Showing posts with label chemotherapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemotherapy. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Early Menopause Symptons


LADY is most often unexpected and sometimes confusing, what early menopause is? UNDWERSTANDING what causes it can help ease you through this transition in your life.

Early Menopause
Early menopause is related directly to age, regardless of the cause. A woman under the age of 45 who has early menopause has not had a period in at least 12 months. The average age of women is 51.

The primary sign of early menopause is the year passing between periods. In addition, you can have a test to measure the levels of follicle stimulating hormone, or FSH, in your bloodstream. Since levels of this hormone increase when your ovaries stop producing estrogen during the ovulation cycle, a high level of FSH may indicate that you have early menopause. However, the levels of this hormone can fluctuate, so you may have to have the test done more than once to confirm the results.

Causes of Early Menopause
Hysterectomies, the removal of the uterus, and oophorectomies, the removal of the ovaries, can lead to early menopause if these operations were performed on younger women. Normally speaking, however, a woman will continue to produce adequate hormones to prevent early menopause if she can keep one functioning ovary.

Cancer treatments can also result in early menopause. Even light doses of chemotherapy or radiation experienced over a short period of time can trigger temporary early menopause. In this case, many women are infertile when ovulation starts again.

Autoimmune diseases can cause premature menopause. If you have an autoimmune disease, your body’s immune system literally attacks itself. If you have an autoimmune disease that goes after your reproductive system, you may experience early menopause.

Early menopause can also run in families. If you have a close relative that has had early menopause, you are at a higher risk of also developing it.

Other Causes of Early Menopause
If you suspect that you have early menopause, see your primary physician. Early menopause symptoms may actually be caused by other medical problems, such as thyroid disease, pituitary disorders or Cushing’s disease, so getting to the bottom of your condition is very important.

Symptoms of Menopause
In addition to changes in the timing of your menstrual cycle, symptoms of menopause can include:

* Weight gain
* Hot flashes
* Night sweats
* Insomnia
* Heavier or lighter menstrual flows
* Mood changes
* Anxiety
* Depression

Monday, May 18, 2009

Breast Cancer

Cancer patients may be able to fight chemotherapy-induced nausea using a common pantry spice -- ginger.Those taking the two lowest doses of ginger reported greater relief than those taking the highest dose, however, so taking more of the spice isn't necessarily better.In the new study, 644 people -- mostly breast-cancer patients -- were given supplements twice a day for six days, including the three days before and after they started chemotherapy. The patients took 0.5, 1, or 1.5 grams of ginger daily, which was divided into two doses, or they took identical placebo supplements that contained no ginger. Ginger-taking patients -- regardless of daily dose -- reported a greater reduction in nausea on the first day of treatment than those taking a placebo."If we can reduce nausea on day one, then patients tend to have reduced nausea throughout treatment," says lead study author Julie L. Ryan, of the University of Rochester Medical Center in Rochester, New York. About 70 percent of cancer patients experience nausea during chemotherapy, although anti-emetic drugs often help prevent actual vomiting.In the largest study of its kind to date, researchers found that a smidgen of purified ginger given in supplement form --equivalent to one-quarter teaspoon to one-half teaspoon of the spice each day -- could reduce chemotherapy-related nausea by 40 percent on the first day of treatment when used in combination with traditional anti-nausea medications.

"It's an interesting and rigorous study in the field of complementary medicine, and an important step forward in improving quality of care for the 70 percent of patients who undergo chemotherapy and experience nausea and vomiting," says Dr. Douglas Blayney, president-elect at the American Society of Clinical Oncology.Prior research had suggested that ginger supplements couldn't reduce nausea during chemotherapy, but Ryan says timing is everything: By giving the supplement three days prior to treatment--which had not been done in previous studies--the anti-inflammatory property of ginger had a head start on quashing queasiness.

Dr. Ted Gansler, director of medical content for the American Cancer Society, says complementary therapies such as ginger may work for some patients, but "most oncologists would not recommend counting on them as alternatives--especially for those receiving chemotherapy drugs known to cause the most severe nausea and vomiting."


If you're feeling queasy, Ryan says, consuming fresh ginger root from the grocery store can help, but purified capsules may work better due to their easier absorption in the gastrointestinal tract. In theory, ginger-containing products such as ginger ale, ginger snaps, and other products could reduce nausea, too, but only if they contained real ginger root, not just ginger flavoring.
Ginger has few side effects, but it could interfere with blood clotting and cause excessive bleeding, says Dr. Gansler. Consult your doctor before taking any supplement.

When dealing with chemotherapy-induced nausea--or any upset stomach--the American Cancer Society recommends eating dry foods such as pretzels and sipping on--you guessed it--ginger ale.
The study was funded by the National Cancer Institute.

Chemotherapy may cause nausea, which may be alleviated through ginger, a new study says.

The findings were released Thursday and will be presented later this month at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting.

Health Library

"We were surprised to find that the lowest doses were the most effective. I am guessing that at one gram the gut reaches maximum absorption," Ryan says.

The reduction in nausea was substantial, she says. The patients taking a placebo reported about a four or five on a seven-point nausea scale, meaning they were extremely nauseated. In comparison, ginger-taking patients tended to report one or two, which is little to no nausea. The supplements reduced vomiting by roughly 5 percent in the study, says Ryan, but very few of the patients had any vomiting due to the anti-emetic drugs they were taking.

Studies have suggested that ginger can also quell nausea caused by pregnancy, motion sickness, and anesthesia.