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Selasa, 07 September 2010

Operation No Cure Cancer

Surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and hormone replacement therapy No Cure Breast Cancer
Einstein said: insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Whether you can learn something from an expert policy knowledge of this? Patients in the USA, Australia, New Zealand, and Malaysia received the same treatment and it all ends with the same results.

Case 1
Fay (not her real name) is a Malaysian woman aged 45 years. He was diagnosed with breast cancer in September 2006.
• Fay mastectomy operation and cleaning of lymph nodes in the armpit area.
• After surgery, he went on as many as 25 times the radiation therapy and chemotherapy six times. Drugs used include 5-FU, Epirubin and cyclophosphamide (FEC). Fully completed in April 2007.
• Every 4 months, Fay had to return to the cancer specialist to conduct routine checks and everything is fine.
• In August 2008, the cancer is found again in the bone - L2, L5, sacral bone and pelvic bone.
• Fay mengkonumsi Tamoxifen for almost two years (November 2006 - August 2008). Treatment with Tamoxifen failed and his doctor suggested to replace the medicine with Arimidex.
• Fay received a doctor's advice to do chemotherapy again and is suffering from side effects.
Case 2
Rin (not her real name) a 40-year-old Indonesian woman, living in the United States (USA). He writes as follows:
• Initially I was diagnosed with breast cancer in December 2004.
• I did a surgical removal of a lump in her left breast in February 2005.
• After surgery, I underwent chemotherapy, eight times. And I experienced menopause after chemotherapy.
• Then I underwent radiotherapy as many as 35 times and completed in October 2005.
• I take the drug Tamoxifen, 20 mg daily.
• I did a routine check with my oncologist for six months and I did a mammogram once a year and two years ago I also did a bone density test (bone density test).
• In August 2008, I started feeling pain in my left foot and sometimes also felt in my left arm. Pain does not go away and even more pain. Then I could not walk straight and bend your knees. This makes it very difficult to ascend and descend the stairs.
• In November 2008, I did scan the entire body and also a CT-scan. The cancer has spread to the upper arm bone, left foot and L5.
• I then underwent radiotherapy in the region longer the sick as much as 10 times.
• In December 2008, I made preparations peripheral blood on my left foot.
• My doctor change medicines from the Arimidex Tamoxifen menjad.
Case 3
Gay (not her real name) was a 43-year-old woman from Australia. He was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1999 tahn. He writes:
• I've got six months of chemotherapy treatment and three months of radiation therapy.
• Then I started taking the drug Tamoxifen for five years and replaced with Arimidex.
• I did not experience any problems until six months yesterday, I felt a little pain in my upper right abdomen and tumor marker (tumor antibody examination result) I increases.
• After several times examined, but the result has occurred with bone metastases.
Case 4
• Sri (not her real name), a 57-year-old woman from Indonesia, was diagnosed with breast cancer in her left breast in 2003. He underwent surgery and a mastectomy followed by chemotherapy and radiotherapy. By the time we talk to him, Sri brain was undergoing chemotherapy and she was not able to explain the details of doing care. Response back to the question we also felt very slow. Sri gone through all this therapy in New Zealand. Sri go for routine check and was told that everything was fine. However, in 2007, he was not so healthy. From further examination found indications of metastases to the bone. Then he underwent another six cycles of chemotherapy and radiation therapy 10 times. All treatment was completed in November 2008. Sri went to Penang in February 2009 and a CT-Scan. The results obtained are as follows:
o lesions on T1 and T5 vertebrae.
o nodules on the C5 and L4 vertebral bodies in the lesion.
o Some lesions of the left iliac bone lysis.
o There may be liver cirrhosis.
What can we learn from these four cases?
1. These patients have been received and undergone all the necessary medical treatments - surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and oral medications - Tamoxifen and Arimidex. They've got the best that medical science continues to offer but cancer.

2. Cancer specialists say any of these treatments have been scientifically proven, FDA approved supported by data reviewed by peers in the medical journal. The question is: what is so special about all this? Why are these patients still experienced metastases? What is meant by "truth and honesty" are actually from all this treatment?


3. Would never crossed the mind of someone that the inability to recover and the ability to spread the cancer can occur because the treatment itself?

4. Let's look at these cases again. Fay in Malaysia experienced metastases one year four months after completing all his medical care. Rin in the USA and in New Zealand Sri experienced metastases approximately three years after his medical treatment, while Gay had metastases from Australia about eight years after treatment. All these cases showed the same problem faced by most patients anywhere in the world. Not matter where you live and what or who you are, doing the same thing and produce the same results.
Einstein said: Insanity is to the do the Same thing over and over again and expecting Different results (insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results). Whether you can learn something from an expert policy knowledge of this? Patients in the USA, Australia, New Zealand, and Malaysia received the same treatment and it all ends with the same results. For years, I observed a similar story is repeated again and again so much to the point that bone metastases could or would occur after such treatment. To expect a different result is what Einstein said, with Insanity (madness).
The questions that lingered in our minds: why those who know this is NOT to do something about it? Why patients are left in darkness and not be warned about such possibilities? Maybe we can do MORE than just prescribing drugs? Should tamoxifen to prevent recurrence but of all the cases above, Tamoxifen has miserably failed. Why do not we look back to see what we have done until today?

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