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---- [分享] 放 棄 牛 奶 是 打 擊 乳 癌 的 重 要 一 環 (http://leold.yuensang.com/cgi-bin/topic.cgi?forum=28&topic=587)


-- 作者: wingwing
-- 發表時間: 2006/06/05 00:21am

此文内容大概:

此文有關一個患上乳癌的白人女科學家 如何發現 以 [牛奶製品] 爲主的飲食方式 和乳癌產生的關連!猶如吸煙與肺癌發病的關連,牛奶製品並沒在實驗室中被證實直接導致乳癌。但從此女科學家的發現,從而改變飲食方式,到最後乳癌不治而愈的結果,和她對中國與西方不同的飲食習慣的研究,她總結出牛奶製品與乳癌和前列腺癌發病不可分的關連。由此她也推論爲什麽中國大陸婦女乳癌發病率僅為 一萬分之一,香港婦女為 一萬分之34, 而西方婦女卻為 12分之1 的巨大差別!! 同時男性前列腺癌發病率在中國是一萬分之0.5,而英國,英格蘭等國家是中國的70倍。

牛奶製品在西方飲食習慣中佔非常大的部分(牛奶、牛油、芝士、酸奶酪,甚至湯、餅乾等都有牛奶成份)。然而中國傳統飲食方式中,牛奶除了是給嬰孩的食物外,成人飲食中牛奶成份的比例是沒有或非常小的。

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以下文章收自電郵,内容只供參考。
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Hi Friends,

Here is something which my interest you or your love ones.  Please pass it to your friends as well. Why didn`t Chinese women in china get breast cancer ?

[b/]By Prof. Jane Plant, PhD, CBE ... "Why I believe that giving up milk is the key to beating breast cancer..."[/b]

Extracted from Your Life in Your Hands, by Professor Jane Plant.


I had no alternative but to die or to try to find a cure for myself. I am a scientist - surely there was a rational explanation for this cruel illness that affects one in 12 women in the UK?
I had suffered the loss of one breast, and undergone radiotherapy.
I was now receiving painful chemotherapy, and had been seen by some
of the country's most eminent specialists. But, deep down, I felt
certain I was facing death. I had a loving husband, a beautiful
home and two young children to care for. I desperately wanted to
live.

Fortunately, this desire drove me to unearth the facts, some of
which were known only to a handful of scientists at the time.
Anyone who has come into contact with breast cancer will know that
certain risk factors - such as increasing age, early onset of
womanhood, late onset of menopause and a family history of breast
cancer - are completely out of our control. But there are many risk
factors, which we can control easily.

These "controllable" risk factors readily translate into simple
changes that we can all make in our day-to-day lives to help
prevent or treat breast cancer. My message is that even advanced
breast cancer can be overcome because I have done it.
The first clue to understanding what was promoting my breast cancer
came when my husband Peter, who was also a scientist, arrived back
from working in China while I was being plugged in for a
chemotherapy session.

He had brought with him cards and letters, as well as some amazing
herbal suppositories, sent by my friends and science colleagues in
China.

The suppositories were sent to me as a cure for breast cancer.
Despite the awfulness of the situation, we both had a good belly
laugh, and I remember saying that this was the treatment for breast
cancer in China, then it was little wonder that Chinese women
avoided getting the disease.
Those words echoed in my mind. Why didn't Chinese women in China
get breast cancer? I had collaborated once with Chinese colleagues
on a study of links between soil chemistry and disease, and I
remembered some of the statistics.  The disease was virtually non-existent throughout the whole country. Only one in 10,000 women in China will die from it,
compared to that terrible figure of one in 12 in Britain and the
even grimmer average of one in 10 across most Western countries. It
is not just a matter of China being a more rural country, with less
urban pollution. In highly urbanized Hong Kong, the rate rises to
34 women in every 10,000 but still puts the West to shame.
The Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki have similar rates.
And remember, both cities were attacked with nuclear weapons, so in
addition to the usual pollution-related cancers, one would also
expect to find some radiation-related cases, too.  

