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When Losing Weight is Bad
For many people, losing weight is not the result of successful diet and exercise, but is a symptom of a serious illness. It's important to take special care of yourself when undergoing cancer treatment. Cancer can deplete your body's nutrients, have a negative effect on your appetite and on the ability to digest foods. Optimal nutrition can help support the effectiveness of your treatment and minimize side effects such as involuntary weight loss. These side effects may be partially due to the effect of cancer itself on your body but you may also be eating less than usual due to emotional concerns. These factors combined may leave you in a vulnerable condition - high nutrient need and low nutrient intake.During your treatme... [Cancercompass News: Cancer Nutrition]
Posted November 2004 | Permanent Link
Visit Dr. Janet Starr Hull's Alternative Health Web Forum and discuss alternative cancer treatments.
Recent Entries
Vitamin Vitality
When Mark Masthay shines light on vegetable molecules to learn more about lung cancer, he's continuing research that began when he forgot to keep that same chemical in the dark. Mark was a grad student then, at Carnegie Mellon University... Continue Reading
Exercise Lowers Colon Cancer Risk
Keeping physically active can significantly cut the risk of colon cancer, international research shows. Scientists analysed data from 413,000 people in 10 European countries, and found physically active people were 22% less likely to develop the disease. They said an... Continue Reading
Obesity Ups Risk for Colon, Throat Cancers
Obesity is associated with an increased risk of colorectal cancer, while obesity and smoking both raise the odds for throat malignancies, two new studies find. In the first study, University of Tokyo researchers examined the effect of body mass index... Continue Reading
Not All Calcium-fortified Foods Provide Same Benefits
Millions of consumers who buy calcium-fortified products to get more calcium into their diets may be in for a surprise. According to research conducted by Robert P. Heaney, M.D., professor of medicine at Creighton University Medical Center, calcium-fortified products, typically... Continue Reading
Laughter May Be the Best Medicine
In hospitals, nursing homes and private clubs all around the country, "certified laughter leaders" are teaching the therapeutic value of mirth, not by telling jokes, but simply pretending to laugh, so that forced hee-hee-hees eventually become honest-to-goodness giggles. [ABC News:... Continue Reading
Other Articles In The Obesity Category
- Obese Kids' Arteries Are Hardening - 11/17/04
- Obesity Linked to Leukemia in Older Women - 11/12/04
- When Losing Weight is Bad - 11/ 8/04
- Studies link obesity to increased frequency of heartburn symptoms; greater risk of esophageal cancer - 11/ 1/04
- How Does Obesity Cause Cancer? - 10/19/04

