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Cervical
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How
many ways of being are there, sweet friend? asks Grandmother
Growth in her warm way. You sense this is a serious question,
and you fear you dont know the right answer.
Between the yin and the yang, between the dark and the
light, between normal and abnormal, there are infinite shades
and numberless ways of being. Without lines, they arise and
change, drift away or settle in, some promoting your well-being,
some eroding it. An erosive change is almost upon us daughter.
How will we meet it?
Cells are changing in your cervix. They are going fast,
faster, growing fast, faster, too fast to be tidy, too fast
to be symmetrical, too fast to be orderly. How do we dance to
this rhythm? Does it tear you loose from your moorings? Does
it set you adrift? Is it freedom?
Cells are changing too fast for the guardians to cope;
they are overwhelmed. Where shall you find more help dearest
granddaughter? Who will you invoke to aid you? Can the guardians
prevail and change the rhythm if they are given reinforcements?
Or must you kill the guardians along with the cancer to stop
the beat and still the music?
Your story is unique my precious child. Your choices will
arise from the well of your own deep inner wisdom. Trust yourself.
Trust me. Ill hold you hand as we dance, Ill follow
or lead, fast or slow, as you will. Lets go!
Do you actually have cervical cancer, or one of its precursors?
This is an important distinction. Current practice tends to
over-treat women with abnormal cells, dysplasia, hyperplasia,
and in situ carcinomas. In nine out of ten cases, if carcinoma
in situ of the cervix is left untreated, it will never progress
to cervical cancer.[1]
Physicians could confidently monitor patients for [amount
and types of HPV] virus with currently available tests for several
months before deciding to treat
more aggressively.[2]
Cervical cancer in situ is generally very slow-growing; untreated,
half will regress and half will, over a period of 10-30 years
progress to invasive cancer.[3] About 10% of women have a fast-growing
type - whose incidence may be increasing - which becomes invasive
within a year.[4] Cervical cancer is most common in women 40-60
years of age, but it occurs frequently in women under 35 years
old.
In the USA, about five million Pap smears yearly reveal dysplasia;
of those, 45,000 will be new cases of cervical carcinoma in
situ and 10,000 will be invasive cervical cancer.[5] Cervical
cancer kills more than 4,000 American women each year.
Black women in America are twice as likely to be diagnosed with
cervical cancer and almost three times as likely to die of it
as white women. They are older at the time of diagnosis and
their disease is further advanced, but they are less likely
to receive aggressive treatments.[6]
Cervical cancer, it is now known, is caused by infection with
certain strains of HPV. A healthy immune system can prevent
this; a weak one cant. Thats why cervical cancer
is strongly related to lack of good sanitary facilities, lack
of vitamin C in the diet (less than 30mg a day increases risk
seven-fold), lack of carotenes in the diet (under 5000 IU daily
triples risk), smoking tobacco (triples risk), first intercourse
before the age of 18 (triples risk; the cervix is immature and
more easily damaged and infected), long-term use of oral contraceptives
(over 8 years quadruples risk), multiple sexual partners (more
than 5 quadruples risk), and a monogamous relationship with
a man who is uncircumsized and who has had more than 25 partners.
[7], [8], [9]
Is cervical cancer connected to inflammation? Women whose cervical
tissues are infected with HPV and also inflamed - by herpes,
gonorrhea, chlamydia, [spermicides, and violent penetration]
- are twice as likely to be diagnosed with cervical cancer as
women who have HPV but no inflammatory events.[10]
Some procedures sound like diagnostic tests. A cone biopsy,
despite its name, is real surgery. See Step 6.
Feelings of being used or raped are associated with chronic
vaginitis, chronic vulvar pain, recurrent wart, herpes, cervical
cancer, and associated abnormal Pap smears (cervical dysplasia).[11]
Take back your power! Claim your cervix and your genitals as
your own. Possess your cervix. Accept it; love it; cherish it.
When we reject a part of ourselves, we can find ourselves losing
that part to surgery.
