According to Dr. Cedric F. Garland of the Moores Cancer Center and the UCSD School of Medicine:
"This will potentially be the most important action ever conducted toward prevention of breast cancer. The more women who participate in this study, the greater the chance that we will defeat breast cancer within our lifetimes."
The most excellent probable way to evade this is to educate each individual about the deterrence. First and foremost, to make it achievable, everybody must know the primary causes of it: nutritional deficit, level of exposure to environmental toxicity, inflammation, estrogen ascendancy, and low immune system. Unfortunately, these things are often disregarded by many of us for the reason of having the notion about, "genes, which cause the disease".
Secondly, to consider who are at risk of this type of Cancer:
(1). Females
(2). Age
(3). Lack of childbearing and the ability to breastfeed
(4). Increased in hormone levels
(5). Dietary Iodine deficiency
(6). Smoking
(7) Menstrual cycle (Women who get their periods early (before age 12) or went through menopause late (after age 55) have an increased risk of it.)
(8) DES (Women who took diethylstilbestrol (DES) to prevent miscarriage may have an increased risk of it after age 40.)
(9) Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) -- You have a higher risk for breast cancer if you have received hormone replacement therapy for several years or more. Many women take HRT to reduce the symptoms of menopause.
However, breast implants, using antiperspirants, and wearing under wire bras do not raise your risk for breast cancer. There is no evidence of a direct link between breast cancer and pesticides.
Meanwhile, according to The World Cancer Research Fund, an estimate of 38% of breast cancer cases in the US are preventable through reducing alcohol intake, increasing physical activity levels and maintaining a healthy weight. It also estimated that 42% of its cases in the UK could be prevented in this way, as well as 28% in Brazil and 20% in China.
To add up, according to some research, in more recent years, research has indicated the impact of diet and other behaviors on breast cancer. These additional risk factors include: endocrine disruptors (chemicals that interfere with edocrine: DDT, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB's), bisphenol A (BPA), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE's), and a variety of phthalates), shiftwork, and radiation -- Although the radiation from mammography is a low dose, the cumulative effect can cause cancer.
This has to prove that, each woman should participate in its study, to learn more about the prevention, so as to discover its inevitable presence without the need to undergo some sort of technology (X-RAY Mammography) intended for its finding. Let us all be cognizant about it.
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