormone leptin in your body may make you more susceptible to breast cancer. Leptin actually talks to inflammatory molecules that induce breast cancer. When this “crosstalk” is cut off, it reduces breast cancer. When one has excess fat, leptin enhances breast cancer cell growth by turning off genes that kill cancer cells, and turning on genes that make cells more open to estrogens, which increases breast cancer development. Of course shedding excess fat will reduce leptin levels. But before you do that, a very easy way to restore leptin sensitivity is to eat much more nutrient-dense foods.

7. Keep exercising. In an eight-year study, older women who engaged in an exercise program enjoyed a 10 percent decreased risk of invasive breast cancer in comparison to women who didn’t exercise. On the other hand, women who had exercised when they were younger, but had stopped moving around very much as they got older, did not have a lower risk of cancer. So the important lesson here is: No matter how hard you exercised when you were younger — keep on walking.

8. Have an egg for breakfast. The choline found in eggs is not, technically, a vitamin, but it is an important nutrient for supporting your health. And, research shows, it can shrink your chances of developing tumors. A study at the University of North Carolina shows that consuming choline in eggs can reduce a woman’s breast cancer risk by 24 percent.

9. Eat more peaches. Researchers at Washington State University found that peaches help inhibit breast cancer growth and keep cancers from spreading. They recommend eating this fruit every day—up to three peaches. In laboratory studies, the researchers found that high levels of peach polyphenols prevent tumors from growing and cut off their blood supply. The chemicals also restrict the production of enzymes that help cancer spread.

10. Why should a woman be addicted to Alcohol? Cut-out or greatly decrease alcohol. Researchers at the University of Houston in Texas say recent findings suggest that alcohol exposure affects several cancer-related pathways and mechanisms, shedding light on the so-called cross-talk between alcohol and cancer-related gene pathways and networks. In other words, alcohol boosts a woman’s risk of getting breast cancer. Current dietary guidelines recommend that women keep their alcohol consumption to no more than one drink daily, but to be on the safe side — and based on this most recent information — you may want to consider cutting out alcohol consumption completely.

11. Drink either Green Tea or Hibiscus tea daily to reduce your breast cancer risk. Avoid all forms of sugars

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Tags: Alcohol and cancerbody fight cancerbreast cancerbreast cancer tumorscancerCancer Researchcancer-causing foodchemicalsCholinediseasehealthHealth_Medical_Pharmahelp cancerillnessinflammatory moleculesinvasive breast cancerkeep cancerskill cancerLeptinMedicinemetastasisNorth Carolinaperiodontal diseasePLoS OneRibbon symbolismRisk factorsRisk factors for breast cancerRTTtexastriple-negative breast cancertumorTumorsUniversity of HoustonUniversity of Houston in TexasUniversity of North CarolinaWashington State Universitywomans breast cancer

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