Mesothelioma New Cures on the Horizon for Asbestos Causing Cancer

Mesothelioma New Cures on the Horizon for Asbestos Causing Cancer

 

Mesothelioma and Asbestosis exist without a cure. Singular methods of chemotherapy and radiation have gone through medical scrutiny only to be declared potentially ineffective. The secret to extending the longevity of life in mesothelioma patients, and reducing the searing pains of cancer and asbestosis, may be found in the magical mix of the next array of clinical trials and experiments involving combination drugs.

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Mesothelioma is a disease with little hope. Scientific studies have shown that chemotherapy, radiation or surgery alone often have little value over choosing no treatment. A rare disease appearing late in life, experiments and trials for this cancer haven’t undergone the funding and urgency of the well-known cancers of the masses – yet research for treatment does exist. Pharmacies, hospitals, health professionals and scientists that are dedicated to curing mesothelioma and reducing its painful side effects continue to conduct scientific studies on treatment efficacy for mesothelioma and asbestosis, and strive to develop new treatment options that can improve the quality of life for asbestos diseased patients.

 

Killing a tumor isn’t easy, and mesothelioma does not regress like other cancers, even after lung surgery. Just as a mix of the right individual talents can produce a powerful team, so can a mix of the right medications and treatment produce a powerful solution. Elementary science best demonstrates this with baking soda and vinegar. Each product has their unique properties that serve product-specific purposes, but when mixed together they can produce a volcanic effect. Finding the synergistic effect from combination drugs and therapies that can debilitate or conquer asbestos related diseases is the goal of mesothelioma and asbestosis clinical trials.

 

A 2007 medical study added on three months to the lives of mesothelioma patients who participated in clinical trials that used the vitamin supplements of B12 and folic acid along with Emetrexed and Cisplatin, when compared to mesothelioma patients that received Cisplatin without any supplements. Three months may not seem long to a person embraced in the rush of life, but it is a gift of life to the cancer sufferer facing imminent death.

 

Doxorubicin, a cancer drug for asbestos disease that’s been around for a while, is now being combined with Onconase. Doxorubicin damages the cancer cells, but the cancer cells can heal. Onconase is a drug that goes in and blocks the healing process. A similar clinical study is being done with Pemetrexed disodium, a drug classically prescribed for mesothelioma, combined with Gemcitabine or Carboplantin to determine the better combination. This would compare the results of two powerful drugs that block cancer cell growth versus a combination of one of those drugs with a drug that damages cancer cells.

 

Mesothelioma and its close relative Asbestosis are expected to reach higher diagnosis rates in the future. Asbestos use has been regulated in many countries, but its wide-spread use still remains. Hundreds of clinical trials for these asbestos diseases exist that will provide help, and maybe even a cure, for the asbestos-induced sufferers of the future. There is a light at the end of the long dark tunnel of mesothelioma. With continued medical research and clinical trials, the light will become brighter and brighter – until hopefully, mesothelioma will be left behind to become a part of the distant past.

 

 

Watch the video related to mesothelioma asbestos

Asbestos facts: Pericardial Mesothelioma is a rare type of cancer that develops from Asbestos exposure. The fibers lodge in the body and cause malignant cancer cells to develop in the lining of the heart. Symptoms for this disease may not manifest for decades. If you may have been exposed to Asbestos in the past, it is vital to inform your doctor. Call us today if you live in the California area.

Help answer the question about mesothelioma asbestos

Asbestos and mesothelioma?
I was cleaning a deep fryer today and on the inside of the exaust tube there was this black looking caked on stuff so I started breaking it off but it was brittle looking foam. Could this be asbestos and the could the half a second I breathes it in for be enough for any adverse effects . I.e mesothelioma

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9 Responses to “Mesothelioma New Cures on the Horizon for Asbestos Causing Cancer”

  1. Mesothelioma-Junction.Com says:

    The ONLY treatment I've ever seen work (and work often!) is the Immuno Augmentive Therapy (IAT) Clinic in Freeport Grand Bahamas. They are run by British and Bahamian medical doctors, and are in my opinion by far the best alternative cancer treatment center in the world.
    For some reason, their treatment (small injections you take several times a day containing immune system proteins) works especially well with mesothelioma, and they are well known for treating it, and often get referrels from Stateside and British MD.s.
    Visit their website at either…

  2. Roseley says:

    Take a quarter size piece to a local lab. Place it in a ziplock bag. Cost will be $15-$25. Look in the yellow pages under asbestos lab or environmental lab.

  3. aprilc232 says:

    Mesothelial cells normally line the body cavities, including the pleura, peritoneum, pericardium, and testis. Malignancies involving mesothelial cells in these body cavities are known as malignant mesothelioma, which may be localized or diffuse. Diagnosis is difficult because the results from fluid analysis of the effusion from the tumor are not usually diagnostic. Most, but not all, pleural malignant mesothelioma is associated with asbestos exposure. Of patients with pleural malignant mesothelioma, 77% have been exposed to asbestos in the past.

