Showing posts with label risks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label risks. Show all posts

Sunday, November 27, 2016

Preventing Thyroid Cancer / a useful warning

Thyroid Cancer

What's Thyroid? (Click Here)

On Wednesday, Dr Oz had a show on the fastest growing cancer in women, Thyroid Cancer.
It was a very interesting program and he mentioned that the increase could possibly be related to the use of dental X-rays and mammograms.

Dr.Oz demonstrated that on the apron which the dentist puts on you for your dental x-rays there is a little flap that can be lifted up and wrapped around your neck. Many dentists don't bother to use it. 

Also, there is something called a "thyroid shield/guard" for use during mammograms.

By coincidence, I had my yearly mammogram yesterday, I felt a little silly , but I asked about the guard for the thyroid shield/guard and sure enough, the technician had one in a drawer. I asked why it wasn't routinely used.

Answer : "I don't know. You have to ask for it."
Well, if I had not seen the Dr. Oz show, how would I have known to ask for the shield/guard.?

Dear reader, we need to pass and share this information on to our daughters, nieces, mothers and all our female friends and husbands please tell your wives.

Please remember to ask for the "Thyroid Shield/Guard" when you go for dental x-ray or mammogram.

Someone is kind and nice enough to forward this information to me. And I hope and wish you to pass it on to your friends and family members. 


June 2011

Dr. Oz, Thyroid Shields & Mammography — The Popular TV Host Sparks a Debate With Radiology
By Kathy Hardy
Radiology Today
Vol. 12 No. 6 P. 18

The latest controversy surrounding mammography comes from an unlikely source—a cardiovascular surgeon with his own syndicated television show. Mehmet Oz, MD, an Oprah Winfrey protégé and host of The Dr. Oz Show, started a debate over whether radiation exposure from mammography could be causing an increase in thyroid cancer when he recommended that women wear lead thyroid shields when getting their mammograms.

During a September 2010 segment of the popular medical advice program, Oz associated the findings from a study involving dental x-rays with the amount of potential radiation exposure stemming from screening mammograms, suggesting the two procedures may account for part of the increase in thyroid cancer among women and calling it “the fastest growing cancer in women.”

Recommendation Without Data
“There has not been any data on this, but personally, if I was getting a mammogram, I would use [a thyroid shield] too,” Oz said in the episode. “Because [of] the amount of radiation exposure, although it’s very small in mammography, it’s not that dissimilar from dental x-rays.”

The show was rebroadcast in December 2010 and apparently Oz’s recommendation went viral in the form of an e-mail with the subject line “Precautions re Mammograms and Dental XRays/A Useful Warning.” The e-mail message cites The Dr. Oz Show and retells the story of a woman who said she never would have known to ask for a thyroid shield when getting her mammogram if it hadn’t been for the show.
The topic also made its way onto blogs and social networking sites, sparking discussion about the topic. The issue of thyroid shields for mammograms even surfaced on the rumor-busting website Snopes.com, where the source of the rapidly spreading e-mail, tweet, and blog message is credited to The Dr. Oz Show. The site details statements on the topic made since the initial Dr. Oz Show, concluding that “in general, the soundest advice for those concerned about exposure during x-ray procedures is to discuss their concerns with their healthcare providers prior to such procedures and determine what level of protection the situation merits.”

The radiology community responded to the December rebroadcast with a joint statement from the ACR and the Society of Breast Imaging (SBI), referring to “an erroneous media report that the small amount of radiation a patient receives from a mammogram may significantly increase the likelihood of developing thyroid cancer. This concern simply is not supported in scientific literature.”

“Correlation is not causation,” says Constance Lehman, MD, PhD, director of imaging at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance in Washington and a professor of radiology at the University of Washington. “Screening mammography is not an area where there should be a concern that this imaging exam causes significant harm to the patient. It’s not good science.”

For women who get mammograms every year, this debate may not sway them away from this routine. However, some in the radiology community believe the discussion surrounding the issue may keep some of the approximately 32% to 39% of women (mammography rates vary by race, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) from having a mammogram.

“This gives women another reason to question whether or not they need a mammogram,” said Phil Evans, MD, director of the University of Texas Southwestern Center for Breast Care, while a guest on a “rebuttal” episode of The Dr. Oz Show in April of this year.

“All these little controversies are dissuading women from having mammograms,” added Daniel B. Kopans, MD, a professor of radiology at Harvard Medical School and director of breast imaging at Massachusetts General Hospital, another guest on the April episode.

In both episodes, Dr. Oz made a point of saying that women should get mammograms, noting that they save lives but adding that “we have a suspect history of exposing people to radiation.”

“If you want women to get mammography, do everything you can to make it safe,” he said during the April show.
He went on to implore women to speak up for their right to ask for a thyroid shield when getting a mammogram, saying, “It’s about your right to control your care.”

