suzieq
9 years agoMember
Solving a breast cancer mystery – why do ‘double-positive’ women do better?
This post is a research article;
I am putting this out for general discussion. 70% of us are double-positive so this is an important topic. This research came from England and was in collaboration with University of Adelaide. But this isn't the first research article I have read about the protective nature of progesterone on breast tissue.
When you read the article please ensure you read to the end where there is a notation regarding difference between progesterin (found in HRT which is not so good) and natural progeseterone which this article is about. I am post treatments and use natural compounded progesterone cream.
I would however, be interested to know what you all think and interested to know what your medical teams, particularly Oncologists think about the science. Here is the article:
http://scienceblog.cancerresearchuk.org/2015/07/08/solving-a-breast-cancer-mystery-why-do-double-positive-women-do-better/
For the research nerds like me out there, this is also interesting:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4245250/
I am putting this out for general discussion. 70% of us are double-positive so this is an important topic. This research came from England and was in collaboration with University of Adelaide. But this isn't the first research article I have read about the protective nature of progesterone on breast tissue.
When you read the article please ensure you read to the end where there is a notation regarding difference between progesterin (found in HRT which is not so good) and natural progeseterone which this article is about. I am post treatments and use natural compounded progesterone cream.
I would however, be interested to know what you all think and interested to know what your medical teams, particularly Oncologists think about the science. Here is the article:
http://scienceblog.cancerresearchuk.org/2015/07/08/solving-a-breast-cancer-mystery-why-do-double-positive-women-do-better/
For the research nerds like me out there, this is also interesting:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4245250/