Saturday, June 29, 2019

ENCORE #112! – When There’s Nothing To Talk About Is There Nothing To Talk About?


From the first moment my wife discovered she had breast cancer, there was a deafening silence from the men I know. Even ones whose wives, mothers or girlfriends had breast cancer seemed to have received a gag order from some Central Cancer Command and did little more than mumble about the experience. Not one to shut up for any known reason, I started this blog…That was four years ago – as time passed, people searching for answers stumbled across my blog and checked out what I had to say. The following entry first appeared in October of 2017.

Like the title says…I don’t know what to say right now, so I’m going to direct you to a post by a very old friend of mine. I met Bruce Bethke before my wife and I married. I was looking for a science fiction writers group to join and stumbled across a notecard at UNCLE HUGO’S SCIENCE FICTION BOOKSTORE (http://www.unclehugo.com/prod/index.shtml).

Bruce, Phillip C. Jennings, and someone I cannot for the life of me remember, started meeting to share writing and talk about the field. Then we all sort of drifted apart. Bruce and I didn’t talk much (it was at the advent of the Internet, so contact we via paper or face-t0-face). At a MinniCon, I heard him speak, re-introduced myself, and as it was now the Age of the Internet, we renewed our friendship. Older and wiser, we found we had more things in common.

In August of 2010, his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. In March of 2011, my wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. We became actual friends (not me and breast cancer, me and Bruce…)

He’s an award-winning science fiction author; he’s a man who has survived some very difficult life experiences, and now he’s the executive editor of an on-line speculative fiction magazine.

Recently, he shared about their most recent experience with breast cancer. I’ll leave you to ruminate with him as he looks at jackalopes and cancer: http://stupefyingstories.blogspot.com/search?q=breast+cancer

At any rate, you’ll find as I did, that breast cancer and friendships, while undoubtedly a strange pair, can make for curiously strong bonds.


Saturday, June 22, 2019

ALZHEIMER’S RESEARCH RIGHT NOW! #3: Can a DOG Get Alzheimer’s????


From the first moment I discovered my dad had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, it seemed like I was alone in this ugly place. Even ones who had loved ones suffering in this way; even though people TALKED about the disease, it felt for me like they did little more than mumble about the experience. Not one to shut up for any known reason, I added a section to this blog…

Every month, I’ll be highlighting Alzheimer’s research that is going on RIGHT NOW! Harvested from different websites, journals and podcasts, I’ll translate them into understandable English and share them with you. Today: https://www.certapet.com/dog-dementia/#What_is_Canine_Cognitive_Dysfunction

Short answer, “Yes.”

Longer answer: “Not exactly, but pretty close…though it may be masked by other things or mask other things…”

We had to put our dog down this past week.

While this is hard ANY TIME it happens, this time, for me, it was doubly hard. What my seem like a non-sequitur: My dad passed away in February of this year.

He died (officially) from complications due to stroke.

As you know by this point, he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2014, five years ago. We eventually got him into a Memory Care facility not far from where I live (the closest of the siblings), where the staff took over the majority of his care and I supplemented and became the primary care contact with them.

All of the experiences with Dad came rushing back as we made the final decision to put our dog down. All of the similarities between our dog’s behavior and health and my dad’s behavior and health made me back away from her in horror.

Both had cancers, both skin.

Both had joint pain.

Both wandered aimlessly at times, sometimes forgetting where they were.

Both had dramatic changes in personality (though our dog’s changes were less pronounced.

Both had vision problems that led to bumping into objects and a decrease in mobility.

Both had times where they simply stared into space as if unaware of their surroundings.

Both had wildly changing sleep patterns – our dog had started waking at random times and asking to be let out, then coming in, expecting to be fed. Her pattern since we got her from a dog rescue organization had been to wake at a VERY specific time and follow through easily with a morning toileting and feeding routine, retiring until my wife got up and we prepared for work.