Kopans says it is too early to determine the large-scale effect of Dr.Oz’s statements regarding thyroid radiation from mammography. At the breast imaging center at Massachusetts General, a few women coming in for mammograms are asking for thyroid shields each day; however, he has not seen any detectable decrease in patient volume.

“I do not have any data from any of the centers, but here and around the county, some women are asking for the shields,” Kopans says. “Here we are explaining that they are not necessary and could compromise the mammogram, but we have them if the patient insists.”

On the show, Kopans differentiated mammography from dental x-rays by explaining that x-rays are like a spotlight. In a darkened room, a spotlight would illuminate only the area at which it was directed. Similarly, x-rays are confined to a specific area.

“The thyroid may be ‘illuminated’ during dental x-rays, but there is no radiation to the thyroid during a mammogram,” he says.

Minute Risk

Kopans explains the only radiation that reaches the thyroid during a mammogram is scatter and that studies show this scatter radiation amount is equivalent to 30 minutes of background radiation that people receive every day from the environment.

“During [Oz’s] one-hour show, we were all receiving twice the dose, from background radiation, that the thyroid might receive from a mammogram,” he says. “This means that a woman could have a mammogram every year for 40 years and her thyroid would receive less total radiation than it receives from one day of background radiation.”

Statistics cited in the ACR/SBI press release show that for annual screening mammography for women aged 40 through 80, the cancer risk from the amount of radiation scattered to the thyroid during a mammogram is “incredibly small,” measured at less than one in 17.1 million women screened. They stress that this “minute” risk of thyroid cancer be balanced with the fact that using a thyroid shield could impact the quality of the mammography image, interfere with the diagnosis, and ultimately result in the need for a second mammogram.

“As we told Dr. Oz, it was not just the fact that a thyroid guard was unnecessary and could compromise the mammogram, the concern is that misinformation over inconsequential issues will discourage women from participating in screening and its potential to save lives,” Kopans says.

While on the show, Evans showed a mammogram image where the patient was wearing a thyroid shield. In the image, viewers could see where the shield slipped down into the field of view, blocking some of the breast and necessitating a repeat mammogram, exposing the patient to more radiation. Another doctor on the April show, Jocelyn Rapelyea, MD, associate director of breast imaging at the Breast Imaging and Intervention Center of George Washington University, explained that since the initial Dr. Oz Show episode, many patients visiting her practice for mammograms had asked for shields, necessitating repeat views 20% of the time.

Although Oz said thyroid cancer is the fastest-growing cancer in women, Kopans noted that cancer of the thyroid is increasing with the same rapidity among men. As the radiologist noted during the program, “Unless men are sneaking in at night to have mammograms, mammography had nothing to do with the increasing incidence of thyroid cancer.”

Imaging’s Message

“The bottom line was that there was no risk to the thyroid with mammography, so a shield was not needed and that it could compromise optimal imaging,” Kopans says. “Dr. Oz dismissed the compromised imaging, suggesting that we often didn’t understand risk until many years later and that he was going to stick with his recommendation.
“Our recommendation is that we will provide a thyroid shield if a patient asks,” he continues, “but it is totally unnecessary and could compromise optimal positioning and lead to the need for repeat exposures.”

This isn’t the first time radiologists and women’s health professionals felt the need to defend and promote the benefits of mammography as a screening tool for breast cancer. Since the 1970s, when mammography became the standard screening method for breast cancer, the practice has come under attack, says Carol H. Lee, MD, a diagnostic radiologist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York and chair of the ACR’s Breast Imaging Commission. During the 1990s, the American Cancer Society, with support from the ACR, aggressively promoted the benefits of screening mammography, running advertisements on television and in magazines informing the public of the importance of this method of breast cancer screening. At that time, there was some feedback stating that mammography was being “oversold,” she says, “although how can you oversell something that’s proven beneficial?”

Defending Mammography

“I don’t understand what the motivation is [for arguing against mammography],” Lee adds. “We have a test that has been studied and proven to detect breast cancer and reduce mortality, yet it continues to face challenges.”

In 2009, recommendations regarding breast cancer screening from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) stirred controversy by withdrawing its recommendation for routine screening mammography for women aged 40 to 49. This recommendation reversed the task force’s 2002 recommendations for breast cancer screening beginning at age 40. The task force also concluded in the 2009 recommendations that the decision to start regular biennial screening mammography before the age of 50 should be an individual choice between a woman and her doctor, taking into consideration specific benefits and harms. The benefits of early breast cancer detection should be weighed against the potential harm of a false-positive finding or the increased exposure to radiation, according to the task force.

Within a matter of days, imaging and women’s health organizations spoke out against the 2009 USPSTF recommendations and to date, gynecologists and radiologists continue to recommend that women begin screening mammography at age 40.

