Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California


Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cancer + risk + fat  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 619 for cancer risk fat. (0.13 seconds) 
Recent
Archives
  • All dates
  • 2002-08
  • 1999-2001
  • 1995-97
  • 1989-94
  • 1982-88

 Sorted by relevance   Sort by date   Sort by date with duplicates included 

I Really Should Study
Genes Associated With Fat Metabolism Could Increase Kidney Cancer Risk
Science Daily (press release) - Nov 17, 2008
"Obesity, hypertension and smoking have been the only established risk factors for kidney cancer, but they account for only 50 percent of cases," said lead ...
Home > Health > On Women > Breast Cancer in the Family? 7 Things ... U.S. News & World Report
Saturated fat tied to small intestine cancers Reuters India
Research: Exercise May Diminish Cancer Risk eFluxMedia
PRESS TV - U.S. News & World Report
all 635 news articles »

eFluxMedia
Obese Older Women Have An Increased Risk Of Breast Cancer
eFluxMedia - Nov 28, 2008
... cancer risk in obese women on the fact that these women do not have regular mammograms or cancer in their case might be easily missed because of fat. ...
Cancer fighters: A look at foods that can help you stay healthy
Evansville Courier & Press, IN -
... the risk of developing lung cancer and has anti-inflammatory properties. As if that weren't enough, one cup of cooked winter squash has only 80 fat-free ...
Auxilium Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Announces Distribution and License ...
International Business Times, NY -
Men withhypogonadism or androgen deficiency may suffer from a decrease in energy,reduced muscle mass, an increase in abdominal fat, decline in libido ...AUXL
Fibrocystic breasts don't increase cancer risk
St. Louis Post-Dispatch,  United States - Nov 29, 2008
Others have gotten relief by adopting a high-carbohydrate, low-fat diet. Dear Dr. Donohue: My rear end itches fiercely. What could this be, and what can I ...

Healthy Wealthy n Wise
7 Reasons Why We Suffer Heart Attacks By: Emilia Klapp, RD, BS
Healthy Wealthy n Wise, WV -
Many of us are under the impression that the major danger from smoking is cancer but that is not quite true; smoking is the major risk factor for heart ...
Report prompts lower consumption of processed meats
Cancer Research UK - News & Resources, UK -
However, Mr Evans noted that many people are still unaware of the impact diet and exercise has on cancer risk, with just 57 per cent recognising that a poor ...
Whole grains offer a lot
News Sentinel, IN -
♦Whole grains are also cancer-fighting heroes: In an important recent study, people who ate the most whole grains had a 20 percent lower risk of colorectal ...
Canola Oil Consumed During Pregnancy Lowers Breast Cancer Risk for ...
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Nov 18, 2008
Canola oil also has a much greater percentage of omega-3 polyunsaturated fat -- 10 percent compared with 0.5 percent in corn oil. The study, expected to be ...
No Association Found Between Fat, Protein, And Meat Consumption ...
Science Daily (press release) - Nov 25, 2008
"Our data do not support the hypotheses that intakes of fat, protein, or meat from animal sources are associated with an increased risk of renal cell cancer ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cancer + 292,000 + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Mammography program hits 20-year mark
Vancouver Courier,  Canada - Jul 31, 2008
Last year in BC 277000 mammograms were performed with that number expected to rise this year to 292000. Kan also attributed the increase in the number of ...
Immunization against S. aureus has potential in selected target groups
Pharmaceutical Business Review - Jul 17, 2008
In the US alone, an estimated 292000 hospitalizations with a diagnosis of S. aureus occur each year. The pathogen is by far the most frequent cause of skin ...
Source: Google News

[PDF] Chart of Darkness: Mapping a Large Intranet
CACT Australia - www9.org
... Abstract: We introduce and define the concept of dark matter on the Web.
Dark matter for ... this paper. 3 Obtaining Web Information The ...

Threatened biotas:" Hot spots" in tropical forests -
N Myers - The Environmentalist, 1988 - Springer
... 0.0054 New Caledonia 15000 1500 1580 1400 (89) 0.56 0.001 Totals 2204000 292000 **
34400 13.8 0.2 For comparison: Hawaii 14000 6000 825 745 (88) 0.30 0.004 ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Eating less fat may lower breast cancer risk, have little impact on colon cancer, heart disease risk

Adopting a low-fat diet in later life and following such a regimen for nearly a decade does not appear to have a significant impact on reducing the overall risk of breast cancer, colorectal cancer or heart disease, according to a Women's Health Initiative study that involved nearly 50,000 postmenopausal women across the United States.

The results of the dietary modification study are published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, or JAMA.