Where these symptoms add up to something in Humans called Alzheimer’s Disease (“…progressive mental deterioration that can occur in middle or old age, due to generalized degeneration of the brain. It is the most common cause of premature senility.” (https://www.alz.org/alzheimers-dementia/what-is-alzheimers), named in 1901 after “German psychiatrist Alois Alzheimer identified the first case…”.

In dogs it’s: “…known as canine cognitive dysfunction syndrome (CCD). Roughly defined, this cognitive disorder tends to affect the perception, memory, and general awareness of a dog.”

Alzheimer’s is diagnosed by particular cognitive behaviors, which I’ve detailed here: https://breastcancerreaper.blogspot.com/2019/01/guys-gotta-talk-aboutalzheimers-21.html

CCD is diagnosed by particular cognitive behaviors, which are detailed below: “[An] acronym used to diagnose dementia patients is DISHA. Where D denotes to disorientation, I denotes to social interaction changes, S denotes to changes in the sleep cycle, H denotes to house soiling, and finally, A would stand for changes in activity.”

The similarities between the two were freaky at best. Even theoretical causes for both are alike enough to give me pause. Similar enough to make my heart flip flop a bit considering that as of yesterday, both are gone from this world – and I recall both of them fondly, and loved both in unique ways…

 (Yeah, I know, Dad is on the left…)




Saturday, June 15, 2019

ENCORE #111! – Lymph Node Excision, Mosquito Bites and “A Return To ‘Normal’”


From the first moment my wife discovered she had breast cancer, there was a deafening silence from the men I know. Even ones whose wives, mothers or girlfriends had breast cancer seemed to have received a gag order from some Central Cancer Command and did little more than mumble about the experience. Not one to shut up for any known reason, I started this blog…That was four years ago – as time passed, people searching for answers stumbled across my blog and checked out what I had to say. The following entry first appeared in July 2012.

Here again, just in time for the season!

After my wife came home from a lymphedema expert at the hospital, I asked her how it had gone. The answer was that the swelling is receding slowly and that the pressure sleeve would be here soon.

She asked how often she would have to wear it, the doctor replied, “Forever.” She added, “Oh, and don’t ever get a mosquito bite. That’s one of the worst things in the world.”

*blink in startlement*

I don’t know about where you all live, perhaps someone lives in Arizona or New Zealand or Hawaii where mosquitoes aren’t a big deal. But in Minnesota, we (somewhat facetiously; but only SOMEWHAT…) call the mosquito our “state bird”. They are everywhere.

Granted, susceptibility to mosquito bites ranges from, say, me to say, my wife…

I get bitten, make no mistake. But my wife? Let me illustrate: we went to a recent fireworks fest celebrating one or another of some small town’s heritages. Great times! We sat in camp chairs set up in the middle of the street. The next morning, she showed me a pair of fist-sized welts, one on each side of her back that had been “exposed” (even though they were covered by T-shirt material!) where NUMEROUS mosquitoes had bitten her!

Take this little tidbit and add it to the doctor’s admonition and you get a recipe for me *blinking in startlement*.

So what’s the problem with mosquito bites?

First of all, let’s review the lymph nodes, which I talked about in depth here: http://breastcancerreaper.blogspot.com/2012/02/lymphedema-another-for-rest-of-your.html.

Excision means to remove or cut out. When the breast cancer was initially diagnosed in my wife, the doctors were very, very interested in how far it had spread. If it remained only in the breast, it was “less dangerous”. But if it had spread to the lymph nodes in the armpit (usually), the diagnosis was more terrifying and led to identifying the stage of the cancer. For a complete explanation, try this site:  http://www.breastcancer.org/symptoms/diagnosis/staging.jsp. They found cancer cells in the node and bumped the diagnosis from 0 to IIIB. This required them to removed lymph nodes – 21 in all and eventually the news that lymphedema would be a FOREVER concern.

