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Nathan Goodyear

Protection against Helicobacter pylori and Other Bacterial Infections by Garlic - 0 views

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    review of activity of garlic against H.pylori.  Most of the studies are in vitro.  Most of the activity against H.pylori is via allicin, though studies have have shown poor bioavailability with allicin.
Nathan Goodyear

Laboratory Investigation - Abstract of article: Helicobacter pylori Lipopolysaccharide ... - 0 views

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    H. Pylori produces LPS.  This plays role in the pathogenesis from H. Pylori
Nathan Goodyear

Management of Helicobacter pylori Infection | American College of Gastroenterology - 0 views

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    American college of Gastroenterology review on H.pylori.  The treatment regimens are significant issues as tetracycline is no longer available.
Nathan Goodyear

Review article: biofilm formation by Helicobacter pylori as a target for eradication of... - 0 views

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    good discussion of biofilms and H.pylori.  This article reviews the literature behind some of the natural and traditional therapies to reduce biofilms.
Nathan Goodyear

Antibacterial effect of garlic and omeprazole on Helicobacter pylori - 0 views

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    Garlic to treat H.pylori.
Nathan Goodyear

Update on Helicobacter pylori Treatment - February 1, 2007 - American Family Physician - 0 views

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    good review of traditional treatment for H. Pylori
Nathan Goodyear

Exploring alternative treatments for Helicobacter pylori infection - 0 views

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    review of literature on natural ways to treat H. pylori
Nathan Goodyear

Efficacy of Sulforaphane in Eradicating Helicobacter pylori in Human Gastric Xenografts... - 0 views

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    sulforaphane proves to have activity against H. pylori.
Nathan Goodyear

Effect of Helicobacter pylori eradication on insul... [South Med J. 2010] - PubMed result - 0 views

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    Eradication of H.Pylori improves insulin resistance, lipids and inflammation
Nathan Goodyear

Substantial contribution of extrinsic risk factors to cancer development - 0 views

  • Here we provide evidence that intrinsic risk factors contribute only modestly (<10~30%) to cancer development
  • we conclude that cancer risk is heavily influenced by extrinsic factors. These results carry immense consequences for strategizing cancer prevention
  • cancers are proposed to originate from the malignant transformation of normal tissue progenitor and stem cells
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • “Intrinsic processes” include those that result in mutations due to random errors in DNA replication whereas “extrinsic factors” are environmental factors that affect mutagenesis rates (such as UV radiation, ionizing radiation, and carcinogens
  • intrinsic factors do not play a major causal role.
  • intrinsic cancer risk should be determined by the cancer incidence for those cancers with the least risk in the entire group controlling for total stem cell divisions
  • if one or more cancers would feature a much higher cancer incidence, for example, lung cancer among smokers vs. non-smokers, then this most likely reflects additional (and probably extrinsic) risk factors (smoking in this case)
  • Particularly, for breast and prostate cancers, it has long been observed that large international geographical variations exist in their incidences (5-fold for breast cancer, 25-fold for prostate cancer)14, and immigrants moving from countries with lower cancer incidence to countries with higher cancer rates soon acquire the higher risk of their new country
  • Colorectal cancer is another high-incidence cancer that is widely considered to be an environmental disease17, with an estimated 75% or more colorectal cancer risk attributable to diet
  • melanoma, its risk ascribed to sun exposure is around 65–86%
  • non-melanoma basal and squamous skin cancers, ~90% is attributable to UV
  • 75% of esophageal cancer, or head and neck cancer are caused by tobacco and alcohol
  • HPV may cause ~90% cases in cervical cancer23, ~90% cases in anal cancer24, and ~70% in oropharyngeal cancer
  • HBV and HCV may account for ~80% cases of hepatocellular carcinoma
  • H pylori may be responsible for 65–80% of gastric cancer
  • While a few cancers have relatively large proportions of intrinsic mutations (>50%), the majority of cancers have large proportions of extrinsic mutations, for example, ~100% for Myeloma, Lung and Thyroid cancers and ~80–90% for Bladder, Colorectal and Uterine cancers, indicating substantial contributions of carcinogen exposures in the development of most cancers
  • onsistent estimate of contribution of extrinsic factors of >70–90% in most common cancer types. This concordance lends significant credibility to the overall conclusion on the role of extrinsic factors in cancer development
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    Really great read.  Cancer is a majority lifestyle disease.
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