The study – the first attempt to test the health impact of a low-fat diet in a randomized, controlled trial, considered the gold standard of clinical and public-health study design – did, however, uncover some encouraging trends, according to Hutchinson Center biostatistician Ross L. Prentice, lead author of the paper that describes the impact of a low-fat diet on breast-cancer risk, one of the primary goals of the study.

" Women in the low-fat-diet group reduced their overall rate of breast cancer by about 9 percent as compared to the women who didn't change their eating patterns, but that difference was not statistically significant; it could have been due to chance. So at this point we're not able to say with certainty that a low-fat diet reduces the risk of breast cancer," said Prentice, member and former director of the Hutchinson Center's Public Health Sciences Division. A 9 percent reduction in breast-cancer incidence means that, out of 10,000 women, 42 in the low-fat-diet group and 45 in the comparison group developed breast cancer each year.

 
Prentice and colleagues did find, however, that a low-fat diet was associated with a statistically significant 15 percent reduction in estradiol, a form of blood estrogen that increases the risk of breast cancer.

Women in the low-fat group also experienced a 30 percent risk reduction for a certain subtype of breast cancer: tumors that were progesterone-receptor negative. " This finding provides an interesting hypothesis for further development and reinforces that breast cancer is multifaceted; it is not a single disease," Prentice said. PR-negative tumors, while relatively rare, are difficult to treat and associated with a higher mortality rate because they are unresponsive to hormone-blocking drugs such as Tamoxifen.

Significant results were seen also among women in the low-fat-diet group who began the study with the highest baseline fat consumption and among women who most strictly adhered to the study's dietary-fat goals. Women in these categories experienced a 15 percent to 20 percent overall reduction in breast-cancer incidence.

" The bottom line is that changing to a low-fat diet may reduce breast-cancer risk, especially among women who have a relatively high-fat diet to begin with, but we don't view our data as strong enough at this time to make a broad recommendation that all women initiate a low-fat diet for that purpose," Prentice said. "Additional follow up with these women may yield a stronger, statistically significant conclusion."

With regard to colorectal cancer, the study did not reveal a reduction of cancer incidence overall, but it did show a modest 9 percent decrease in self-reported colon polyps – a precursor to colon cancer – among the women in the low-fat intervention group, according to Shirley A.A. Beresford, lead author of the paper describing the colorectal-cancer findings.

" It is important to remember that cancers often take decades to develop, and we may only be seeing the early stages of the impact of a low-fat diet intervention on the risk of colorectal cancer and other diseases," said Beresford, a member of the Hutchinson Center's Public Health Sciences Division and at the University of Washington School of Public Health and Community Medicine. " The reduction in polyps suggests a possible reduction in colorectal-cancer risk could emerge over a longer time period." No significant reduction in heart disease emerged among the women in the low-fat intervention group, who achieved only a 2.4 percent reduction in low-density lipoprotein, or LDL, and a 3 percent lower rate of heart disease.

The study did, however, find trends toward reduction in heart-disease risk among the subset of women in the low-fat-diet group who made the greatest reduction in consumption of saturated fat and trans fat, both of which can raise the risk of heart disease because they increase production of LDL cholesterol.

Nationally, 48,835 women between the ages of 50 and 79 participated in the study, including more than 1,000 from the Seattle area. Forty percent of the women were randomly assigned to follow a low-fat diet while 60 percent of the women served as a comparison group and thus maintained their usual eating habits. The women in both groups were followed for eight years.

Those in the low-fat group aimed to consume no more than 20 percent of daily calories from fat, and to eat at least five servings of vegetables and fruits and six or more servings of grains daily. To help reach this goal, the women met regularly in small groups with nutritionists to learn how to modify their behaviors to achieve and maintain this dietary change.

At the beginning of the study, the women's baseline fat consumption was between 35 percent and 38 percent of their daily calories. A year into the study, the women in the low-fat group got 24 percent of their energy from fat – 11 percent fewer calories from fat as compared to the women who ate their usual diet – and they maintained much of that difference throughout the study.

" This was a long-term, demanding study for the women in the low-fat group, and they did a marvelous job of trying to adhere to stringent dietary goals," Prentice said. " In spite of their efforts, we achieved only 70 percent of the difference in dietary habits between the two groups that we needed to get. If we'd achieved an even higher adherence rate, I believe the study's results would have been more dramatic," Prentice said.

Importantly, the low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet did not increase the risk of obesity, metabolic syndrome or diabetes.

Source: Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, 2006
 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 

 

Continue News With: News9A ;

 

 

ALL THE NEWS : News1 ; News2 ; News3 ; News4 ; News5 ; News6 ; News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services. Home

 © 2002-2006

Keywords:

Contact Iconocast

Home Page