Thursday, March 11, 2010
 

Print this pageSend this to a friend

Anticancer 101: Secrets from Dr. Servan-Schreiber

Sixteen years ago, when I was 31, my life took a sudden turn. I was an ambitious physician and neuroscience researcher who reveled in discovery and glittering science projects. Then, slipping into a brain scanner one evening in place of a subject who hadn't shown up, I was suddenly stripped of my white-coat status and thrown into the gray world of patients: That evening, I discovered that I had brain cancer.

Being a physician and scientist is no protection from getting cancer. But it allowed me to dig deeply into the medical and scientific literature to find out everything I could do to help my body resist the disease most efficiently and try to beat the median survival of a few years.

The first thing I learned is that we all carry cancer cells in us. But I also learned we all have natural defenses that generally prevent these cells from turning into an aggressive disease. These include our immune system, the part of our biology that controls and reduces inflammation, and the foods that reduce the growth of new blood vessels needed by developing tumors.

One out of three people will develop cancer. Of course, that means two out of three will not. For these people, their natural defenses will have kept cancer at bay. I understood it would be essential for me to learn how to strengthen these defenses.

Page 1 of 4
[ 1 ] 2 3 4    Next or view as single page

Permalink

Write a comment

  • Required fields are marked with *.

If you have trouble reading the code, click on the code itself to generate a new random code.
Security Code:
 

 

About the Author

David Servan-Schreiber, M.D., Ph.D. is clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, and the co-founder and former director of the Center for Integrative Medicine of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. He is the author of Healing Without Freud or Prozac and Anticancer: A New Way of Life. (Viking). For more information, go to his website.

Other Articles by David Servan-Schreiber, M.D.:

    No other articles from this author



Tell a Friend