• Log in with Facebook Log in with Twitter Log In with Google      Sign In    
  • Create Account
  LongeCity
              Advocacy & Research for Unlimited Lifespans

Photo
- - - - -

Thyroid Nodules, Conventional vs Alt Med (Split from Epitalon thread)


  • Please log in to reply
18 replies to this topic

#1 smithx

  • Guest
  • 1,446 posts
  • 458

Posted 12 July 2013 - 10:19 PM


If you have nodes on your thyroid, you need to make sure it's not cancer.

You should get a biopsy if you haven't already. In many cases a biopsy will determine if you have thyroid cancer, but in other cases it won't.

If you have an ambiguous biopsy, the next thing to consider is a biopsy with genetic testing of the sample, which can identify many cancers not identifiable through standard biopsies, and thereby prevent unnecessary thyroidectomy. Here is the website of Veracyte, the company which offers this test:

http://www.veracyte.com/afirma/


I found out yesterday I have nodes on my Thyroid. So it will be interesting to see if Epitalon has any effect.


Edited by smithx, 12 July 2013 - 10:20 PM.


#2 1todd960

  • Guest
  • 32 posts
  • 2
  • Location:Arizona, United States
  • NO

Posted 13 July 2013 - 12:17 AM

Thanks smithx for the link.

Edited by 1todd960, 13 July 2013 - 12:23 AM.


sponsored ad

  • Advert
Click HERE to rent this advertising spot for SUPPLEMENTS (in thread) to support LongeCity (this will replace the google ad above).

#3 Gerald W. Gaston

  • Guest
  • 529 posts
  • 58
  • Location:USA

Posted 13 July 2013 - 02:21 AM

I have a good bit of AGAG here but have yet to begin using it.

I also have a single thyroid nodule that is not palpable and was only discovered incidentally during a cervical MRI. All FNAs came back benign. That said unless an entire nodule is tested... you can't say there is no cancer only that the biopsy material itself of the neoplasm in question is benign follicular adenoma tissue.

#4 Dreamer

  • Guest
  • 102 posts
  • 13
  • Location:San Diego
  • NO

Posted 13 July 2013 - 05:21 PM

You should get a biopsy if you haven't already. In many cases a biopsy will determine if you have thyroid cancer, but in other cases it won't.

I don't mean to be argumentive nor do I wish to debate biopsies and MainStream Medicine (MSM).

However, I think anyone considering whether or not to have a biopsy should first make a decision on whether they will use MSM and their poison, cut and burn protocols which are typically unsuccessful in curing cancers or if they will instead opt for alternative therapies which can cure cancers, and are non-invasive.

The problem with biopsies is that they can and do release cancer cells into the system, if it is cancerous, to metastasize elsewhere in the body.

I would never have a biopsy nor would I turn to MSM for treatment of any health problem.

Each of us has to make that decision for ourselves.

I made that decision many years ago and do not carry health insurance simply because I would not use MSM and that is all health insurance covers. I would turn to nutrition and alternative methods if I had a problem.
  • like x 1
  • dislike x 1

#5 solarfingers

  • Guest
  • 440 posts
  • 40
  • Location:California

Posted 13 July 2013 - 11:41 PM

Dreamer, I so agree with you...

#6 1todd960

  • Guest
  • 32 posts
  • 2
  • Location:Arizona, United States
  • NO

Posted 13 July 2013 - 11:55 PM

I also agree. I prefer not to go the MSM way but would prefer a more natural way. Can't get to the doctor for another two weeks for testing so won't know anything till then.

Sorry for getting this thread off track. And I appreciate everyone's input and suggestions.

todd

#7 solarfingers

  • Guest
  • 440 posts
  • 40
  • Location:California

Posted 14 July 2013 - 12:04 AM

I also agree. I prefer not to go the MSM way but would prefer a more natural way. Can't get to the doctor for another two weeks for testing so won't know anything till then.

