Pancreatic Cancer is for many people a death sentence. Some of the new research is now saying they have figured out a way to treat it without Chemo and Surgery. The new approach is that they have discovered a gene that can actually slow down the growth of Pancreatic Cancer, or the progression of the Disease. This could possibly lead to a better and earlier treatment for this affliction.
Typical treatment for people who have an advance case of Pancreatic Cancer is known to include intensive Chemotherapy for an indefinite amount of time?? So, I guess if you’re suffering from horrible ”Body Rejection Effects”, you get to suffer for an indefinite amount of time and hope that the treatment works better for you than it did for Steve Jobs? How long do you go through this before knowing if it’s going to help you or not? That’s the problem as I see it? If something isn’t going to work for you, you need to talk to your Doctor about the best treatment option available for you if the current one isn’t working and ask him or her for advice on something else that may work for you. Boy, do I know this one! My former spouse was on one drug that was ineffective and then changed to another one which wasn’t much better, but all came with ample ”Body Rejection Effects”. Expensive ones too and they didn’t do much at all to help with the Nerve Pain.
The Terpene Answer
Recently published research by the National Institute of Health have reported that many Terpenes have a negative effect on Cancer. Probably a third of our Terpenes have shown their worth in the war against Cancer, as well as Inflammation at the same time no less. Another important thing is to keep your Inflammation under control at all times and it can be checked by a simple inexpensive test called a C Reactive Protean or CRP test that any Doctor can order for you and discuss the results. This will tell you what your Inflammation level is and if it needs to be treated or not.
Lex Hahn, Founder
Vital Terpenes Therapeutics
”As Nature Intended”
The role of inflammation in pancreatic cancer – PubMed (nih.gov)
Prediagnostic Inflammation and Pancreatic Cancer Survival – PubMed (nih.gov)
Pancreatic cancer, inflammation, and microbiome – PubMed (nih.gov)