Cancers – are they preventable?

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Cancers can be referred to as a group of diseases in which there is uncontrollable growth of abnormal cells in the body and there are over 200 types of cancer.

Technically speaking, cancers are a variant of the diseases described above in which the disease spreads locally or the abnormal cells travel through the blood and lymphatic system to continue the abnormal growth at other parts of the body.

On the other hand, tumours referred to as benign do not grow uncontrollably, do not invade neighbouring tissues and do not spread through the body.

Healthy cells control their own growth and would destroy themselves if they become unhealthy.

Cell division is a complex process that is normally tightly regulated. Cancer happens when problems in the genes in a cell prevent these controls from working. Genes are very tiny inheritable chemical ‘structures’ in a cell that directs various growth and development processes in the cell and hence the body. These problems with genes may be from damage to the gene or may be inherited.

Determining what causes cancer is complex and it is often difficult to point to a specific cause for a specific cancer. Many things are known to increase the risk of cancer including tobacco use, infection, radiation, lack of physical activity, poor diet, obesity and environmental pollutants.

These can directly damage genes or combine with existing genetic defects within cells to cause disease. A small percentage of cancers say about 5-10% are entirely inherited.

Cancer can be determined in a number of ways, including the presence of certain signs and symptoms, screening tests, or medical imaging. Once a possible cancer is detected, it is confirmed by microscopic examination of a tissue sample and is usually treated with chemotherapy, radiation therapy or surgery or any combination of these three options. The chosen method of treatment or combination would depend on the extent of disease and the patient’s condition. The chances of surviving the disease vary greatly by the type and location of the cancer and the extent of disease at the start of treatment. While cancer can affect people of all ages, a few types of cancer are more common in children and the risk of developing cancer generally increases with age. In 2007, cancer caused about 13% of all human deaths worldwide (7.9 million) and rates are rising as more people live to an old age and lifestyles changes in the developing world.

CANCER CLASSIFICATION

Cancers are classified by the type of cell that the tumuor resembles which is therefore presumed to be the origin of the tumuor. These types include:

• Carcinoma, which are cancers derived from epithelial cells. This group includes many of the most common cancers, particularly in the aged, and includes nearly all those developing in the breast, prostate, lung, pancreas and colon.

• Sarcoma are cancers arising from connective tissue such as bone, cartilage, fat, nerve and each of these develop from cells originating in what is referred to as mesenchymal cells outside the bone marrow.

• Lymphoma and leukaemia: These two classes of cancer arise from haematopoietic or blood-forming cells that leave the bone marrow and tend to mature in the lymph nodes and blood respectively.

• Germ cell tumuors are cancers derived from pluripotent cells most often showing up in the testes or the ovary. Pluripotent cells have the capacity to develop into various fetal and adult tissues.

• Blastoma: cancers derived from immature ‘precursor’ cells or embryonic tissue tend to occur more commonly in children.

SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

Cancer symptoms are usually non-specific which means that many other illnesses also show the same symptoms and signs. Cancer symptoms can be divided into three groups:

• Local symptoms are restricted to the site of the primary cancer and these could include lumps or swellings, bleeding from the skin, mouth or anus, wounds and pain. Initial swellings of tumuors may be painless but advanced cancers can be really painful.

• Metastatic symptoms are due to the spread of cancer to other locations in the body. These include enlarged lymph nodes which can be felt under the skin or enlargement of the liver or the spleen which is felt in the abdomen.

The spleen is an organ situated in the upper left region of the abdomen involved in the immunological defense of the body. Other symptoms include the pain or fracture of affected bones and symptoms involving the body’s nerves.

• Systemic symptoms are those symptoms that occur due to distant effects of the cancer but are not related to the direct or metastatic spread of the cancer. Some of these symptoms include weight loss due to poor appetite and body wasting, fatigue, excessive sweating especially at night, anaemia and other non-specific conditions that may be mediated by the immunological or hormonal signals from the cancer cells.

CAUSES

It is almost always impossible to prove exactly what caused a cancer in any individual because most cancers have multiple causes. For instance, a heavy tobacco smoker who develops lung cancer would blame the tobacco but all of us have a small chance of developing lung cancer due to air pollution and radiation.

As stated earlier most of the causes of cancer are environmental and these include factors such as tobacco, diet, obesity, infections, radiation, stress, lack of physical activity and environmental pollutants.

CHEMICALS

Many chemicals have been known to have carcinogenic effects. Aside tobacco that has been mentioned above, other chemicals include alcohol, exposure to benzene at workplaces and the inhalation of asbestos fibers.