Sorry for getting this thread off track. And I appreciate everyone's input and suggestions.

todd


I strongly recommend the Gerson Therapy...

http://gerson.org/ge...gerson-therapy/

It has as good a track record as chemo...

#8 Gerald W. Gaston

  • Guest
  • 529 posts
  • 58
  • Location:USA

Posted 14 July 2013 - 11:39 AM

I too apologize for derailing the thread further, but I just wanted to say that I also agree in general on the issues of a biopsy and increase change of metastasis. I took this into heavy consideration for the 2 that I had done. I did not continue on after reading about the inaccuracy in non-palpable nodules even though my ENT wanted one done every 6 months for the first 2 years and then yearly after that.

An FNA by definition is a very small piercing of the skin and in my case we are talking about targeting a nodule directly under the skin. A few of my stored notes when I was considering my options are below and a few spot checks still finds them accurate:

I looked at the odds of this being cancer (thyroid cancers represent ~1% of new cancer diagnoses in the US each year) and even though it is slightly higher for males, and for those with single nodules, the odds are very much still in your favor that it is benign (less than 12% are cancer). Even if cancer is found the odds are only ~10% will die from the disease - and this doesn't change much regarding the type (with the exception of Anaplastic thyroid cancer). I then I looked at the odds and survival rates for the various individual types of thyroid cancers. Three of them account for almost 99% of the thyroid cancers and have great survival rates in early stages: Papillary (~80%), Follicular (~%15), Medullary (~3-4%). The fourth and rarest form is Anaplastic Thyroid Cancer (ATC) and while it accounts for less than 2% of all thyroid cancers, ATC is the most aggressive and deadly as it is responsible for ~%40 of all thyroid cancer deaths and has a 5 years survival rate of only 7% ( with most dying in the first 5 months).

My doctor told me that if you did MRI and ultrasound scans of everyone over the age of 40, a vast majority of them would have nodules on something. They would then be expected to check these nodules. Its one of the reasons most are against the idea of such full body scans, as most all nodules detected this way turn out to be benign. From my notes I see that one website stated "Palpable thyroid nodules are present in as many as 4-7 percent of the population, while ultrasound can detect thyroid nodules in as much as 67 percent of the general population." That's a lot of folks with thyroid nodules! And such a small percent are cancer.

All that said I did follow a few protocols that seem to deter cancer cell adhesion during biopsies or surgery. One is MCP that I had already been on. The other is Cimetidine (Tagamet) that I used for a week prior to each FNA. The use of these were to reduce cancer cells from sticking together and also from their adhesion to blood vessel walls.

I can say now, a few years later that, that my single nodule did not show up on the last ultra-sound.
  • like x 1

#9 tintinet

  • Guest
  • 1,972 posts
  • 503
  • Location:ME

Posted 14 July 2013 - 09:22 PM

Dreamer, I so agree with you...


MSM treats some things well, some things not so well, and some things miserably poorly. But alternative therapies are certainly not consistently superior. And some things are not currently responsive to anything, at least not consistently.
  • like x 2

#10 Dreamer

  • Guest
  • 102 posts
  • 13
  • Location:San Diego
  • NO

Posted 14 July 2013 - 10:21 PM

Can you please clarify what you mean?

What things does MSM treat well, not so well and poorly?

When you say alternative therapies are not consistently superior, which ones are you referring to?

And what things are not currently responsive to anything, at least not consistently?

I just want to make sure I understand what you mean.

#11 PWAIN

  • Guest
  • 1,288 posts
  • 241
  • Location:Melbourne

Posted 14 July 2013 - 11:56 PM

Can we keep this thread on track, create a new thread if necessary.
  • like x 1

#12 niner

  • Guest
  • 16,276 posts
  • 1,999
  • Location:Philadelphia

Posted 15 July 2013 - 12:12 PM

Can we keep this thread on track, create a new thread if necessary.