The conclusion we can draw from these statistics strikes you with
some force. If a Western woman were to move to industrialized,
irradiated Hiroshima, she would slash her risk of contracting
breast cancer by half.

Obviously this is absurd. It seemed obvious to me that some
lifestyle factor not related to pollution, urbanization or the
environment is seriously increasing the Western woman's chance of
contracting breast cancer.  I then discovered that whatever causes the huge differences in
breast cancer rates between oriental and Western countries, it
isn't genetic.  Scientific research showed that when Chinese or Japanese people
move to the West, within one or two generations their rates of
breast cancer approach those of their host community.
The same thing happens when oriental people adopt a completely
Western lifestyle in Hong Kong. In fact, the slang name for breast
cancer in China translates as 'Rich Woman's Disease'. This is
because, in China, only the better off can afford to eat what is
termed 'Hong Kong food'.

The Chinese describe all Western food, including everything from
ice cream and chocolate bars to spaghetti and feta cheese, as "Hong
Kong food", because of its availability in the former British
colony and its scarcity, in the past, in mainland China.
So it made perfect sense to me that whatever was causing my breast
cancer and the shockingly high incidence in this
country generally, it was almost certainly something to do with our better-off,
middle-class, Western lifestyle.  

There is an important point for men here, too. I have observed in
my research that much of the data about prostate cancer leads to
similar conclusions.  According to figures from the World Health Organization, the number
of men contracting prostate cancer in rural China is negligible,
only 0.5 men in every 100,000. In England, Scotland and Wales,
however, this figure is 70 times higher. Like breast cancer, it is
a middle-class disease that primarily attacks the wealthier and
higher socio-economic groups - those that can afford to eat rich
foods.

I remember saying to my husband, "Come on Peter, you have just come
back from China. What is it about the Chinese way of life that is
so different?"  Why don't they get breast cancer?'
We decided to utilize our joint scientific backgrounds and approach
it logically.  We examined scientific data that pointed us in the general
direction of fats in diets. Researchers had discovered in the 1980s
that only l4% of calories in the average Chinese diet were from
fat, compared to almost 36% in the West.

But the diet I had been living on for years before I contracted
breast cancer was very low in fat and high in fibre. Besides, I
knew as a scientist that fat intake in adults has not been shown to
increase risk for breast cancer in most investigations that have
followed large groups of women for up to a dozen years.
Then one day something rather special happened. Peter and I have
worked together so closely over the years that I am not sure which
one of us first said: "The Chinese don't eat dairy produce!"
It is hard to explain to a non-scientist the sudden mental and
emotional 'buzz' you get when you know you have had an important
insight. It's as if you have had a lot of pieces of a jigsaw in
your mind, and suddenly, in a few seconds, they all fall into place
and the whole picture is clear.

Suddenly I recalled how many Chinese people were physically unable
to tolerate milk, how the Chinese people I had worked with had
always said that milk was only for babies, and how one of my
close friends, who is of Chinese origin, always politely turned down the
cheese course at dinner parties. I knew of no Chinese people who lived a traditional Chinese life
who ever used cow or other dairy food to feed their babies. The
tradition was to use a wet nurse but never, ever, dairy products.
Culturally, the Chinese find our Western preoccupation with milk
and milk products very strange. I remember entertaining a large
delegation of Chinese scientists shortly after the ending of the
Cultural Revolution in the 1980s.

On advice from the Foreign Office, we had asked the caterer to
provide a pudding that contained a lot of ice cream. After
inquiring what the pudding consisted of, all of the Chinese,
including their interpreter, politely but firmly refused to eat it,
and they could not be persuaded to change their minds.
At the time we were all delighted and ate extra portions!
Milk, I discovered, is one of the most common causes of food
allergies. Over 70% of the world's population are unable to digest
the milk sugar, lactose, which has led nutritionists to believe
that this is the normal condition for adults, not some sort of
deficiency.

