Cancer
treating the cause vs. symptom management
Regardless of the type of therapy, it is important to find the co-causative factors so that treatment is targeted as best as possible.
When we talk about cancer, it is obvious we need to talk about carcinogens - substances/toxins linked to cancer.
Unfortunately, this is something we have largely overlooked - and this should be our first priority: to assess the patient for which carcinogens are present abnormally and which allows cancer to proliferate.
There is evidence that several types of toxins including chemicals, pesticides, xenoestrogens as well as synthetic hormones, heavy metals and mycotoxins (from mold among others) are linked to cancer risk.
We cannot eat our way out of a poisoning problem due to carcinogens - healthy eating will fail to provide much help, if our system is breaking down from toxicity.
A heavy metal poisoning does not disappear simply because you eat healthy.
Likewise, eating healthy does not help much, if you suffer from the consequences of having lived in a mold-affected house.
Although I specialize in nutritional therapy and work on what food can do of good things for our body, you obviously can't eat our way out of a mold problem.
The toxins need to be removed through targeted detoxification based on lab-work - not guess-work.
My job is to investigate the biochemical causes involved in your disease. Your task and choice may be to follow a program that can help you get rid of the identified carcinogens.
Carcinogens in your body - whether they come from cigarettes, pesticides from contaminated drinking water or mycotoxin poisoning from mold - will lead to a vulnerable inner environment prone to relapse.
It is always best to act as early as possible, so that the body is not too weakened. It is also important to be open about your wishes and choices so that your relatives can support your choices.
Book time to get a a customized health program developed based on laboratory testing and US doctor supervised scans.
References
Carcinogenesis. 2010 Jan; 31(1): 71–82.
Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2018; 8: 60.
J Prev Med Public Health. 2014 Mar; 47(2): 74–83.