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http://sunnyview.sunnybrook.ca // The Essential Cancer Treatment Nutrition Guide & Cookbook is research-based, and offers everything from tips on managing side effects of treatment to 150 recipe options suitable for various stages in the cancer journey.


In this webinar, the die****ians of God's Love We Deliver cover a range of cancer fighting nutrition tips such as how plant–based foods fight cancer, superfoods to prioritize in your diet, how healthy fats can help support your health, and how nutrition plays a role in protecting your bones during treatment.
Visit www.sharecancersupport.org for more information.


How important is it to have a healthy diet full of nutritional values that can fill your stomach and improve your health as well? Without proper nutrition intake, you can never feel much better or improve health from a condition like cancer. Having a healthy food plate is the key to a healthy life.
Dr. Randeep Singh, Director & Senior Consultant Medical Oncology, Oncology at Narayana Superspeciality Hospital, Gurugram, shared important points on the diet in Chemotherapy for cancer treatment. He has talked in detail about a healthy diet and food habits after the treatment or therapy.
#narayanahealth #healthforall #allforhealth #nhcares
For video consultation with the doctor, log on to https://video.narayana.health/home
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The 2022 Prostate Cancer Patient Conference is Sept 10-11, 2022! RSVP Today!
https://pcri.org/2022-conference
To view the study visit: "A Healthy Lifestyle in Men at Increased Genetic Risk for Prostate Cancer": https://www.sciencedirect.com/....science/article/pii/
We at the Prostate Cancer Research Ins****ute receive questions on a regular basis about diet, lifestyle, and prostate cancer (and if you would ever like to ask us a question about that or anything related to prostate cancer, contact our helpline at pcri.org/helpline). Unfortunately, diet and lifestyle questions are notoriously difficult to investigate in a truly scientific manner and insights on these topics are few and far between. Recently, though, a prospective study was published looking at the diet and lifestyle of 12,000 men with prostate cancer over 20 years. They found an equal incidence of prostate cancer in men with healthy and unhealthy lifestyles; however, they also found that there was a lower mortality rate from prostate cancer in men with healthier lifestyles.
To view the study visit: "A Healthy Lifestyle in Men at Increased Genetic Risk for Prostate Cancer": https://www.sciencedirect.com/....science/article/pii/
0:09 I have heard that there was a recent study published looking at diet and lifestyle of 12,000 prostate cancer patients over 20 years. Is there anything that we can learn from this study?
4:17 Why is animal protein bad for prostate cancer?
5:00 Do eggs count as animal protein when thinking about animal protein's relation to increased prostate cancer risks?
5:27 Can a specific diet cause PSA to decline?
6:25 Do you have specific diets that you tend to recommend to your patients?
7:25 Is it fair to say that these stringent diet and lifestyle recommendations would be most appropriate for men with more dangerous prostate cancers and that men with low-grade, Gleason 6, prostate cancers do not
8:51 Considering the significance of a person's weight in their general health, can you tell us more about the medication "Wegovy," a weight loss medication, that you mentioned in our recent webinar?
9:53 Should all prostate cancer patients be lifting weights?
Don’t know your stage? Take the quiz: Visit http://www.prostatecancerstaging.org
To learn more about prostate cancer visit http://www.pcri.org
Sign up for our newsletter here to receive the latest updates on prostate cancer and the PCRI: https://pcri.org/join
Who we are:
The Prostate Cancer Research Ins****ute (PCRI) is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization that is dedicated to helping you research your treatment options. We understand that you have many questions, and we can help you find the answers that are specific to your case. All of our resources are designed by a multidisciplinary team of advocates and expert physicians, for patients. We believe that by educating yourself about the disease, you will have more productive interactions with your medical professionals and receive better individualized care. Feel free to explore our website at pcri.org or contact our free helpline with any questions that you have at pcri.org/helpline. Our Federal Tax ID # is 95-4617875 and qualifies for maximum charitable gift deductions by individual donors.
The information on the Prostate Cancer Research Ins****ute's YouTube channel is provided with the understanding that the Ins****ute is not engaged in rendering medical advice or recommendation. The information provided in these videos should not replace consultations with qualified health care professionals to meet your individual medical needs.
#prostatecancer #markscholzmd #pcri


Worried about your risk of colon cancer? Let your food be preventive medicine with these diet tips from Mayo's experts in cancer care. Get more healthy living tips from the Mayo Clinic App: http://mayocl.in/2tbMb57


