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I am 20 and have been diagnosed with bladder cancer. I had it removed by TUR... a surgery. It came back but I avoided treatments that were too costly, and it went away on its own. I've never smoked and don't drink. I tried natural and spiritual treatment. Something went right, because it's gone now without the use of chemo/radiation/surgery.
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There is a lot to say for natural cancer treatment. I have had several friends and acquaintances find that natural or homeopathic treatments gave them results when conventional medicine only made things worse.
I would advise you to search for your local herbalist and ask for advise and perhaps have him/her refer you or give you some good ideas on where to find proper natural treatments in your town.
I hope you find what you are looking for and may the powers that be help you or your loved one get healthy again.
AnswerIt depends on what type of cancer a patient has. There are many cancers that are curable such as skin cancer, cancer of the cervix, Breast cancer (in some patients), colon cancer. The basis to being cured is to have a total physical every year and if you find something that is bothering you it's important you discuss it with the doctor. With the type of cancer a patient has this is a question they should ask their GP or preferably their Oncologist. Sometimes the doctors can't answer the question, but can give a percentage on the prognosis.
AnswerNo. Depending on the type of cancer, either surgery, radiotherapy or chemotherapy is required to kill cancerous cells.
AnswerWe used to think only medical intervention could eliminate cancer cells. Since the discovery of immunosurveillance, we now realize that the body is developing and destroying cancer cells all the time. Only when the normal system of immunosurveillance breaks down do we develop clinically detectable cancer.Yes, it eats away your gall bladder and gives you cancer.
NO because cancer will go away when it wants to go away
Looks like. go to, http://www.andywilliams.com/No, Andy Williams is no longer alive. He passed away in September 2012 of bladder cancer.
There is no specific threat of bladder cancer during or after prostate cancer. The prostate cancer could spread to the bladder just as easily as it could spread to any other organ.
There are several tests to find out whether bladder cancer is present.
Bladder cancer will force normal cells to divide uncontrollably.
Not Kidney cancer but bladder cancer
Bladder cancer is cancer affecting the urinary bladder. Bladder cancer is a fairly common form of cancer and men are affected two to three times more than women. Most bladder cancers occur after the age of 55. The disease is not contagious. No one can "catch" bladder cancer from another person.
There many areas you can find bladder cancer treatments from the national cancer institute. Once on that website you can see there is many general information about bladder cancer and how your diet, gender and smoking can risk development of the cancer.
The success rate for radiation in bladder cancer is 67 percent.
Bladder cancer is the production of tumors in the urinary bladder that affect how the body controls itself. It is treated by chemotherapy, radiation and surgery.
Bladder cancer cannot be treated with bicarbonate of soda. There are three types of cancer that affect the bladder. They are transitional cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and adenocarcinoma. Bladder cancer is treated with chemotherapy, which sometimes causes the tumors to shrink, and then with surgery.