“The ACR and the SBI reviewed the USPSTF analysis and found that this group of individuals lacked expertise in breast cancer care and failed to understand the fundamental scientific evidence and that these guidelines would result in numerous lives being lost that could be saved by annual mammography,” Kopans says. “A recent review concluded that, among women now in their 30s, as many as 100,000 lives would be lost unnecessarily to breast cancer by following the USPSTF guidelines.” Concerns continue regarding the impact of this latest mammography controversy and the potential setbacks in early breast cancer detection it could cause.

“My greatest concern is the large number of women who are not undergoing regular mammograms because of issues like this, leaving them at risk for a delayed diagnosis of breast cancer,” says Lehman. “We are working hard to make sure all women age 40 and older are undergoing mammography so that if they have breast cancer, we can find it early when they can still be cured.”

Kathy Hardy is a freelance writer based in Phoenixville, Pa. She is a frequent contributor to Radiology Today.

** Dr. Oz discusses his controversial advice about requesting thyroid guards during mammograms and dental x-rays. Here, his critics weigh in. Your health is on the line. What would you do?

Click here to watch Part 1
Click here to watch Part 2
Click here to watch Part 3

Saturday, November 26, 2016

November Awakening The Best In You

1. You are the only real obstacle in your path to a fulfilling life.

2. Creativity is inventing,
experimenting, growing, 
taking unknown risks, breaking unwritten rules,
making mistakes, and having fun.

3.  Don't just save up for the rainny day because if you do,
the rainny day will come.

4. We are here on planet to learn and to evolve into better beings.

5.  Treat all disasters as if they were trivialities but never treat a triviality as if it were a disaster.

6.  Persistence is the twin sister of excellence.
One is a matter of quality; the other , a matter of time. 

7.  I have never been hurt by anything I didn't say.

8.  Better to do SOMETHING imperfectly than to do NOTHING flawlessly. 

9.  Iron rusts from disuse;
stagnant water loses its purity and in cold weather becomes frozen;
even so does inaction sap the vigour of the mind.

10. Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because you character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are. 

11. Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.  

12. Success is getting what you want; happiness is wanting what you get.

13. There is only one small letter between the words CAN and CAN'T . . . and that one letter will TOTALLY change your destiny.

14. You cannot do a kindness too soon, for you never know how soon it will be too late.

15. Life is a succession of lessons which must be lived to be understood.

16. There are two educations. One should teach us how to make a living and the other how to live in making.

17. The best way to become acquinted with a subject it to write a book about it.  I love blog about it here, and you love to read about my blog. 

18. I can give you a six-word formula for success: 
i.Think 
ii.things 
iii.through, 
iv.then 
v.follow 
vi.through.

19. Kindness in words creates confidence.
      Kindness in thinking creates profoundness.
      Kindness in giving creates love. 

20. Doubt is a pain too lonely to know that faith is his twin brother. 

21. Mediocrity knows nothing higher than itself, but talent instantly recognizes genius.

22. Those who bring sunshine into the lives of others, cannot keep it from themselves.

23. In the practice of tolerance, one's enemy is the best teacher.

24. Unless commitment is made there are only promises and hopes  . . . but no plans. 

24.1 A Dream Written Down With A Date Becomes A GOAL!
A GOAL Broken Down Into Steps Becomes A PLAN!
A PLAN Backed By Action Makes Your Dream A REALITY!

25. Self-pity gets you nowhere. One must have the adventurous daring to accept oneself as a bundle of possibilities and undertake the most interesting game in the world - making the  most of one's best. 

26. There are two primary choices in life : to accept conditions as they exists, or accept responsibility for changing them. 

26.1 Say to your Self daily, three times a day: "I love you, I'm sorry, Please forgive me, Thank you, I really really love you." (smile)

27. Look at a day when you are supremely satisfied at the end. it is not a day when you lounge around doing nothing ; it's when you've had everything to do, and you have done it. 

28. Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not one bit simpler. 

29. More important than talent, strength, or knowledge is the ability to laugh at yourself and enjoy the pursuit of your dreams. 

30. It takes less time to do things right than to explain why you did it wrong. 

THINK BIG, THINK BOLD!

1.don't take yourself too seriously, laugh at things and yourself.

2.be good at what you do.

3.do good to people.

Growing from survival , 
to success, 
reach significance! 

Love You, 
Thank You,
(your best signature here)

Welcome Soongworld (click for amazing opportunity)

“If somebody offers you an amazing opportunity but you are not sure you can do it, say yes – then learn how to do it later!”

― Richard Branson
Sir Richard Charles Nicholas Branson is an English business magnate, best known for his Virgin brand of over 360 companies. Branson's first successful business venture was at age 16, when he published a magazine called Student. He then set up a record mail-order business in 1970. In 1972, he opened a chain of record stores, Virgin Records, later known as Virgin Megastores and rebranded as zavvi in late 2007. With his flamboyant and competitive style, Branson's Virgin brand grew rapidly during the 1980s - as he set up Virgin Atlantic Airways and expanded the Virgin Records music label. Richard Branson is the 236th richest person according to Forbes' 2008 list of billionaires as he has an estimated net worth of approximately $7.9 billion USD.