    * Median survival for patients with malignant mesothelioma is 11 months. It is almost always fatal. Median survival based on histologic type is 9.4 months for sarcomatous, 12.5 months for epithelial, and 11 months for mixed. Approximately 15% of patients have an indolent course.

    * Asbestos exposure is linked to at least 50% of patients developing malignant mesothelioma. Approximately 8 million people in the United States have been exposed to asbestos in the workplace. Family members are also exposed to asbestos embedded in the worker's clothing. The combination of tobacco and asbestos exposure greatly increases the risk of developing pleural mesotheliom

    History:

    * Dyspnea and nonpleuritic chest wall pains are the most common presenting symptom.

    * Chest radiographs show obliteration of the diaphragm, nodular thickening of the pleura, decreased size of the involved chest, and/or radiolucent sheetlike encasement of the pleura.

    * A loculated effusion is present in more than 50% of patients, and a major portion of the pleura is opacified by the effusion.

    * Chest discomfort, pleuritic pain, easy fatigability, fever, sweats, and weight loss are the other common accompanying symptoms. Patients may also be asymptomatic, with evidence of a pleural effusion noted incidentally on physical examination or by chest radiograph. Metastatic disease is uncommon at presentation and contralateral pleural abnormalities are usually secondary to asbestos-related pleural disease rather than metastatic disease.

    * Approximately 60-90% of patients may have symptoms of chest pain or dyspnea.

    Physical:

    * Physical findings of pleural effusion are usually noted upon percussion and auscultation.

    * In rare cases, malignant mesothelioma manifests as cord compression, brachial plexopathy, Horner syndrome, or superior vena cava syndrome. Death is usually due to infection or respiratory failure from the progression of mesothelioma.

    * Primary sites include the pleura (87%), the peritoneum (5.1%), the pericardium (0.4%), and the right side of the thorax (more so than the left side, by a ratio of 1.6:1)

    Causes:

    * A substantial proportion of patients were exposed to asbestos in asbestos mills, shipping yards, mines, or their homes.

    * The crocidolite in asbestos is associated with mesothelioma in miners, manufacturers (using asbestos), and heating and construction workers. The rod-shaped amphiboles are more carcinogenic than the chrysotile.

    * Malignant mesothelioma has also been linked to therapeutic radiation using thorium dioxide and zeolite, a silicate in the soil.

    * An etiological role for simian virus 40 in malignant mesothelioma has also been suggested. Asbestos exposure alone was associated with malignant mesothelioma, but SV 40 alone was not. Thus giving some epidemiological evidence that SV 40 is a possible cocarcinogen. Its direct role at this point is still controversial.

    * Interleukin 8 has direct growth-potentiating activity in mesothelial cell lines.

    Medical Care: Treatment options for the management of malignant mesothelioma include surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, and multimodality treatment.

    * Chemotherapy

    o Currently, cisplatin as a single drug had been used as the standard drug for phase III clinical trials. None of the standard treatment options has improved survival. The most active agents are anthracycline, platinum, and alkylating agents; each produces a response rate of 10-20%.

    o Vogelzang et al presented the results of a phase III study of pemetrexed in combination with cisplatin versus cisplatin alone. Pemetrexed (500 mg/m2/d) and cisplatin (75 mg/m2/d) or cisplatin (75 mg/m2/d) was given on day 1. Both arms were given every 21 days. The median time to survival in the cisplatin/pemetrexed arm was 12.1 months versus 9.3 months for cisplatin alone. The response rate was 41.3% for the cisplatin/pemetrexed arm and 16.7% for the cisplatin arm. Folic acid and vitamin B-12 were given routinely to prevent the adverse effects of pemetrexed. This trial established the regimen as the standard choice for this disease.

    o A 1999 phase II study by Byrne et al using cisplatin (100 mg/m2) on day 1 and gemcitabine (1000 mg/m2) administered intravenously on days 1, 8, and 15 of a 28-day cycle for 6 cycles showed response rates of 47.6% (complete and partial response), 42.8% (stable disease), and 9.5% (progressive disease). The median response duration was 25 weeks, progression-free survival was 25 weeks, and the overall survival was 41 weeks. Toxicity was mainly gastroenterologic and hematologic in nature.

    o Several other combinations have been found to be active, including cisplatin/doxorubicin (Adriamycin)/mitomycin C, bleomycin/intrapleural hyaluronidase, cisplatin/doxorubicin (Adriamycin), carboplatin/gemcitabine, and cisplatin/vinblastine/mitomycin C. The cisplatin/gemcitabine combination has yielded the best results.

    o With the isolation of mesothelial cell lines, several chemotherapeutic agents are being tested actively to assess their efficacy. One explanation for the poor response to chemotherapy is the low apoptotic rate, as evidenced by low BCL2 and BAX expression. These data suggest that apoptosis is not a key phenomenon in mesothelioma development and histologic differentiation.

    o Numerous trials of chemotherapeutic agents have been performed; however, until recently, the studies were small, the staging systems used were different, and the measurements of disease were inaccurate.