Done. I find the complete abandonment of mainstream medicine to be pretty scary. I had a very bad case of pneumonia (Legionnaires' Disease, in fact) some years back, and I would have certainly died without a lot of drugs a month in the ICU on a ventilator. Dr. Steve from Grouppe Kurosawa tried to cure a less virulent form of pneumonia with the natural approach, and it killed him. Steve Jobs had an extremely treatable cancer that he tried to cure naturally. Everyone knows how that turned out.

Mainstream medicine is good for things that are lethal in the very short term- trauma, stroke, MI, bad infections, etc.
  • like x 2

#13 Dreamer

  • Guest
  • 102 posts
  • 13
  • Location:San Diego
  • NO

Posted 15 July 2013 - 01:22 PM

Can we keep this thread on track, create a new thread if necessary.


Done. I find the complete abandonment of mainstream medicine to be pretty scary. I had a very bad case of pneumonia (Legionnaires' Disease, in fact) some years back, and I would have certainly died without a lot of drugs a month in the ICU on a ventilator. Dr. Steve from Grouppe Kurosawa tried to cure a less virulent form of pneumonia with the natural approach, and it killed him. Steve Jobs had an extremely treatable cancer that he tried to cure naturally. Everyone knows how that turned out.

Mainstream medicine is good for things that are lethal in the very short term- trauma, stroke, MI, bad infections, etc.

It's not really that I have abandoned MSM. I simply, over the years, found MSM to be inept, fraudulent, and ineffective. I have seen too many people put their faith in MSM only to live low quality lives and die prematurally as a result.

Our decision to not carry health care insurance is simply a cost/benefit decision since we don't use MSM nor would we for a health problem. We would use MSM for trauma or an emergency (because they have the facilities and skill sets) and may use them for diagnosis purposes. I suppose that if we learned that they held the ONLY cure, we would use them, but under our control.

Personal experiences are interesting, but cannot be reliably used to prove a case for MSM or for alternative therapies. Just because one alternative therapy fails does not mean others may not have worked. The Steve Jobs case is interesting, but only proves that he made the wrong chices in both MSM and alternative therapies. There were no really good choices for MSM to cure his cancer but there were other good choices available from alternative therapies that could have been successful.

MSM has been successful in having all protocols for cancer treatment except their poison, burn and cut methods made illegal and criminal in virtually all states, and they are rarely successful. How open minded is that?

My interest in health care and nutrition and my skepticism of MSM began in my early twenties, early 1960s, when a brother of a friend had a physical including chest xrays and they found 3 spots on one lung. They wanted to take his lung out right away. A second opinion confirmed.

He went to a naturopath for a complete physical who examed him for about 4 hours without xrays, did not know about the 3 spots on the lung, and informed him that he had 4 spots on his lung. Short story is that he was put on a Gerson type program (this was before Gerson) of only fresh organic fruit juices for several weeks, then added some veggie juices, followed by some solid fruit then some solid veggies, al organic, all fresh and uncooked. No beverages except distilled water, no alcohol, coffee, tea, nada.

Six months later, his cancers were gone, completely, confirmed by a full set of chest xrays by the original (astounded) physician. Thus began my interest in nutrition and alternative methods.

The MRSA problems are a product of MSM and they have few tools to successfully deal with it. Alternative Medicine, AM, has tools to deal with MRSA quite successfully. Yet MSM will not adopt the AM tools simply because they are AM and not MSM. They would rather see you die and then shrug their shoulders than use an AM protocol that could be successful. That's how much control Big Pharma has over MSM and the USG/FDA.

I agree that in an emergency, MSM is hard to beat in getting past the immediate emergency. After that, they basically treat symptoms and not the cause(s).

In the end, we all have to take responsibility for our own health care decisions and live, or not, with the results. We have simply chosen to stay with nutrition and so-called alternative methods, which have been around much longer than MSM.