DIET AND EXERCISE

Diet, physical inactivity and obesity are related to approximately about 30% of cancer cases. Physical inactivity is believed to contribute to cancer risk not only through its effect on body weight but also through negative effects on immune system and the network of hormones.

Diets that are low in vegetables, fruits and whole grains, and high in processed or red meats are linked with a number of cancers. A high salt diet is linked to stomach cancer and aflatoxin B1, a frequent food contaminant with liver cancer. Our local kokonte sometimes gets contaminated with aflatoxins.

INFECTIONS 

About a fifth of cancers are linked to infections and the agents include viruses, bacteria and parasites. Cervical cancer is caused by human papillomavirus and liver cancer can be caused by hepatitis B and C viruses.
Leukaemias and Kaposi Sarcoma can also be virus-induced. Stomach cancer is linked to a bacterium called helicobacter pylori and a parasite called schistosoma haematobium is known to cause cancer of the urinary bladder.

RADIATION

About 10% of invasive cancers are related to radiation exposure. Sources of radiation include medical imaging and radon gas. Non-ionizing radio frequency radiations from mobile phones, electric power transmission and other similar sources have been described by the WHO as a possible carcinogen.

HEREDITY

About 5-10% of all cancers have been linked to factors that are inherited. Some cancers in this category include breast cancer, ovarian cancer, bone cancer, brain tumours, colon cancer, stomach cancer, testicular cancer, leukaemias and retinoblastoma in children.

A related factor to heredity causes is the level of hormones. Breast and ovarian cancers are believed to be linked to inherited levels of high female hormones while high levels of male hormones in men of African ancestry are believed to be a factor in the high level of prostate cancer in this group.

PREVENTION

Cancer prevention is defined as active measures undertaken to decrease the risk of cancer. The vast majority of cancer risk factors are due to environmental (including lifestyle) factors, and many of these factors are controllable. More than 30% of cancers are considered preventable by avoiding risk factors including tobacco, obesity, inappropriate diet, physical inactivity, alcohol, sexually transmitted infections and air pollution.

However, not all environmental causes can be prevented such as background radiation. Dietary recommendations to reduce the risk of developing cancer includes reducing intake of foods and drinks that promote weight gain such as energy-dense foods and sugary drinks, eating mostly foods of plant origin, limiting intake of red meat and avoiding processed meat, limiting consumption of alcoholic beverages and reducing intake of salt and avoiding mouldy cereals.

Vaccination is helpful in preventing certain types of cancer such as hepatitis B vaccine and vaccine against human papillomavirus which causes cervical cancer. Screening tests are available for certain types of cancer but not possible for all types of cancer.

A screening test would make good medical sense when it causes little harm and there is ready and accessible treatment for the disease that is being screened. Screening tests can be done for cervical cancer, prostate cancer, breast cancer, colon cancer etc.

CONCLUSION

Most of the factors linked to the causation of cancer are lifestyle-related and hence preventable and the adherence to these recommended interventions takes a lot of discipline so the earlier one begins implementing them, the earlier one can get used to them and the easier it becomes.

The B&FT

Kim K.: If I married for money, I would’ve stayed

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When reality TV queen Kim Kardashian swung by “Live! With Kelly” on Monday, she and host Kelly Ripa spent some of their time rehashing the backlash to Kim’s intent to divorce.

Many have alleged that Kim’s brief marriage to pro basketball player Kris Humphries was nothing more than another way for the endorsement-happy star to line her pockets, a claim that Kim has continuously denied.

If that were true, she told Kelly, then getting divorced was “a bad business decision.”

If you really think about it, she continued, “it doesn’t make sense that everyone thinks that…[I]f this was a business decision and I really made all that money that everyone was claiming we made off this wedding and if the wedding was fake and just for TV, I’m a smart business woman, I would’ve stayed married longer.”

In the end, Kim reiterates that she was just trying to follow her heart. “Me being such a hopeless romantic, I really wanted to believe in something so badly,” she told Kelly. “I really didn’t think that following my heart would create so much backlash.”

As for what she’s learned, “I learned that I just really need to rewrite my fairy tale…I just really felt like I definitely tried everything I felt like I could. I heard stories of people who had kids and stayed married for years and it ended up not working out. I want babies, and I want that forever love, and I just felt like if I feel in my heart that this isn’t right, then why wait years to have the same result.”

From : CNN

Libya, Zambia Draw 2-2

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Libya and Zambia played to an entertaining 2-2 draw at a sodden Estadio de Bata in a 2012 Africa Cup of Nations Group A game that kicked off over an hour late due to incessant rain at the venue.

