Saturday, April 7, 2012

Is There Value to Aspirin Cancer Prevention?

When my father died from cancer a few months ago, I had a lifetime to regret that I did not become a doctor. But even if I did, I could not have done anything much anyway since there was no stopping this dreaded disease. Today, as medical science takes a closer look at aspirin cancer prevention methods, cancer may just have found its match.

There is currently scientific evidence suggesting that aspiring may be a preventative medicine where cancer is concerned. As the substance is found nearly everywhere now and does not even cost that much, doctors in various countries have been encouraging more studies to verify the suggestions. The horrific stresses of chemo were what prevented my relative from taking preventative therapies, so the discovery of aspirin's performance in this matter certainly gives me cause to think about how he would have fared with this other method.

If my father (or his doctor) did find out about this, it would still have been too late anyway since aspirin helps more for prevention than cure. The regular but limited consumption of aspirin was shown to be related to the reduction of chances of cancer affliction. The drug has been seen to produce results too in retarding metastatic development in those already suffering from the disease.

The medicament has been seen to elicit different responses from different cancers. A number of cancers, including prostate and colon cancer, wer observed to react most adversely to aspirin and were powerfully limited by it. My father suffered from colon cancer.

Esophageal strains and colorectal ones were very strongly limited too, according to scientists. This is the reason the drug is being suggested as a precautionary measure by more than a few authorities. Those who endorse the drug as a potential cancer-preventor say, however, that even more studies have to be conducted before anything final is said and that people should watch how much of the drug they do consume.

Like any other helpful drug, aspirin turns harmful when taken in excess or ill-advised. Internal bleeding may be a consequence of overdoing your aspirin consumption, for instance. The lethal nature of these potential overdose results should warn you not to take too much of the drug.

There are some people in the medical field who are still on the fence about the drug. A few studies in the US indicate, after all, that there was no connection between aspirin consumption and lower cancer possibilities. Nonetheless, people from the other side of the fence argue that we can hardly trust these researchers given that they did not provide aspirin as a daily dose (as the researchers from the other side did).

There are concerns about even the Oxford research, however: after all, it was initially intended to see if aspirin could be helpful in preventing cardiac problems. There are countries where doctors often suggest regular consumption of baby aspirin for those with weak hearts. Critics note that cardiac problems are quite different from cancer-related ones.

A qualified stance is perhaps the best one in this matter, as with many other yet-experimental notes in medicine. There are people like the CMO of the American Cancer Society, who has indicated his belief that the researchers could be coming close to something very useful, yet has not indicated support for aspirin as a preventive drug at the moment. The potential of aspirin for preventing cancer is clearly what is being brought to light here, say some, and not its certainty.

Their learning obviously far surpasses mine here, so I cannot question them in the details. That said, I feel the absence of my own cancer-stricken relative keenly enough to be eager about anything that could bring down the possibility of cancer for others. Thus, my desire is to see that the increasing numbers of studies on aspirin cancer prevention will aid other people in bringing down this deadly disease.



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