As part of the 2022 Prostate Cancer Patient Conference, this program covers supportive care for managing prostate cancer, including diet and exercise. Recorded on 10/15/2022. [Show ID: 38611]
Please Note: Knowledge about health and medicine is constantly evolving. This information may become out of date.
More from: Prostate Cancer Patient Conference
(https://www.uctv.tv/prostate-cancer-conference)
Explore More Health & Medicine on UCTV
(https://www.uctv.tv/health)
UCTV features the latest in health and medicine from University of California medical schools. Find the information you need on cancer, transplantation, obesity, disease and much more.
UCTV is the broadcast and online media platform of the University of California, featuring programming from its ten campuses, three national labs and affiliated research ins****utions. UCTV explores a broad spectrum of subjects for a general audience, including science, health and medicine, public affairs, humanities, arts and music, business, education, and agriculture. Launched in January 2000, UCTV embraces the core missions of the University of California -- teaching, research, and public service – by providing quality, in-depth television far beyond the campus borders to inquisitive viewers around the world.
(https://www.uctv.tv)


Dr. Amber Orman likes to practice what she calls “true healthcare.”
She is a radiation oncologist and also a prac****ioner of lifestyle medicine “which is using food and movement, the way that you feel stress the way that you sleep, your relationships and your use of tobacco, alcohol and drugs, to really change your life in a positive way,” according to Orman.
Orman takes that practice into the HEAL Program at AdventHealth. HEAL stands for Healthy Eating Active Lifestyle. Orman started the program with Dr. Nathalie McKenzie, a gynecologic oncologist.
The HEAL program shows cancer patients ways they can change their lifestyles to improve their overall health and help them recover from their diagnosis.
Part of the core of the HEAL program is encouraging patients to consume a diet that is at least majority plant-based.
Part of the reason for encouraging a plant dominant diet is because plants provide something that animal products cannot, fiber.
“Fiber is only in plants,” she said. “So when we’re eating fiber, that is what our gut microbiome needs to be happy.”
Orman explained that your gut microbiome is “a po****tion of bacteria in your gut, that is absolutely central to many processes in your body.”
“So when this po****tion of organisms in your gut is happy because they’ve been eating a lot of fiber, the global level of inflammation in your body is lower, and your immune system is functioning in a better way,” the doctor said. “When our immune system is functioning in a better way, it can pick off little cancer cells that are floating around in our body from time to time — because that is the case, we always have a cancer cell or two roaming around that our body is designed to take those out so that it doesn’t land in breast tissue or the pancreas and grow to become a tumor that we find and diagnose and treat.”
In addition to fiber, plants also provide phytonutrients.
“Phytonutrients, again, are substances only in plants,” Orman said. “One subset of a phytonutrient is an antioxidant. And they’re anti-inflammatory — they’re just very good for our body. They run around kind of repairing damage and preventing damage.”
In the latest episode of Florida Foodie, Orman shares more about HEAL and the improvements she has seen in her patients as a result of the program. She also shares more about the benefits of a plant-dominant diet for overall health and what changes people can make to begin improving their nutrition.
Please follow our Florida Foodie hosts on social media. You can find Candace Campos on Twitter and Facebook. Lisa Bell is also on Facebook and Twitter and you can check out her children’s book, “Norman the Watchful Gnome.”
MORE: https://bit.ly/344w2Wk


Dr. Michael Pishvaian discusses the various nutritional issues that can be present in many pancreatic cancer patients. A nutritionist can help develop a plan to reduce digestive complaints caused by pancreatic cancer, including diet changes or the introduction of the prescription pancreatic enzyme drug called CREON.
More videos: https://ruesch.georgetown.edu/rueschreels
Transcript:
I want to address nutrition for patients with pancreatic cancer. The pancreas sits in a very delicate place in the abdomen, and actually, the pancreas is critical for releasing enzymes into the intestinal tract to help digest food, so it's not surprising at all that patients with pancreatic cancer have significant digestive and nutritional issues, including frequent abdominal discomfort, bloating, g****iness, diarrhea. These are all symptoms of the tumor itself compressing the pancreatic duct, preventing the juices from flowing into the intestine. There are also symptoms of the pancreas tumor sitting on some critical blood vessels and some critical nerve endings within the abdomen.
It's been my practice to really incorporate our nutritionist to help us manage the nutrition for patients of pancreatic cancer. It's very important that patients keep their calories up, which is often much, much easier said than done because patients don't feel like eating, the chemotherapy makes their food taste bad. Even the cancer itself, even without the chemotherapy, can make their food taste bad as well. Coaching patients through the idea of trying to decide which foods work best for them is often very important.
I have had patients tell me that ****y foods are the only thing they can tolerate, and I've had other patients tell me that they can't stand ****y foods, and only salty foods or sugary foods are what they can tolerate. What I would advise is that find what works best for you allows you to keep your calories up high enough, and if it's available to you to try and meet with a nutritionist to try and discuss what other options are out there.
One thing that is specific, and it's a medication, but there's a medication called CREON, or there are other versions of CREON. What this drug is, it's synthetic pancreatic enzymes that are taken with the meal and basically are replacing the body's ability to release the pancreatic enzymes in the intestine. These ingested enzymes help to break down food so that it doesn't lead to the diarrhea and the bloating that a pancreatic cancer patient cl****ically get.
Now, these drugs are not necessarily effective for all patients, but I have had some patients benefit dramatically, so it's certainly worth trying.