Now to mosquito bites. Why are they such a concern? “...some insect bites probably are inevitable...treat them...to lessen the histamine effect, which can cause increased swelling in that area. Benadryl or hydrocortisone creams are two treatment options for insect bites. An ointment with aluminum sulfate as the active ingredient can also help decrease the effects of bites and stings...Treat an insect bite like any break in the skin on your limb at risk. Wash and dry the area completely and apply antibiotic cream to the area...take along a specialized first aid kit. The kit should include alcohol wipes to clean off any skin break, antibiotic cream for application on the skin, and bandages to protect the area…An insect repellent is a good idea...natural repellents, usually with citronella as the active ingredient, and these can be less detrimental to your skin...avoid putting insect repellent on your skin and then wearing a compression garment over it...”

Now you can be prepared for summer camping. As prepared as you can be!


Saturday, June 8, 2019

BREAST CANCER RESEARCH RIGHT NOW! #67: The “Seeds to Soil” Search…


From the first moment my wife discovered she had breast cancer, there was a deafening silence from the men I know. Even ones whose wives, mothers or girlfriends had breast cancer seemed to have received a gag order from some Central Cancer Command and did little more than mumble about the experience. Not one to shut up for any known reason, I started this blog…

Every month, I’ll be highlighting breast cancer research that is going on RIGHT NOW! Harvested from different websites, journals and podcasts, I’ll translate them into understandable English and share them with you. Today: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/06/190604131124.htm

“The concept of cancer metastasis has long been supported by the ‘seed and soil’ proposal, in which it is theorized that cancer cells (seeds) are dependent upon the tissue of organs (soil) to thrive in sites beyond their point of origin. This hypothesis laid the foundation for why cancer metastases are more common in certain organs over others, such as the lungs, lymph nodes, bones or liver. The idea is that these organs offer a more fertile environment for cancer cell growth.”

I SO get that, it’s a relatively easy image to get into the  head regarding how BREAST cancer ends up in places like the lymph nodes, lungs, bones, liver, and other organs – essentially the cancer cells break off from the main mass in the breast, float through the blood and land in whatever fertile soil there is in the body.

Sort of like dandelion seeds…not only that, though.

At Virginia Commonwealth University, a team of doctors have discovered USING MOUSE CELLS (please note, this is nowhere near the testing-in-Humans stage!) that breast cancer cells adrift in the body and landing in a different organ, change themselves as well as the cells of the organ they land in.

However, this isn’t a simple process. It’s not easily treated because it doesn’t appear that the cells of the cancer and the organ being attacked change in the same WAY: “‘Multiple pathways within the cancer cells, and potentially within the host organ as well, may need to be targeted to inhibit the growth of metastases,’ Harrell said. ‘Our ongoing efforts are aimed at identifying synergistic combinations of drugs that inhibit the SRC pathway and other pathways that promote metastasis.’”

Some background will help here – this particular effect, called “seed and soil” has been observed before and researchers have tried to target the cells with drugs, effectively killing them…and then having the cancer come back.

As whose who have experienced the breast cancer “spook house ride”, we know that the spectre of breast cancer never vanishes entirely, sometimes rearing its ugly head unexpectedly (https://breastcancerreaper.blogspot.com/2019/04/guys-gotta-talk-aboutbreast-cancer-45.html).

So we’re not talking cure here – but we ARE talking about making headway in the analysis of WHY breast cancer cells hang around, HOW they hang around, and eventually discovering a way to TREAT those cowardly so-and-sos….


Saturday, June 1, 2019

ENCORE #110! – Another “HOLD ON THERE BABA LOUIE!” Moment With a 2019 UPDATE!


From the first moment my wife discovered she had breast cancer, there was a deafening silence from the men I know. Even ones whose wives, mothers or girlfriends had breast cancer seemed to have received a gag order from some Central Cancer Command and did little more than mumble about the experience. Not one to shut up for any known reason, I started this blog…That was four years ago – as time passed, people searching for answers stumbled across my blog and checked out what I had to say. The following entry first appeared in May of 2012.

Doctors harp on exercise.

Despite the harping – or in my case, perversely because of it – I avoid exercise like the plague.

Even so, as I read more and more sites promoting the “exercise makes you better if you have breast cancer” meme, I found that almost none of them give any kind of evidence as to WHY exercise fights cancer and promotes healing.

