Cancer Diary: The Relationship between Chronic Inflammation and Cancer

 


I have often not wanted to take medication for an injury -- I am pretty good at toughing things out. That has changed since I have learned about the connection between frequent/chronic inflammation and cancer. (The ability of anti-inflammatory medicines to prevent cancer is not known; they reduce inflammation, however, which is important.)

Of course, inflammation is natural. It is part of how our body heals it itself. However, there are times when inflammation sets in and does not go away -- and that is the connection with cancer. Long-term inflammation can change DNA and result in cancer.

Examples of long-term inflammation include ulcerative colitis and Corhn Disease. Either of these can lead to colon cancer.

Here are some articles that are well worth reading.


NIH National Cancer Institute Risk Factors: Chronic Inflammation - NCI (cancer.gov)

8 foods that cause inflammation 8 Foods That Cause Inflammation – Entirely Health

What is Pro-Tumor Inflammation and Its Role in Cancer?

Anti-Inflammatory Foods


For more Cancer Diary posts, click HERE.


Blog editor's note: As a memorial to Carl Don Leaver, co-founder of MSI Press LLC, and simply because it is truly needed, MSI Press is now hosting a web page, Carl's Cancer Compendium, as a one-stop starting point for all things cancer, to make it easier for those with cancer to find answers to questions that can otherwise take hours to track down on the Internet and/or from professionals. The web page is in its infancy but expected to expand into robustness. To that end, it is expanded and updated weekly. As part of this effort, each week, on Monday, this blog will carry an informative, cancer-related story -- and be open to guest posts: Cancer Diary.     


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