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Cofactors May Explain Why Some Get Colon Cancer, Others Don't

Posted Aug 25 2008 2:45pm 1 Comment

Although scientists are not sure what causes colon or rectal cancers, they know that they are associated with lack of exercise, eating too much meat, and the human wart virus (HPV). A study from Sendai, Japan shows that men who spend a lot of time walking are at reduced susceptibility to developing colon cancer.



An extensive review of the world's literature shows that colorectal cancer occurs far more frequently in prosperous industrialized countries, and that dietary factors may cause up to 75 percent of these cancers. You are increased risk for colon cancer if you are overweight, and exercise reduces your risk. Rectal cancer is not affected by obesity or exercise, and may be associated more with infection, such as with the HPV virus that causes genital warts. Since the vast majority of people who are infected with HPV do not get cancer, we have to explain why some do. The leading theory is that of cofactors: some combination of infectious agents, genetic susceptibility or lifestyle factors. I think that rectal cancer requires some kind of infection, but you do not develop the cancer unless you also smoke, lack vitamin D, eat a lot of meat, or some other combination of factors. Colon cancer appears to require some combination of factors such as lack of vitamin D, eating meat, not exercising or not eating enough foods from plants. Journal references ; more on colon cancer

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Ted

You left out the largest cofactor of all - IONIZING RADIATION. Research by Dr. John Gofman (1996, 1999) indicates that ionizing radiation from medical diagnosis (xray, CT scan, mammogram, fluoroscopy) are primary cofactors in 50% of ALL cancers. (Without a primary cofactor cancers are less able to form.)

Most cancers are likely caused by a set of primary and secondary cofactors - the usual suspects - poor diet, smoking, toxins/chemicals, stress, poor sleep, electromagnetic pollution, etc. A set of secondary cofactors may lead to illness but rarely disease. Add in a primary cofactor and cancer is more probable.

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