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A Patient's Guide to
Managing Hormone-Refractory Prostate Cancer
Chapter 9. Take Care of
Your General Health
You are going through a
difficult battle, true of any cancer. So the message of this chapter is
simple. Take care of yourself, in every way possible. Most of these messages
you’ve heard your entire life, so we won’t belabor them.
Nutrition
Don’t expect to defeat advanced metastatic prostate cancer by what you eat,
but don’t help the cancer along either. Eat a low-fat diet. Prostate cancer
thrives on certain fat. The only good fats are found in olive oil and
cold-sea fish; the rest of them are to be minimized, if not avoided
altogether.
Veggies are good. The dark-colored vegetables especially are good—broccoli,
spinach, and so on. Lycopene is good; it is found in tomatoes; so everything
with tomatoes is good, especially when they are cooked, as in sauces.
Tea is good for drinking, especially green tea. Soy foods are good. Three
helpings a week of ocean (not farm) fish are good for your cardiac health.
The books by Dr. Dean Ornish address low-fat diets, even though they are
focused on cardiac health. Dr. Charles Myers has a nutrition/cookbook for
prostate patients (Eating Your Way to Better Health), available through his
web site www.prostateforum.org.
As a rule of thumb in following a low-fat diet, avoid all red meats; avoid
egg yolks in any form; as nearly as possible, avoid all milk fats, in any
form—stay with low-fat milk, cheese, etc.; and try to avoid, as much as
possible, fats and oils in the form of salad dressings, oleomargarine, and
cooking oils—with one exception—olive oil.
Food supplements and vitamins
All of us take some combination of food supplements and vitamins. See the
list in Chapter 6 for one example. The purpose for taking the following
supplements is explained in that table.
As basic daily food supplements, you might consider taking vitamin E (400
i.u.), selenium (200 micrograms, not milligrams), vitamin B-12 (100 mcg),
vitamin C (500 mg, except when on chemo), vitamin B mixture, calcium (1 g),
500 mg magnesium with zinc, Coenzyme Q-10 (100 mg twice a day), GLA and DHA
fatty acids (500 mg DHA 2-3 times a day), lycopene (30 mg). You will want to
work out your own list. UCSF has
a webpage that summarizes a lot of information on
nutrition and prostate cancer.
The following table may also be useful to you in selecting vitamins to
supplement. You don’t necessarily need to supplement every vitamin; however,
cancer is insidious in that it depletes many of the body’s resources. This
table will, however, give you a list for discussing with your doctor. The
table focuses on the health problems that result when you are deficient in a
particular vitamin. However, you must exercise caution because some of these
vitamins should not be taken during chemo (e.g., your own doctor should have
a say in which of these vitamins you supplement. Further, the fat-soluble
vitamins have toxicity limits, as well as effects on your blood coagulation.
Vitamins and Associated
Symptoms of Deficiency
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Vitamin |
Deficiency Symptoms |
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Water-Soluble Vitamins
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Ascorbic acid
(vitamin C) |
Bleeding gums,
bruising |
|
Thiamin (vitamin B1) |
Fatigue, depression |
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Riboflavin (vitamin
B2) |
Cracked lips, scaly
skin |
|
Pyridoxine (vitamin
B6) |
Anemia, irritability |
|
Niacin |
Dermatitis, dementia |
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Folic acid (vitamin
M or B9) |
Megaloblastic anemia
(production of dysfunctional red blood cells) (check with your doctor
to see if ok to take with HRPCa) |
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Vitamin B12 |
Megaloblastic
anemia, neurodegeneration |
|
Pantothenic acid |
Weight loss,
irritability |
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Biotin (vitamin H) |
Dermatitis,
anorexia, depression |
|
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Fat-soluble Vitamins
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Vitamin A |
Night blindness
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Vitamin D |
Rickets,
osteomalacia (loss of bone calcium) |
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Vitamin E |
Hemolysis of red
blood cells (breakdown of red blood cells and release of hemoglobin) |
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Vitamin K |
Hemorrhage, delayed
blood clotting |
|
McMurry, John,
Organic Chemistry, 5th ed., Brooks/Cole: Thomson Learning, Pacific
Grove, CA, 2000, p. 1103. |
Exercise
Stress can be ferocious in fighting this disease because your life is on the
line. Exercise is good for everything you can think of. It increases your
appetite, improves your digestion, enhances your attitude, allows you to
sleep. There will be times that exercise is difficult, for example, when you
are undergoing chemo. Do what you can as regularly as you can.
An exercise program three times a week that includes aerobic exercise
(walking, swimming, biking) is great. Also try to add some resistance
exercise to keep your muscle mass. Once you stop off the flow of
testosterone to your body, your muscle mass begins to deteriorate. You may
also wish to take daily creatine (the weightlifter’s supplement) to enhance
muscle mass. However, stay away from anything like DHEA that contains
hormones to feed the prostate cancer.
Rest
Rest is important to fight stress. It is also one of the best pain
relievers. Get all the rest your body can take while you are in this battle.
If you have a difficult time sleeping, Ambien® is one effective sleeping
pill if used infrequently. It can cause a dependency. Benadryl ® also works
well as an aid in sleeping. Of course, the best sleep aid is exercise.
Your psychological well-being
It is difficult to over-emphasize the stress caused by a chronic disease.
You are being forced to make life-impacting decisions at a time you may not
feel up to it.
When one person gets cancer, the whole family gets it. You also need to keep
in mind that your wife (and children) is suffering stress of at least the
same magnitude as you. Completely open communication seems to be the best
way to deal with the family’s stress.
You can choose to close yourself off from the world or open yourself to all
the help available. Those of us on the support list have chosen the latter
course and believe it is more successful. Clinical studies have also shown
that asking for help and reaching out are healthy tactics.
A local support group is good for contacts and talks. There are also many
on-line support groups, such as ours, for prostate cancer. Our experience is
that both are good for whatever help they provide.
This is also the time for prayer. Turn to your church and your God for
support. If you need convincing, clinical trials have even shown that prayer
works in improving disease outcomes. Certainly the support of fellow church
members is beneficial.
After fighting this disease for a long-time, it is possible to suffer the
effects known as “post-traumatic stress syndrome.” Typically, the result is
depression, which is dangerous to your life. It suppresses the immune
system, destroys the quality of your life, and puts you at risk for suicide.
Take your situation seriously, and be good to yourself and others around
you.
When you feel that this disease and the battle are driving you crazy, one of
the best counter-tactics is to go out and help someone else. What you see in
this book, our support list and web site are serious efforts to help
ourselves by helping others.
Return to the Table of Contents
Continue to Chapter 10
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