Perhaps nature is trying to tell us that we are eating the wrong
food.  Before I had breast cancer for the first time, I had eaten a lot of
dairy produce, such as skimmed milk, low-fat cheese and yoghurt. I
had used it as my main source of protein. I also ate cheap but lean
minced beef, which I now realized was probably often ground-up
dairy cow.  In order to cope with the chemotherapy I received for my fifth case
of cancer, I had been eating organic yoghurts as a way of helping
my digestive tract to recover and repopulate my gut with 'good'
bacteria.

Recently, I discovered that way back in 1989 yoghurt had been
implicated in ovarian cancer. Dr Daniel Cramer of Harvard
University studied hundreds of women with ovarian cancer, and had
them record in detail what they normally ate. wish I'd been made
aware of his findings when he had first discovered them.

Following Peter's and my insight into the Chinese diet, I decided
to give up not just yoghurt but all dairy produce immediately.
Cheese, butter, milk and yoghurt and anything else that contained
dairy produce - it went down the sink or in the rubbish.

It is surprising how many products, including commercial soups,
biscuits and cakes, contain some form of dairy produce. Even many
proprietary brands of margarine marketed as soya, sunflower or
olive oil spreads can contain dairy produce.  

I therefore became an avid reader of the small print on food
labels. Up to this point, I had been steadfastly measuring the progress of
my fifth cancerous lump with callipers and plotting the results.
Despite all the encouraging comments and positive feedback from my
doctors and nurses, my own precise observations told me the bitter
truth. My first chemotherapy sessions had produced no effect - the lump
was still the same size.

Then I eliminated dairy products. Within days, the lump started to
shrink.

About two weeks after my second chemotherapy session and one week
after giving up dairy produce, the lump in my neck started to itch.
Then it began to soften and to reduce in size. The line on the
graph, which had shown no change, was now pointing downwards as the
tumour got smaller and smaller.  And, very significantly, I noted that instead of declining
exponentially (a graceful curve) as cancer is meant to do, the
tumour's decrease in size was plotted on a straight line heading
off the bottom of the graph, indicating a cure, not suppression (or
remission) of the tumour.

One Saturday afternoon after about six weeks of excluding all dairy
produce from my diet, I practised an hour of meditation then felt
for what was left of the lump. I couldn't find it. Yet I was very
experienced at detecting cancerous lumps - I had discovered all
five cancers on my own. I went downstairs and asked my husband to
feel my neck. He could not find any trace of the lump either.
On the following Thursday I was due to be seen by my cancer
specialist at Charing Cross Hospital in London. He examined me
thoroughly, especially my neck where the tumour had been. He was
initially bemused and then delighted as he said, "I cannot find
it."

None of my doctors, it appeared, had expected someone with my type
and stage of cancer (which had clearly spread to the lymph system)
to survive, let alone be so hale and hearty.  

My specialist was as overjoyed as I was. When I first discussed my
ideas with him he was understandably skeptical. But I understand
that he now uses maps showing cancer portality in China in his
lectures, and recommends a non-dairy diet to his cancer patients.
I now believe that the link between dairy produce and breast cancer
is similar to the link between smoking and lung cancer. I believe
that identifying the link between breast cancer and dairy produce,
and then developing a diet specifically targeted at maintaining the
health of my breast and hormone system, cured me.
It was difficult for me, as it may be for you, to accept that a
substance as 'natural' as milk might have such ominous health
implications. But I am a living proof that it works and, starting
from tomorrow, I shall reveal the secrets of my revolutionary
action plan.

Extracted from Your Life in Your Hands, by Professor Jane Plant.


-- 作者: fate0816
-- 發表時間: 2006/06/05 00:57am

我一向都好少飲奶

幾年前, 學人飲奶, 因為d什麼高鈣奶廣告, 又話什麼骨質疏鬆....

點知飲左個多星期, 就乳腺發炎

試過兩次都係咁 ~ 而家放棄了飲奶,

而且問過骨科醫生都話高鈣奶對骨質疏鬆幫助不大


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