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OPTIMAL LIFE CENTER
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Breast Cancer and Iodine Prevention and Cure: How to Prevent and How to
Survive Breast Cancer
by Dr. David Derry M.D., Ph.D.
110 pages; perfect bound; **** 2nd EDITION AVAILABLE NOW ****; catalogue #01-0286;
ISBN 1-55212-884-9; US$16.50, C$24.95, EUR16.30, £11.30
This book is about cause, prevention and treatment of breast cancer. Breast
cancer has two phases. The first one, from abnormal cells up to carcinoma
in situ reverses with iodine. The second phase, invasion, is controlled by
connective tissue thyroid hormone.
Available from www.trafford.com Search: Dr.
David Derry to locate the book.
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About the Book
I have taken my personal experience in practice along with the details of
treatment of patient together with published literature and proposed a testable
theory of breast cancer. The lack of a theory of cancer and especially breast
cancer has made treatment difficult and empirical.
The book is divided into four parts. The first part discusses iodine. From
published facts, we can arrive at a proposal that iodine could be the first
phase of a two phase cancer defence system. It appears that iodine in the
extra-cellular fluid outside of the cells is the main surveillance system
for abnormal cells. Iodine also triggers the natural death of normal cells
in the body. There are many cells types in the body undergoing a natural death.
For example some of the cells in the stomach have lives of only 2-3 days.
The name of this process is apoptosis.
Carefully documented descriptions of the cancer process at different places
in the body reveals most cancers have similar stages through which it passes.
The cancers are not really cancer until the cells start to move by invasion
through the nearby connective tissue. Cells develop abnormalities for a variety
of reasons and can continue to become abnormal all the way up through atypical
cells and to carcinoma in situ. Carcinoma in situ is the dividing line between
the two phases of cancer development. Iodine in correct doses will reverse
all of the changes up to and including the carcinoma in situ.
The thyroid hormone controls connective tissue function. So connective tissue
around organs forms a structural biological barrier to the spread of cancer.
Cancer spread to distant organs only develops in the connective tissue of
those organs. Therefore, if the connective tissue defense is not strong then
the cancerous cell from a distant site can land there and grow. If however
the thyroid hormone level in the connective tissue is high enough then the
connective tissue will perform its normal defense duties and not allow the
cancer cell to enter it and develop.
Using these principles, fibrocystic disease and breast cancer become more
understandable. Supplemental iodine in the correct doses will remove all lesions
from carcinoma in situ back to just an abnormal cell by triggering death of
these cells by apoptosis. Spread of cancer cells in the connective tissue
can be arrested by adequate treatment with thyroid hormone to strengthen the
connective tissue barrier.
My experience with patients using this approach so far has been successful.
The principles are that there are two phases to cancer one controlled by iodine
and the other by thyroid hormone. Thus the book deals with the prevention
and survival of breast cancer.
Sample Excerpt
Introduction
This book is about cause, prevention and treatment of breast cancer. Over
the last century enough data and observations have become available to allow
the collection of this material into a coherent, understandable and testable
thesis of how breast cancer starts and how it progresses. This monograph therefore
is devoted to the exploration of a new outlook towards breast cancer with
also a passing mention of related cancers and diseases. When discussing cancer
we are talking about a systemic process, which allows the development of predictable
sequence of biological changes leading to cancer. This presentation is not
meant to be exhaustive and I hope to complete a more comprehensive treatment
of this thesis in the future. Purposely, I have addressed this book to women
with breast cancer. Since reading some of the stories of personal experiences
with breast cancer, I am full of admiration for their knowledge and enthusiasm
with which they pursue this disease and the research connected with it.
Part of the present participation by women is related to the activism which
accompanied the AIDS disease outbreak, for the first time women saw that they
too had a place in the decision making and began to influence research funding
towards projects they instinctively knew needed exploring. This is admirable,
because academic research cannot always see obvious holes in the research
fields, and they may not be able or interested in filling in those holes.
It is hard to get away from breast cancer statistics such as unchanged mortality
rates since the records were kept in the 1920s. Also discouraging, are the
newly designed detection and screening methods, which seem to still fail in
changing disease outcomes. It is even disappointing that old fashion self
examination appears not to help with survival. These discouraging results
and statistics may only be the result of no coherent understandable theory
of the cause of breast cancer so that a clean approach to the disease can
be started. Slowly different exploratory approaches to breast cancer are emerging
from the periphery of the present established cancer understanding but none
yet show a clear opening to crack the mystery of this disease. It is hoped
that this little presentation will give food for thought and maybe lead to
some further advances.
