There are so many things we can do to, putatively, decrease our chances of dying from many serious ailments--keep fit, maintain an optimal weight, eat healthily, etc. In theory, it seems to me that heart diseases are the easiest to guard against; cancer is considerably more mysterious, but many studies support credible preventative measures. However, in all my reading, I have seen nothing that gives me a clue how to reduce the chances of pancreatic cancer. If we get that one, it is virtually game over: the doctors, by all accounts, just tell you how long you have to live.
Recently, I have noticed with unease a series of celebrities being diagnosed with terminal pancreas cancer, or something similar: Steve Jobs, Simon Hoggart, Iain Banks, Wilko Johnson, Roger Lloyd-Pack. What disconcerts me is how lean these guys were. This is a disease that seems just as likely to strike you if you are not overweight.
Difficult to know about the diet of these chaps. They are educated people who might be presumed to know what healthy food is. We know Jobs was a vegan and other things, and there have been attempts to associate his problems with fructose. I doubt, however, that rock guitarist Wilko Johnson was a fruit addict. I am guessing he may have drunk a lot in his time. But if drink is at work among these guys, we know that was not the case with Jobs.
Looking at their photos, some of them seem to be balding, but not all. Images on google show male pancreas cancer victims to be more often balding than not. Vague clue, I know, but it might hint at hormonal matters.
Seems a shame to put all our efforts into avoiding known risks of certain illnesses while remaining in the dark on this major killer.
I am sure the well-informed people on this site have some ideas to offer.
Edited by Gerrans, 03 March 2014 - 05:55 PM.