Compared to women with other types of cancer, women with cervical
cancer are more likely to be sexually unhappy. They may dislike
intercourse, but feel that they must do it, and are often non-orgasmic
in the presence of a man. They are more likely to be divorced,
separated, deserted, or stuck in a relationship
with a man who is unfaithful, undependable, or alcoholic.[12],[13]
Women with cervical cancer have been found to be low or deficient
in a number of nutrients, including vitamins A, B6 (pyridoxine),
C, folate (folic acid), and selenium.[14] Increasing your consumption
of orange and green vegetables, whole grains, sauerkraut, selenium-rich
foods - like garlic, seaweeds, and mushrooms - and pyridoxine-rich
foods - like lentils, broccoli, and potatoes wont cure
cancer. High-quality nutrition does, however, provide the basis
for normal healthy cells to replace the cancerous ones, and
primes the immune system to eliminate aberrant cells.
Extract of common privet berry (ligustrum vulgare, L. lucidum)
has been shown to inhibit cervical cancers in mice.[15] Even
if it doesn't directly eliminate cervical cancer, privet is
happy to help reduce inflammation, enhance white blood cells,
and nourish the immune system.
Milk thistle seed tincture is a fantastic complementary medicine
for anyone choosing chemotherapy. And this large, striking plant
may be anticancer, too. Two alkaloids, silymarin and silibinin,
reduce the growth of cervical, breast, and prostrate cancer
cells.[16]
Castor oil is Edgar Cayces classic cancer treatment. In
the case of cervical cancer, Cayce recommended daily castor
oil packs over the uterine area, as well as five drops of castor
oil orally at bedtime. In severe cases, he added Atomidine and
Glyco-Thymol to the regime.
Low levels of folic acid are associated with the development
of cervical cancer, perhaps because folate is needed for DNA
repair. But no study has shown that supplements, even in very
high doses, can reverse it.[17]
Likewise, low levels of carotenoids in the diet and blood increase
the risk of invasive cervical cancer, but supplements are not
a cure, and may even prolong the presence of precancerous cells,
helping them mature into cancers.[18] Studies have repeatedly
found that beta-carotene supplements decrease spontaneous
healing. Women with CIN II who took beta-carotene were
more than twice as likely to progress as the controls were.[19],[20]
High doses of vitamin C wont help either; and may harm.[21]
Smoking tobacco causes a tumor suppresser gene to lose its ability
to kill cancer cells according to UCLA cervical-cancer researcher
Dr. Christine Holschneider. Perhaps thats why women who
smoke are more likely to get cervical cancer and more likely
to die of it, too. Isnt it time to switch to an herbal
smoke? Make your own with coltsfoot, mullein, mint, and a touch
of tobacco.
From the 1938 until 1971, more than six million unborn children
in the USA were exposed to the potent estrogen-like hormone
diethylstilbestrol (DES or desPLEX) when it was prescribed to
their mothers in the mistaken belief that it could prevent miscarriage
and create bigger, stronger babies. Although studies from 1954
on found the opposite to be true - women who took DES were more
likely to miscarry - this dangerous drug continued to be given
to pregnant women for 15 more years.[22]
DES daughters and sons have malformed reproductive systems,
malfunctioning immune systems, and a heightened sensitivity
to carcinogens. DES-daughters and granddaughters are especially
likely to be diagnosed with fast-growing clear cell adenocarcinoma
or cervical intraepithelial neoplasia of the cervix or vagina.[23]
Though many DES-daughters are diagnosed when young, the is no
age at which the danger disappears.[24]
The DES daughters and granddaughters that I know have remained
cancer-free by attention to healthy living and regular use of
red clover blossom infusion (1-3 quarts a week) and burdock
root tincture (a dropperful a day, more when stressed).
certain cancers, such as early-stage breast, cancer,
prostate cancer, cervical cancer and low grade lymphomas, respond
very well to herbal treatments, yet seem to be aggravated and
sometimes worsened by surgical procedures or other conventional
treatments.[25]
The rates of cervical cancer are four times less among women
whose partners have had a vasectomy.[26] Of course, once you
already have cervical cancer, this intervention is too late.