The monograph is divided into four parts.
1. Iodine its evolution and role in the cell
2. Iodine and thyroid hormone and its relations to the patient's constitution
3. Cancer in general as a process.
4. Breast cancer fibrocystic disease, its prevention and arrest.
The first part is information on iodine and its relation to the body and thyroid
gland. Iodine appears to be the least understood important element making
up the body fluids and cells of humans. Iodine has not been neglected as huge
amounts of research have not uncovered any other function of iodine than that
it makes thyroid hormone and it serves as an excellent antiseptic, which we
have known for a hundred years. In spite of all the research we do not know
what biochemical processes it participates in or what part it plays in the
overall metabolism of the body other than its role in the formation of thyroid
hormone.
I propose primarily that iodine is the trigger mechanism for apoptosis (the
natural death of cells) and the main surveillance mechanism for abnormal cells
in the body. Iodine triggers the death of cells which are abnormal or which
have normal programmed death as part of their life cycle. This is part of
a general thesis that iodine and thyroid hormone act as a team to provide
a constant surveillance against abnormal cell development, chemicals that
are carcinogenic and the spread of cancer cells within the body. Iodine appears
to have several more roles in the body. In the stomach iodine protects against
abnormal growth of bacteria in the stomach (of which helicobacter pylori is
the most clinically significant). Iodine can coat incoming allergic proteins
to make them non-allergic, which likely also applies to the internal equivalent
called autoimmune disease. Iodine binds softly to the double and triple bond
of lipids to protect these bonds while they are being transported to synaptic
sites in the brain and blood vessels of the body. As well iodine in the stomach
deactivates all biological and most chemical poisons. All of these new proposed
testable functions of iodine are discussed. There is a discussion of the possible
role of iodine in evolution in relation to development of multi-cellularity
and maturation of vertebrates The general thesis of this book is that there
is a specific dose of iodine intake above which is preventative of several
disease processes including those related to fibrocystic disease and breast
cancer.
The second part is related to the thyroid hormones and the thyroid gland.
In both of these first two sections some suggestions as to the evolutionary
source of iodine and thyroid hormone are outlined. From here we can understand
that tissue levels of thyroid hormone are just as important if not more important
than circulating blood levels. It is proposed that thyroid hormone has controlled
the genome(Nuclear DNA sequences etc) since the beginning. Because of this,
control of intracellular low levels of thyroid hormone would tend to let genes,
which can cause disease escape and express themselves. Therefore thyroid hormone's
main purpose is to run each of the cells in relation to each other and also
to permissively allow other hormones to act.
Thyroid hormone came well before any of the other hormones and has taken up
the position of the most important hormone. Since iodine came before thyroid
hormone then iodine is more important than the hormone. Some of the clinical
aspects of thyroid hormone treatment are discussed in relation to disturbances
in the receptor mechanisms and its relation to thyroid hormone resistance.
The third part deals much with the findings of the intensive cancer investigations
of the last 60 years or more. The late Dr. David Clarke Jr. wrote some detailed
thoughts on the biological development of the cancer process. Now along with
findings by Dr. Sampson of the Mayo clinic in the 1970s it becomes evident
that perhaps cancer is a biphasic process (two phases). More clearly stated,
cancer has two phases the first is controlled by iodine up to the phenomena
called "carcinoma in situ" or "occult cancer" and thyroid
hormone seems to control the second phase namely the spread of cancer within
connective tissues.
The forth and last part concerns the application of the first three parts
to breast cancer. Much of the material in this part seems to fall into place
if the postulates put forward are legitimately representing what is happening
in this disease. With these concepts we can relate the risk factors and epidemiological
studies on breast cancer to prevention and treatment.
On a personal note I want to explain briefly my route to this book. Having
become highly trained and qualified to do basic research, domestic re-arrangements
made pursuit of this career a financial impossibility. Hence I had a complete
career change in 1972, from academic halls to the front lines of general practice.
It was my over-riding philosophy when I entered general practice that I would
learn and practice to listen to the patient. Sir William Osler said it clearly
but Syndenham said it first that if you listen to the patient they will tell
you the diagnosis and if you listen even more closely they will tell you the
correct treatment. I have tried to hone my skills in this one area of medicine
and found it to be a gold mine of interesting new concepts