Monday, March 3, 2014

Cancer Treatment


Author: Charles Patrick Davis
There is no known treatment that cures multiple myeloma. However, there are methods to decrease the occurrence and severity of symptoms. The therapy is decided based upon the patient's condition and, in some individuals, the multiple myeloma stage and the interaction of the oncologist or cancer management team made with the patient's input.
My Thoughts:
Therefore all I can say you can do is try avoiding the risk factors but truthfully you cant avoid the risk factors.They include things like being over age 65 , being male , being African American or having  a family member affected by Multiple Myeloma. But you still could take chemo if you want it  . Chemo could relieve symptoms then again, it could cause nausea and vomiting. So in my opinion I would use the chemo for this type of cancer.
First Survivor Jack Aiello:
On Thanksgiving ’02, I finally needed to go on a medical disability due to MM treatment side-effects, specifically peripheral neuropathy (numbness, tingling, and random sharp pains in my feet, legs, and right hand) and fibrosis (scar tissue in my left leg as a result of radiation). It’s been 6 years since any plasmacytoma and my MM is still in remission, but the peripheral neuropathy side effects are still painful despite trying various treatments and even a clinical trial for it.   
Second Survivor Andy:Feb 2009 - Brilliant: within a month of Dexamethasone and Lenolidamide the IGs are back down to 14. I asked the consultant if it might be a good time to try and harvest some more stem cells. Yes, there is an unlicenced drug called plerixofer which helps to release the stem cells from the marrow. If we wait for it to be licenced in a couple of months it will cost £12,000 and it is unlikely that we will get it. Sign here if you want to try it. Good news we now have enough stem cells to put in the bank for another autograft. Trouble is that the IGs are once again creeping up.
Third survivor Maria Barnett:I want to share this next info with others so they and maybe the doctors can become aware of it and maybe study it to see if they can prove that this is indeed possible. Many years ago my younger brother was diagnosed with a rare blood disease. I'm sorry I cannot even begin to say or spell the name of it because it is a mile long. This disease is a disease caused by the immune system. Then, in 1995, both my mother and myself had our thyroids go crazy, and they had to kill them. They called our disease Graves Disease and this is caused by the immune system. Next, in 1998, my daughter was diagnosed with Chrons Disease, another disease of the Immune System. Finally, in January of 2000, I was diagnosed with Multiple Myeloma with lesions, another disease caused by the immune system. So you see, there is a history of diseases here in the family, all diseases of the Immune System. 
Fourth survivor James D. Bond:I was in Stage 3 at diagnosis. I have had three stem cell transplants, over the first 9 years, and almost all other Myeloma treatments. I've participated in six clinical trials, and I am currently doing well; and have continued working full-time and pushing myself to stay physically active. Each of the last 2 summers, I rode my bike 328 miles from Cleveland, OH to Cincinnati, OH in the American Cancer Society's Pan Ohio Hope Ride www.panohiohoperide.org. I plan to ride again in 2009. My last urine electrophoresis showed 10 mg of monoclonal protein per liter, or 0.01 grams of monoclonal protein per liter.
Fifth survivor Kathy D'Orlando:I live in Ormond Beach Florida by way of Long Island New York and Tennessee (60 miles from Oak Ridge nuclear power plant). Class of 2003 for both myself and my husband. He in January and I in May 2003. Weird! Both diagnosed within 3 months of each other from "blood cancers", "environmental" induced! He was a landscaper and I have worked in the hospital since 1977. He with Large B-cell aggressive Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Passed on October 5, 2003. Told he was in remission in May 2003 and within 2 weeks cancer was in his brain and spine!

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

JIMMY V. CLASSIC

THE V FOUNDATION , ARTICLES

Rameen Beroukim, M.D., PH.D.



The Cancer Genome Atlas, a project launched by America’s National Institutes of Health, has assembled genetic data on thousands of tumors and made it available to anyone who wants to analyze it. Thanks to these DNA sequencing studies, researchers have unprecedented information on the molecular changes which propel cancer. Rameen Beroukhim, M.D., Ph.D., a 2009 V Scholar, is one of the researchers making sense of the data and putting it to use. He has examined almost 5,000 specimens from 11 traditionally defined types of cancer and found 140 regions of DNA that were sometimes either multiplied repeatedly or deleted altogether.

Coaches v. Cancer


The Coaches Vs. Cancer Classic is a new annual college basketball tournament event, benefiting cancer research. The event is held at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn NY, and televised by truTV. The tournament replaced the previous Coaches vs. Cancer Classic tournament of 1995-2011, which was renamed the 2K Sports Classic in 2012 when it became a charitable event for the Wounded Warrior Project.
The tournament features 12 schools, with four host schools playing two games on campus and advancing to the Championship Rounds held at the Barclays Center. The remainder of the field participates in a round-robin series at one of the two sub-host sites.
The Florida State Seminoles won the inaugural Coaches vs. Cancer Classic in 2012 by defeating the St. Josephs Hawks 73-66.


Friday, February 21, 2014

DESCRIPTION

Multiple Myeloma is a cancer that starts in the bone. As it progresses it shows seriously ill signs of the cancer as it goes to a certain part of the human body. It affects the organ by discombobulating blood cells and going to any other area of the body.


Multiple myeloma, also known as myeloma, is a hematologic cancer, or cancer of the blood. It is the second most common blood cancer, after non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and represents approximately 1% of all cancers in white individuals and 2% of all cancers in black individuals.The American Cancer Society estimates that 24,050 new cases of multiple myeloma will be diagnosed in 2014. The number of cases of myeloma reported at a particular time (the prevalence) varies according to gender, age, and race/ethnicity. Multiple myeloma is more common among men than women and occurs more frequently with increasing age.
MY LOOK ON THIS ARTICLE:
Multiple Myeloma is a dangerous cancer that starts in the bones but progress to be dangerous. It occurs more in older men.