mother's son: သြားဖုံးေရာဂါႏွင္႔ ကင္ဆာ

Friday, May 30, 2008

သြားဖုံးေရာဂါႏွင္႔ ကင္ဆာ

ခႏၶာကုိယ္တစ္ကုိယ္လုံးသည္ ေရာဂါေတြႏွင္႔ ျပည့္ေနပါသည့္ အဆိပ္အုိးတစ္လုံးပမာ ျဖစ္ပါသည္။ အခ်ိန္မေရြး ေရာဂါတစ္မ်ိဳးမဟုတ္ တစ္မ်ိဳးျဖစ္ေပၚလာနိဳင္ျပီး ေပါက္ကြဲနိဳင္ပါသည္။
တကယ္႔အႏွစ္သာရဟူ၍ ျမဴမွ် မရွိပါ။ သုိ႔ေသာ္လည္း ကုိယ္ရရွိလာတဲ႔ ခဏတာဘ၀ေလးမွာ ကုိယ္႔ရဲ႕ခႏၶာကုိယ္ကုိ အက်ိဳးရွိေအာင္ကာ အသုံးခ်ၾကရမည္။
ထုိသုိ႔ အသုံးခ်ဖုိ႔ကား နံပါတ္တစ္အေနနဲ႔ ကုိယ္က်န္းမာဖုိ႔ ကာကြယ္ေစာင္႔ေရွာက္ရမည္။ က်န္းမာမွ က်န္တဲ့ ကိစၥေတြကုိ ဆက္လုပ္နိဳင္မည္ မဟုတ္ပါလား?
ဤေနရာ၌ သြားေရာဂါႏွင္႔ ပတ္သက္၍ သြားဖုံးေရာဂါမွ တဆင္႔ သြားဖုံးကင္ဆာေရာဂါအဆင္႔သုိ႔ မေရာက္ေအာင္ ကာကြယ္နည္း ေဆးပညာကုိ တင္ျပလုိပါသည္။

Gum Disease Sign Of CANCER Risk

If your gums and teeth aren’t in good shape, it could point to – or bring on – bigger health problems. In fact, a study claims that gum disease might be a warning sign of an increased cancer risk even in non-smokers. A team of researchers at the Imperial College London has found that gum disease raises the risk of developing lung, kidney, blood and pancreatic cancers irrespective of whether a person is a smoker or a non-smoker.
According to lead researcher Dr Dominique Michaud, the persistent presence of gum disease might be a sign of weakness in the immune system which could also allow cancer to develop, the Lancet Oncology Journal reported.
In their study, the team analyzed the health records of 50,000 men and found that those with a history of gum disease had a 14 per cent higher chance of cancer compared with those with no history of gum disease.
There was a third increase in the risk of lung cancer, almost a 50 per cent rise in the chance of kidney cancer, and a similar rise in pancreatic cancer. Blood cell cancers such as leukaemia rose by 30 per cent among men with gum disease.
While there was no rise in lung cancer chances among those with gum disease who had never smoked, there was a slightly higher increase in the overall risk of any cancer, and a similar rise in blood cancer rate, the study found. “These findings might represent a commonality in the immune function and response to inflammation, which results in susceptibility to both periodontal disease and haematological cancers,” the BBC News portal quoted Dr Michaud as saying.
However, according to the researchers, it was also possible that long lasting gum disease could trigger changes in the immune response which helped cancer thrive, or that the bacteria from the gum could be directly causing the cancer in the tissue of mouth or throat when swallowed.
But, they stopped short of saying that people with the problem should seek medical, rather than dental, help.
“At this point, we feel that any recommendations for prevention of cancer based on these findings are premature; patients with periodontal diseases should seek care from their dentists irrespective of effect on cancer,” Dr Michaud said.However, experts have pointed out that the small increases in risk recorded by the Imperial College study were not proof of a link.

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