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Plant based diet

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I wanted to share this interview.

In doing research on MBC, I came to Dr. Andrew Weil. I found below interview on his website. I've just begun eating a plant-based diet and already feeling less fatigue and am anxious to see what wbc count will be when next tested. I've also been having acupuncture treatments twice weekly since I began Ibrance and Letrozole in Sept. 2019. The treatments immediately worked with the hot flashes and I believe help with energy and immune system.

Interview with Integrative Oncologist, Dr. Abrams

I tell my patients that I think of cancer as a weed. Modern western oncology is focused on destroying the weed while integrative oncology concentrates on the soil the weed grows in and on making the soil as inhospitable as possible to the growth and spread of the weed.

We also recognize that many cancer patients are people who have been highly functional and in control of their lives. A cancer diagnosis takes away that control and puts them at the mercy of doctors. In my practice, I try to return to the patient some sense of control by giving them things they can do to take their lives back into their own hands. At the same time I’m also trying to decrease ongoing inflammation in the body, which is at the root of many chronic diseases, and to enlist the body’s innate immunity to fight against the cancer as well as decreasing stress and increasing hope.

Are there dietary changes that can help patients fight cancer?

The one thing we know for sure about diet is that obesity increases the risk of a number of different types of cancer. With hormonally driven cancers (such as breast cancer) obese patients have a worse prognosis than those with a healthy body mass index. So it is important for some patients to improve their nutritional status and decrease their weight. The most useful strategy is to eat a plant-based diet focusing on a wide variety of colored fruits and vegetables. Cruciferous vegetables such as broccoli, cauliflower and cabbage contain a cancer-preventing compound so potent that is being investigated as a chemotherapy agent. Berries are rich in beneficial phytonutrients and antioxidants. Overall, a diet that emphasizes fruits and vegetables, whole grains, nuts, cold water fish that provide omega-3 fatty acids (fish eaters have a reduced risk of cancer) is the best nutritional strategy.

At the same time, we recommend decreasing your intake of animal fats in general and red meat and dairy products in particular to control cancer-promoting inflammation in the body. I personally believe that refined sugar and carbohydrates are not beneficial for individuals living with cancer because of their effect on insulin production and insulin-like growth factors, which promote inflammation and are also associated with cancer cell division.

I appreciate the fact that organic fruits and vegetables are expensive, but they are the best choices for cancer patients, not just because they’re grown without pesticides and other agricultural chemicals but because plants grown outdoors organically need to protect themselves from other plants, predators (insects, birds and animals) and the sun. Organically grown plants do this by producing more intense protective chemicals, known as phytonutrients, which are beneficial to us.

I also recommend seasoning food with ginger, garlic, onions, turmeric, drinking green tea, all of which have anti-inflammatory effects. If you drink alcohol, stick to red wine. Excessive alcohol consumption is a cancer risk, men who drink alcohol should limit themselves to a maximum of two drinks daily and women to a maximum of one. For women at risk for breast cancer, one drink a week is safest.

What about IM strategies to counter the side effects of conventional cancer treatment?

I refer my patients to Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioners on the staff at the Osher Center. I believe that cancer patients treated concurrently with acupuncture tend to do better. In fact, the National Institutes of Health had a consensus conference on acupuncture in 1997 and found that it was useful in treating side effects of chemotherapy, including chemotherapy associated nausea and vomiting. I think it may also be useful for increasing energy, decreasing dry mouth and relieving hormonally induced hot flashes. Traditional Chinese Medicine is all about expelling evil and supporting good. Modern western medicine is mainly about expelling evil. I think my role as an integrative oncologist is to support the good as well as expelling the evil.

Tell us about the importance of mind/body approaches in cancer treatment.

These approaches are vital. Patients have lost a sense of control and their bodies have been assaulted with chemotherapy and radiation. Learning mind body techniques – guided imagery, hypnosis, mindfulness, stress, reduction, yoga, T’ai chi – helps decrease stress. Many people blame the stress in their lives for the development of cancer. I don’t think stress in and of itself is enough to cause cancer, but it does affect production of hormones such as epinephrine and cortisol that can depress the immune system. So, overall, stress may lead to an increased risk that cancer will spread and to shorter survival. It has been shown that women with ovarian cancer who lack a good support system have more distress and more aggressive malignancies, and this is just one example of a psychological association and a biological marker for more aggressive disease.

Read another interview with Dr. Abrams: Lowering Cancer Risk With Integrative Medicine.

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What does he propose we do when our treatment causes us to put on weight?

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He doesn't specifically say in this article I posted but I was told by a qualified nutritionist that this plant-based diet is a good and healthy way to lose weight while on cancer meds. My primary care physician and onco nurse agree. I'm indeed hoping that's the case as I need to shed 25-30 lbs.

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RLN-overcomer

Shalom: Sister/warrior I am a voracious health, and wellness reader/researcher. I am a health advocate for myself, and my loved ones. The overwhelming studies have shown that, if you eat unhealthy foods, drink unhealthy beverages, smoke cigarettes, and don't exercise theses cumulative affects will cause the ailments/diseases, which you will have a much greater chance of getting. We all have the ability to make beneficial choices when it comes to health, and wellness. Years ago organic food was too expensive, healthy food tasted bland, and exercise was limited to yoga or some grueling combat routines. We now have delicious healthy dishes, deserts, and beverages to purchase or prepare . We also have an array of exercise modalities. We currently have more availability of less expensive organic fruits, and vegetables. I know we all have different levels of discipline, and I do thank God that I am generally a very disciplined individual. I communicate with two different Integrative Dr.'s when I need information, or confirmation on specific supplements, herbs, essential oils, and other health, and wellness issues/modalities. Thank- you for this very important information that if adopted by more of our sister/warriors, and loved ones, this will save lives, and, or increase our quality of our existing life. XoXoXo

Thank you for sharing, Red1246...It's all very interesting...

I especially liked the weed metaphor. I've always thought of my cancer as like a mold or fungus on the shower tiles (not that I ever have any!! :) ), but that if bleach (=chemo) failed to kill it, you can still make changes to the environment...keep things dry, put a fan in there, open it to sunshine, etc. It probably won't completely eliminate the mold, but it could reduce it or slow down its spread. Lifestyle changes might accomplish this.

My doc, early on, said "seed vs. soil...", i.e. create as inhospitable a physiology as possible.

I'm vegan, mostly organic, and definitely eat a LOT of the foods you mention. I drink a lot of ginger green tea (brew a full pot in the morning and drink it over ice throughout the day as a poor substitute for Diet Coke! But I do allow myself to drive-thru at McD's for a large DC sometimes). And I'm nearly stress-free and generally ridiculously happy. :) Now, re: the wine.....that's different matter! I consider Prosecco the the third leg of my regimen, i.e. + Ibrance + Faslodex... :

Thanks, again, for the information and inspiration. As you note, simply knowing that you're taking action against the disease, as opposed to being a passive battle ground for the war between the drugs and the cancer, feels good! :)

Take care,

Lynn

Hi Kathleen,

Thanks for sharing Dr. Abram's interview. While I don't agree with everything he mentioned, I do agree with switching to a mainly plant-based diet and doing all I can to improve my immune system function. I have cut back on dairy and other inflammatory foods. I was never much of a meat eater anyway before my diagnosis, but I have cut back even more over the past two years. When I do eat meat I look for organic products to buy.

Thanks again!

Sophie

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