So I dug into the sites and finally found some evidence supporting this wild, “Do this one weird thing…” kind of meme. This week, it’s number:

1)                  Physical activity appears to enhance proliferation of lymphocytes, increases the number of natural killer cells and increases lymphokine-activated killer cells activity.

What’s a “lymphocyte”?

What’s a “natural killer cell”?

What’s “lymphokine-activated killer cell activity”?

To tell you the truth, these appear to fade from easily definable to mumbo-jumbo-ish, so let’s have at it!

But we need to take one more step backward and start with White Blood Cells.

In contrast to the RED blood cell, which are the cells that make up the visible part of the blood. The red blood cells – or rbc’s – are the part of the blood that makes it RED! It’s red because each of the rbc’s has many heme molecules in it. The heme molecules are the ones that carry a tiny iron atom in their center. It’s the iron atom that OXYGEN grabs hold of so that the rbc’s can carry oxygen to the lungs allowing us to BREATHE. There are zillions of these little suckers in your bloodstream at all times and THEY come from the marrow in your bones.

So white blood cells – or wbc’s – don’t have heme in them; therefore they are, by comparison, WHITE. But they still travel in the bloodstream. Instead of carrying oxygen, they attack and destroy any germs that get into your body. They also take care of any other junk that gets in.

Lymphocytes are a kind of wbc. There are three kinds of lymphocytes – natural killer cells, T cells and B cells. Another name for the natural killer cells are NK cells. T cells are the kind of cells that the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) targets.

NK cells have the specific duty of protecting the body from tumors and viruses by “popping” the cells to destroy them; the other two handle the release of cytokines, lysis and immune regulation and creating antibodies.

The effect of exercise on NK cells however, seems to be blasted out of the water by the study referenced below and quote here: “…latent CMV infection is associated with lowered numbers of NK-cells expressing inhibitory receptors and a blunted mobilization of NK-cells in response to acute exercise. This may indicate a compromised immune response to ‘fight-or-flight’ situations in those infected with CMV.”

Conversely, “Moderate exercise has been reported to produce an anti-inflammatory environment and thus reduce the risk of infection. Conversely, continuous, intense exercise may increase oxidative stress (an overproduction of reactive oxygen species compared to the body’s ability to detoxify), inflammatory responses, as well as the risk for infection.”

And blasting back from the other side: “Longitudinal training studies in previously sedentary people have failed to show marked changes in T and B cell functions provided that blood samples were taken at least 24 h after the last exercise bout.” Also: “Evidence suggests that the prophylactic effect of exercise may, to some extent, be ascribed to the anti-inflammatory effect of regular exercise mediated via a reduction in visceral fat mass and/or by induction of an anti-inflammatory environment with each bout of exercise (e.g. via increases in circulating anti-inflammatory cytokines including interleukin (IL)-1 receptor antagonist and IL-10). To understand the mechanism(s) of the protective, anti-inflammatory effect of exercise fully, we need to focus on the nature of exercise that is most efficient at alleviating the effects of chronic inflammation in disease. The beneficial effects of endurance exercise are well known; however, the anti-inflammatory role of strength training exercises are poorly defined. In addition, the independent contribution of an exercise-induced reduction in visceral fat versus other exercise-induced anti-inflammatory mechanisms needs to be understood better. There is consensus that exercise training protects against some types of cancers. Training also enhances aspects of anti-tumour immunity and reduces inflammatory mediators. However, the evidence linking immunological and inflammatory mechanisms, physical activity, and cancer risk reduction remains tentative.”

Translated: “We don’t know enough yet to say if exercise is magic”.

UPDATE: February 2016: “In Brief, the beneficial effects of exercise are countless. Pedersen et al. now link exercise, cancer, and immunity and reveal that exercise decreases tumor incidence and growth by over 60% across several mouse tumor models through a direct regulation of NK cell mobilization and trafficking in an epinephrine- and IL6-dependent manner.”

So it appears that, four years later, there is strong evidence that exercise isn’t magic, but science! Dang…now where’s my bike helmet?