#14 maxwatt

  • Guest, Moderator LeadNavigator
  • 4,949 posts
  • 1,625
  • Location:New York

Posted 15 July 2013 - 03:30 PM

Thyroid cancer is highly treatable by MSM. Worst case, they remove your thyroid and you take levothyroxine (thyroid hormone) for the rest of your life. But nodules while not necessarily cancerous, can be a sign of Hashimoto's disease, an autoimmune destruction of the thyroid gland. That too is well-treated by MSM, again by levothyroxine. I believe that in this situation, NOT using mainstream medicine in such cases invites continuing, and possible fatal, illness.

#15 Dreamer

  • Guest
  • 102 posts
  • 13
  • Location:San Diego
  • NO

Posted 15 July 2013 - 05:25 PM

When you say "treatable" are you saying cured without removal by surgery? What protocols are you referring to, both for cancer and for Hashimoto's?

Are you suggesting that there are not alternative non-invasive and natural protocols that cannot be successful and that only MSM has the answers to best treat successfully and cure the underlying cause(s) while returning the thryoid gland to a healthy state?

#16 smithx

  • Topic Starter
  • Guest
  • 1,446 posts
  • 458

Posted 15 July 2013 - 06:58 PM

The problem with traditional thyroid biopsies is that they often produce ambiguous diagnoses.

When confronted with an ambiguous diagnosis, doctors often recommend a thyroidectomy in case it is cancer, which would prove fatal.

Pathology done after the thyroidectomy often finds that it wasn't cancer after all, but by then it's too late and the patient has to be on thyroid replacement therapy (which is not really equivalent to what the thyroid produces naturally) for the rest of his/her life.

The Veracyte test I linked to in the first post of this thread is designed to eliminate unnecessary thyroidectomies by genetically profiling the biopsy cells to determine if they really are cancer or not. Here's what they have to say about it:



Ambiguous results on thyroid fine needle aspiration (FNA) samples have been a common and significant problem for physicians and their patients. FNA samples can be challenging to interpret and produce indeterminate results in up to 30 percent of cases.
Current guidelines recommend that most of these patients undergo a diagnostic thyroid surgery to assess whether the nodules are benign or malignant. In approximately 70 percent of the time, the nodules are diagnosed as benign by
surgical pathology.

The novel Gene Expression Classifier (GEC), the centerpiece of the Afirma Thyroid FNA Analysis, promises to help physicians reduce the number of avoidable surgeries by preoperatively reclassifying indeterminate nodules as benign. The GEC measures the gene expression of 142 genes and applies a multi-dimensional algorithm to classify whether a nodule with cytopathology indeterminate diagnosis is benign or suspicious.
...

A recent large, multi-center (49 sites), prospective clinical validation study recently published online in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) demonstrated that thyroid nodules with cytopathology indeterminate** and a Benign GEC result have less than 6% likelihood of being malignant (greater than 94% Negative Predictive Value). These results, consistent with earlier findings, show the risk of malignancy of a GEC Benign result is comparable to that of nodule diagnosed as benign by cytopathology. As a result, the authors of the NEJM study and associated editorial suggest that physicians can consider watchful waiting in lieu of surgery in patients with cytopathology indeterminate and GEC benign results.



#17 niner

  • Guest
  • 16,276 posts
  • 1,999
  • Location:Philadelphia

Posted 15 July 2013 - 09:30 PM

Personal experiences are interesting, but cannot be reliably used to prove a case for MSM or for alternative therapies. Just because one alternative therapy fails does not mean others may not have worked. The Steve Jobs case is interesting, but only proves that he made the wrong chices in both MSM and alternative therapies. There were no really good choices for MSM to cure his cancer but there were other good choices available from alternative therapies that could have been successful.