Women who douche four or more times a month are nearly four
times more likely to be diagnosed with cervical cancer.[27]
Isnt douching a way to cleanse the vagina? Absolutely
not. The vagina harbors beneficial organisms (mostly bacteria)
that prevent infection and may forestall cancer; douching washes
them away, leaving the cervix and vagina vulnerable.
A cone biopsy is real surgery, not just a biopsy. It was originally
conceived of as a uterus-sparing procedure for women with cervical
cancer who, usually from a desire to have children, were reluctant
to undergo hysterectomy. A cone biopsy requires anesthesia and
is designed not just to sample cells to test for cancer, as
a biopsy would, but to remove all possible cancerous tissues
from the cervix along with a clean margin of unaffected tissue.
Over-treatment of cervical carcinoma in situ is common. Except
in the rare case of fast-growing microinvasive cancer, it is
considered safe to explore alternative treatments for 3-12 months
before consenting to surgery. A high percentage of in situ cervical
cancers can be reversed.
[1] JAMA,
Feb. 1989, cited in Ovarian Cysts, HealthFacts,
XVI (146), July 1991
[2] Amount of virus sets cancer risk, L Seachrist,
Science News,Vol 148, September 23, 1995
[3] One Way to Avoid Unnecessary Testing After Ambiguous
Pap Results, HealthFacts, May 2001
[4] Screening for Cervical Cancer, HealthFacts,
XV (136), Sept 1990
[5] Special Report: Gynecologic Cancers, Weill Medical
College Womens Health Advisor, June 2006
[6] Differences in cervical cancer mortality among black
and white women, EA Howell, Obstet Gynecol, 94(509-15),
Oct 1999
[7] Does His Circumcision Lower Her Risk for Cervical
Cancer?, Andrew Kaunitz MD, Journal Watch, 7(6):41
[8] Screening for Cervical Cancer, HealthFacts,
Sept 1990
[9] Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine, M. Murray ND & J.
Pizzorno ND, Prima Publishing, 1991
[10] Co-conspirator? Genital herpes linked to cervical
cancer, N. Sepa, Science New, 162:292?3, November 9, 2002
[11] Womens Bodies, Womens Wisdom, Christiane Northrup
MD, Bantam, 1991
[12] Personality patterns in patients with malignant tumors
of the breast and cervix," Tarlau & Smalheiser, Psychosomatic
Medicine, vol 13(117), 1951
[13] Psychological setting of uterine cervical cancer,
LG Koss, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, vol 125(807-13),
1966
[14] Encycl. of Natural Medicine, Murray & Pizzorno, Prima,
1991; also, study by CE Butterworth, MD at U of Alabama Med
School
[15] Desk Reference to Natures Medicine, Steven Foster
and Rebecca Johnson, National Geographic, 2006
[16] Ibid
[17] Nutrients and Cervical Cancer Prevention, C
Massion MD, Alternative Therapies in Womens Health, 2(8):57?60,
Aug 2000
[18] Physicians Perspective: Alternative Cancer
Therapies Can Be Dangerous, Carolyn Runowicz MD, Health
News (NEJM), Feb 2003
[19] The effect of beta-carotene and the regression and
progression of cervical dysplasia, Jrnal of Clinical
Epidemiology, 44(273-283), 1991
[20] Effects of beta carotene and other factors on the
outcome of cervical dysplasia, Gynecology Oncology, 65(483-492),
1997
[21] Randomized double-blind trial of beta carotene and vitamin
C in women with minor cervical abnormalities, British
Journal of Cancer, 79(1448-1453), 1999
[22] DES - Forgotten by many but still an important womens
health issue, Ann Mulligan, The Network News, Nov /Dec
1998
[23] DES: New Concerns, Susan Ince, Womens
Health and Fitness News, Dec 1988
[24] Ibid note 24
[25] Herbal Medicine, Healing & Cancer, Donald Yance Jr.,
Keats, 1999
[26] The Complete Womans Herbal, Anne McIntyre, Henry
Holt, 1994
[27] Douching: New Dangers Identified, Cynthia Pearson,
The Network News, March 1991; study in Am. J. of Epid, Feb 15,
1991
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