    * Radiation

    o Results with radiation therapy are also disappointing.

    o Radiation has no effect on survival, but it has caused significant palliation in 50% of patients treated for chest pain and chest wall metastasis.

    * Trimodality therapy

    o This involves a combination of all 3 standard strategies (ie, surgery, chemotherapy, radiation).

    o One trimodality approach involved extrapleural pneumonectomy followed by combination chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Overall survival rates were 45% at 2 years and 22% at 5 years.

    o Lymph node involvement was a significant negative prognostic factor. The epithelial type had a better survival rate compared with the sarcomatous or mixed type (65% vs 20% at 2 y and 27% vs 0% at 5 y).

    o Survival based on the Brigham staging system was 22 months for stage I, 17 months for stage II, and 11 months for stage III.

    o Overall median survival was 17 months, yielding a 2-year survival rate of 36% and a 5-year survival rate of 14%. Epithelial cell type survival was better, with a 2-year survival rate of 68% and 5-year survival rate of 46%.

    o Different chemotherapeutic regimens found to be useful in the trimodality treatment include cyclophosphamide/doxorubicin (Adriamycin)/cisplatin, carboplatin/paclitaxel, and cisplatin/methotrexate/vinblastine. External beam radiotherapy is delivered in a standard fractionation over 5.5-6 weeks.

    Surgical Care: Surgical resection has been relied upon because radiation and chemotherapy have been ineffective primary treatments. The 2 surgical procedures used are pleurectomy with decortication and extrapleural pneumonectomy.

    * Pleurectomy with decortication is a more limited procedure and requires less cardiorespiratory reserve. It involves dissection of the parietal pleura, incision of the parietal pleura, and decortication of the visceral pleura followed by reconstruction. It has a morbidity rate of 25% and a mortality rate of 2%. It is a difficult procedure because the tumor encases the whole pleura; the local recurrence rate is high.

    * Extrapleural pneumonectomy is a more extensive procedure and has a higher mortality rate. Recently, the mortality rate has been lowered to 3.8%. It involves dissection of the parietal pleura; division of the pulmonary vessels; and en bloc resection of the lung, pleura, pericardium, and diaphragm followed by reconstruction. It provides the best local control because it removes the entire pleural sac along with the lung parenchyma.

    * With surgery alone, the recurrence rate is very high and most patients die after a few months. At least half the patients who have local control with surgery have distant metastasis upon autopsy.

    Consultations:

    * If an infection is suggested initially, consultation with a pulmonary specialist is essential if the infection does not resolve within 2 weeks with adequate antibiotic treatment.

    * Chest radiographs are mandatory for follow-up if the infection has resolved. If the patient has diffuse calcification of the pleura and a history of weight loss with chronic cough, a full evaluation by a pulmonary specialist and oncologist is necessary.

    * A referral for thoracoscopy is warranted if the diagnosis is considered and the initial workup is not diagnostic.

    * Occupational history is important, and family members with exposure to asbestos should also be evaluated.

    Diet:

    * Patients are usually cachetic after surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation. Good supportive care and a regular nutritional status assessment are warranted. Patients should be referred to a nutritionist.

    Activity:

    * Beginning physical activity as soon as possible is important to prevent postoperative complications.

    * Pulmonary physiotherapy is very helpful because of the extensive lung resection in such patients.

  4. Sahid says:

    Yes. Mesothelioma is a rare type of cancer that attacks the thin membranes which line your chest and abdomen. Although rare, mesothelioma is the most common form of cancer associated with asbestos exposure.

  5. NO!!!!!!!!!! says:

    Do you really think makers of deep fryers would put asbestos in an exhaust tube? do you really think people are that stupid, to just ask for a lawsuit?
    DO YOU?

    REALLY? DO YOU??????

  6. Hawaii SEO says:

    Try the links in http://www.hot8sites.com/lawyer/mesothelioma-lawyers-helping-the-mesothelioma-v.html

  7. I CANCELED YOUR VOTE says:

    We all know he died from an infection after being declawed.

  8. dige plige says:
  9. raemcc92 says:

    Lawsuits like that take years to even get to court. The companies have big time lawyers, much more than the average person can afford. I see commercials on tv all the time about a class action lawsuit against the manufacturer, so that hasn't even come to fruition yet. Like I said, years.

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