I agree that anecdote is anecdote, but it can be used as an existence proof should anyone claim that one side or the other "never works", or as an example of the type of thing that works. There certainly must have been studies comparing conventional and alt methods in various areas, and those might give us something to chew on, should anyone want to dig them up. Personally, I see value in both sides, and use them both as I see fit. In the Jobs case, my understanding was that his cancer could have been surgically excised and that this particular treatment had a 95% survival rate, damn good for pancreatic cancer, which is usually a death sentence. Jobs chose to do something that sounded like the Gerson treatment. In this particular case, I think he was an idiot and that he signed his own death warrant. I think that in his case, there were no really good natural choices, and a very good MSM option.

MSM has been successful in having all protocols for cancer treatment except their poison, burn and cut methods made illegal and criminal in virtually all states, and they are rarely successful. How open minded is that?


Whenever things like shark cartilage, laetrile, DCA, etc are tested in a serious way, they don't seem to work as well as the MSM approach. The argument that is made is that people are being duped into skipping the only treatments that have been shown to have some merit. True believers will trot out the usual "they designed the trials to fail" arguments, but I have a hard time buying that level of conspiracy theory. It's more likely that the tiny early tests upon which the hype is based were designed to not fail. Cancer is just a very tough problem, and if anything worked reliably, I think we'd know by now. Be that as it may, I think it's not that hard to find alternative treatment if one is so inclined. If they've all been made illegal and criminal, I don't think that enforcement is very good.
  • like x 2

#18 Dreamer

  • Guest
  • 102 posts
  • 13
  • Location:San Diego
  • NO

Posted 15 July 2013 - 10:23 PM

IMHO, Steve Jobs, an otherwise very intelligent man, failed to do his homework on his cancer. His choice of alternative methods was not what I would have chosen. So to say that alternative medicine failed him is just wrong. The protocol he chose did not work. But there are other protocols that probably would have worked, first to stop the progression, to make him healthier and finally to cure the cancer.

MSM may have done no better than the alternative protocol he chose. We will never know.

If I found that I had pancreatic cancer or any other cancer, I would think about alkalizing and hyperbaric oxygen to get started since cancers do not like oxygen or an alkaline environment. There are several diets that would make sense such as Gerson and Eat3Live and other similar diets. They are both more alkaline than acid and conducive to better health. I believe that would give me the time to strengthen my body while I researched a path to health.

One of the problems with MSM is that they are pretty much cookie-cutter medicine and heavy on the drugs and surgery. They target modification of the symptoms, not the underlying cause in most cases. So, is one ever really cured or just in a state of remission?

Alternative medicine is more about good balanced health and healing the body, resolving the underlying cause of a health problem. Big differences there.

The alternative protocols you listed would not be my first alternative protocol choices for any health problems. There are many more to choose from that are quite effective.

As for the illegality of cancer treatments outside MSM’s poison, burn and cut protocols, simply ask your doctor or do a 2 minute research. Even chelation therapy, a very effective treatment for cleaning out the circulation system, is not permitted in many states. It bites into the bypass surgery profits. In some cases, it is the AMA that does not permit certain protocols. In at least some of those cases, naturopaths and chiropractors can get around the bans, sometimes not.

Cancer is just a very tough problem, and if anything worked reliably, I think we'd know by now.


But, we outside MSM do know of things that work and work well. The knowledge is available and much of it has been out there for many years. The FDA is a pretty good watchdog for MSM and makes life miserable for those that promote alternative cures and nutrition that work (Burzynski is a classic example as is the war on raw milk and the protection at all levels of GM produce).


It sounds like you are much more open to MSM than I am so we may never fully agree on these things.

sponsored ad

  • Advert
Click HERE to rent this advertising spot for SUPPLEMENTS (in thread) to support LongeCity (this will replace the google ad above).

#19 1todd960

  • Guest
  • 32 posts
  • 2
  • Location:Arizona, United States
  • NO

Posted 16 July 2013 - 03:05 AM

Some very good discussions today. I have a lot of research to to obviously.




12 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 12 guests, 0 anonymous users