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 Slight rant about Cancer in everyday life

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Knnbuccb
post Mar 23 2025, 04:21 PM

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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Mar 22 2025, 07:21 PM)
Yes bros.

She had mastitis because her breasts were big and she ignored the cyst that formed after. Then it turned cancerous.

So yeah they say pregnancy prevents breast cancer isn't true
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You mean during pregnancy her breasts became big?

Actually I heard before breast cancer progress during pregnancy very fast maybe because something to do with hormones etc and lowered immunity to accommodate the foreign living being in the uterus....
Knnbuccb
post Mar 23 2025, 04:22 PM

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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Mar 22 2025, 09:41 PM)
38 bro.

Late pregnancy
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Bro late age at first pregnancy is a strong risk factor

The protection that pregnancy confers only if first pregnancy is before certain age I think below 35 if not mistaken
Knnbuccb
post Mar 25 2025, 02:54 PM

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QUOTE(lorkh @ Mar 23 2025, 12:04 PM)
If it's in the family there's nothing they can do. My paternal aunties & uncle all died from heart attack.
Kinda unfortunate your aunty had to cook in an enclosed kitchen. How could she have stood the smoke & oil is beyond me.

Tis is what Ai replies when i queried about breast cancer & pregnancy

Here's what research shows about the relationship between pregnancy and breast cancer:

Long-term protective effect: Having a full-term pregnancy, especially before age 30, actually reduces a woman's lifetime risk of breast cancer.
Temporary risk increase: There is a short-term increase in breast cancer risk following pregnancy, which typically lasts for about 10 years. This may be due to hormonal changes that can stimulate the growth of existing cancer cells.
Multiple pregnancies: Women who have had multiple full-term pregnancies generally have a lower risk of breast cancer than women who have never given birth.
Breastfeeding: Breastfeeding for a total of one year or more (combined across all pregnancies) further reduces breast cancer risk.
Age at first pregnancy: Women who have their first full-term pregnancy at a younger age (before 30) have a lower risk of breast cancer compared to women who have their first child later in life or who never have children.
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Damn sounds like what I said except the age u gave was 35 .....

I'm a genius
Knnbuccb
post Mar 25 2025, 02:56 PM

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QUOTE(Avangelice @ Mar 23 2025, 12:29 AM)
My staff did do her blood test last two weeks ago. CEA is a tumour marker for colon cancer and it was normal. Oncologist say the best one of colonoscopy and a CT scan
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Coincidentally I just knew colorectal cancer month is coming soon thanks to an oncologist video

 

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