|
 |
 |
|
Don’t Break the Chain
Ionizing radiation causes double and multiple
strand breaks in DNA and is accepted as a primary cause
of cancer. Since the 1970s, the gold standard for breast
cancer detection, in the Western world, has been
screening mammography. Since 1970, the
percentage of women with breast cancer has tripled.
Cancer can be caused by a number of factors. Excess
estrogen, carcinogens from chemicals and other factors
contribute to allowing cancer to grow. Family history
and genetics are rarely a factor. That means we are
unknowingly doing it to ourselves. |
 |
|
|
A
Brief History
The scientific community has long been
suspicious of the risks posed by the ionizing radiation
of the mammogram—and for
good reason. In 1904, soon after Thomas Edison made the
first X-ray machine, his assistant, Clarence Dally, died
from radiation induced cancer. He has been referred to
as a “martyr for science.” Radiation became the longest
standing and most documented cause of cancer. Even
Thomas Edison refused ever to have an X-Ray. Viewing
inside the human body, however, was so compelling that
the risks have been virtually ignored, down-played, and
thought of as “worth the benefit.” You might ask, “To
whom is this worth the risks?” Although mammography was
quickly accepted in the 1970s as the answer to the
breast cancer problem, no known research was carried out
on the effects of radiation on the breast at that time. |
|
What the Studies Reveal
Because of rising concerns in the scientific community,
recent studies reveal some troubling results. For your
education, we
will briefly review those studies, which point out that
mammograms do not reduce mortality, and radiation raises
the risks of causing cancer on two fronts: it damages
DNA and surrounding tissues—a deadly combination. |
|
January, 2000
A 1999 study revealed that there had been no
decrease
in breast cancer mortality in Sweden, where screening
had been recommended since 1985. The decision to
screen was based on eight internationally controlled
mammogram trials, including about 500,000 women.
Due to unsatisfactory results in Sweden, a review of the
studies was conducted and found that the results of the
original eight studies were misinterpreted and,
therefore,
misrepresented. The analysis concluded that for every
1,000 women screened biennially for 12 years, one breast
cancer was avoided, whereas the total number of deaths
was increased by six. There is no reliable evidence to
date, which says that mammography screening decreases
breast cancer mortality (Lancet 2000; 129-34).
 |
2002 Radiation Research
The Low-Dose Radiation Research Program was funded
by a grant supported by the US Department of Education
and the National Institute of Health. Conclusions
showed that low energy X-rays of mammograms
produce an increased biological risk, as opposed to
higher energy photons of other types of X-rays.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University
of California cell biologist Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff
shows that exposure to ionizing radiation creates a
wound that promotes a microenvironment in the tissue
surrounding breast cells that can cause cells to become
cancerous. “Our studies demonstrate that radiation
elicits
rapid and persistent global alterations in the mammary
gland microenvironment. Radiation exposure can
causebreast cancer by pathways other than genetic
mutations
(DNA damage).” Ionizing radiation is a well-established
carcinogen, but previous studies of its cancer-causing
effects have largely focused on damage to the breast
cells’
DNA. Barcellos-Hoff has pursued a different tactic. “It
takes
a tissue to make a tumor,” she says. “Cells don’t become
tumors without cooperation from the surrounding tissue.”
|
|
2002 Saarland University, Hamburg, Germany
It is generally accepted that ionizing radiation
causes
double and multiple strand breaks in DNA, which is an
accepted cause of cancer. Research reveals that exposure
to low-dose radiation causes damage so extensive to
the DNA that it is unable to repair itself, resulting in
a
permanent genetic mutation of the DNA.
 |
2004 Radiation Research
The Neoplastic Transformation Potential of
Mammography X-Rays
To help resolve the controversy regarding the risk of
mammography breast screening, a study was carried
out with a grant to the University of Birmingham, UK.
A comparison was made using an actual low-dose
mammogram X-ray machine and a standard high-dose
X-ray (chest X-ray). Results suggested that the risks (of
developing cancer) associated with mammogram screening
may be approximately five times higher than previously
assumed (which was 1%), making the estimated increased
risk of 5% for each exposure. The authors suggested that
the risk-benefit relationship of mammography exposure
clearly needs to be re-evaluated.
|
|
Prevention is always the best
policy
Ionizing radiation damage is cumulative,
which means each exposure multiplies the risk. The fact
that the risk exists at all justifies the necessity to
use a safe, noninvasive method of screening to avoid
causing the disease that mammograms are designed to
detect. Clearly, one way to prevent breast cancer is to
avoid unnecessary radiation exposure. In spite of its
risks, ionizing radiation is widely supported by those
who benefit in various ways from its use, as well as
results of mammographies on otherwise healthy women. It
is an elective procedure, not a requirement. You have a
choice. When a mammogram is recommended, consider whose
interest it serves to recommend exposing you to a known
risk. Take responsibility for your best interest.
Thermal Imaging is a safe, affordable and reliable
option. It can prevent breast disease by helping you to
monitor your breast health and to avoid ionizing
radiation. In addition, it can detect previously
undetected signs of microscopic development in time to
make choices that can change the outcome.
Even if you have had only one mammogram, then you are at
risk. Early detection is vital. Remember, the best way
to manage a disaster is to prevent it! |
|
Here’s to your good health! |
|
For a nationwide listing of Thermal Imaging Centers
visit
www.ditiflorida.com
Natural Medicine Center of Lakeland
315 Doris Drive
Lakeland, Florida 33813
Call (863) 709-9565
|
|