Friday, 23 March 2012

You can beat cancer with fasting

Chem­o­ther­a­py drugs work bet­ter against can­cer when com­bined with cy­cles of short, se­vere fast­ing, a study has found.
According to world-science.net, re­search­ers sug­gest the fast­ing might help be­cause nor­mal cells tend to put off try­ing to di­vide when nu­tri­ents are lack­ing—but can­cer cells keep try­ing, and this pro­cess ul­ti­mately kills them.
Fast­ing, even on its own, ef­fec­tively treated a ma­jor­ity of can­cers tested in mice, in­clud­ing trans­planted can­cer tu­mors made of hu­man cells, re­search­ers said. Their stu­dy, pub­lished in the jour­nal Sci­ence Trans­la­t­ional Med­i­cine, found that five out of eight can­cer types in mice re­sponded to fast­ing alone: just as with chem­o­ther­a­py, fast­ing slowed the growth and spread of tu­mors. And with­out ex­cep­tion, “the com­bina­t­ion of fast­ing cy­cles plus chem­o­ther­a­py was ei­ther more or much more ef­fec­tive than chemo alone,” said study sen­ior au­thor Val­ter Longo of the Uni­vers­ity of South­ern Cal­i­for­nia.
Mul­ti­ple cy­cles of fast­ing com­bined with chem­o­ther­a­py cured 20 per­cent of mice with a highly ag­gres­sive type of chil­dren’s can­cer that had spread through­out the body, and 40 per­cent of mice with a more lim­it­ed spread of the same can­cer, the au­thors added. No mice sur­vived in ei­ther case if treated only with chem­o­ther­a­py.

Okonjo-Iweala to run for World Bank top job


Nigeria’s finance minister will run for the World Bank top job, her South African counterpart announced on Friday, the deadline for nominations to succeed Robert Zoellick.
“We are proud to confirm that the Nigerian Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala will be a candidate,” Pravin Gordhan told reporters at a press conference, standing alongside her.
Okonjo-Iweala had been rumoured as a possible candidate with emerging economies pushing for a representative at the 187-nation development lender whose top job had traditionally been held by an American since its founding nearly 70 years ago.
Days after her spokesman denied she was pursuing the job, Okonjo-Iweala said she was “absolutely” confident of her bid.
“I have long experience in the World Bank, in government and in diplomacy and I look forward to giving you my vision at the appropriate time,” she said.
Okonjo-Iweala is a respected former World Bank managing director who joined Nigeria’s government as finance minister in August.
“I share the World Bank vision of fighting poverty with passion. The issue is in what direction one must take this to make this the most beneficial,” she said.
Nominations are due Friday with Zoellick stepping down at the end of his term in June.
Source