Chipolopolo twice fought back from a goal down to force a draw (the first of the tournament) against the Mediterranean Knights, for whom Ahmed Osman Saad scored a brace. Zambia’s goals were netted by Emmanuel Mayuka and Christopher Katongo.

The match kicked off an hour and a quarter late due to a waterlogged pitch, and in the opening minutes it was clear that a lot of the playing surface was still very sodden and difficult for the teams.

Libya seemed to adapt to the conditions quicker and went into a shock lead after just five minutes. Walid Elkhatroushi provided a great through-ball for Ahmed Osman Saad to sprint onto and the attacker opened up the angle before striking the ball beyond goalkeeper Kennedy Mweene.

The Mediterranean Knights were then dealt a massive blow when Elkhatroushi was forced off before the 20-minute mark with injury. Ihab Albousaifi came on in his stead, but was unable to provide the same creative spark.

That signalled a change in the match as Zambia took control and began to force the North Africans onto the back foot. On 29 minutes Chipolpolo drew level at 1-1 when Emmanuel Mayuka steered home a well-placed volley from Rainford Kalaba’s teasing cross.

Such was Zambia’s dominance in the lead up to their goal and following it, that coach Herve Renard had the confidence to withdraw a defender, Francis Kasonde, and put on striker Collins Mbesuma in a very positive tactical switch on 32 minutes.

Despite Zambia’s attacking intent, the score remained 1-1 up to the half time break, though Libya did have a few nervy moments where they needed goalkeeper Samir Abod to be sharp.

The North Africans started the second half in much the same way they did the first- by taking the lead. Saad was again the man who found the back of the net, showing great persistence in the penalty area before firing home a shot via the inside of the post.

But again Libya were unable to hold onto their lead, with Zambia drawing level for a second time just six minutes after conceding.

Issac Chansa provided a brilliant assist, chesting down a cross before volleying an overhead kick that was headed home at the far post by Chris Katongo.

Both sides had further chances to add to the score line but in the end a draw was a fair reflection of the game.

The result certainly suits Zambia better than Libya, who will need to win their last game against Senegal to have any chance of progressing into the last eight.

Big Brother Africa twists: candidates must apply in pairs

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Just when DStv audiences thought that they had seen all the incredible twists and turns that mega-hit reality-TV franchise Big Brother Africa could possibly include, M-Net’s sensational series has pulled off another huge surprise.

And you know it’s a massive announcement when even the fact that this season’s brand new cash prize of a cool USD 300 000 isn’t the headline-grabbing news!

Grabbing that honour is the revelation from series producers that this season, entrants must DOUBLE-UP to compete. This means that anyone who wants to enter season 7 must partner with another person to enter as a pair!

So whether you enter with your best friend, boyfriend, girlfriend, mom, dad, brother, sister, boss, husband, wife, neighbor, hairdresser, whomever…you must just make sure that you enter as a pair. So who will take the journey of a lifetime with you? Remember you may have to spend a long time with them in the house so choose carefully!

PLUS, in another bold change, Big Brother Africa welcomes two new countries Liberia and Sierra Leone to the Big Brother house for the first time ever, while this time round, Ethiopia bows out of the game and Mozambique will take on a new role that will be announced at a later stage.

That means that this year, if you want to enter Big Brother Africa you can do so if you and your partner are citizens from one of the following participating countries: Angola, Botswana, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, Namibia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

Both partners must come from the same country, must be 21 years or older, must be fluent in English and must have a valid passport.

Interested persons can collect an entry form from the nearest MultiChoice office in their country anytime from February 5. Alternatively people can also enter by logging on towww.mnetafrica.com/bigbrother and completing an entry form online. Or download an entry form from the website, complete and email it back to [email protected]. All online entry forms will also be available from February 5. Whatever you choose to do, do it fast because the deadline for entries is February 27, 2012!

And remember that, as with previous seasons, entrants must be fun-loving, vocal, creative, original and articulate. In addition all entrants must the social flexibility to live in close proximity with others and must be tolerant of views and lifestyle choices other than their own.

Commenting on the surprise turn of events, M-Net Africa Managing Director Biola Alabi says, “we are thrilled to be offering a huge, new, USD 300 000 prize and to include two new countries who were chosen to participate based on their ongoing interest in the series and their growing DStv audiences. And while Ethiopia won’t have a housemate this year, we’ll look to include them and other non-housemate countries in other ways if the opportunity arises, as we do every season. We are and have always been proudly committed to making this a truly African show. And as for Mozambique, they will be included with a housemate – but that’s all we are saying at the moment!”

She goes on to say, “Of course, the really big news this season is that entrants must enter as pairs. In the past we’ve seen a natural and continuous cross-over between individuals and their families, their friends. So this year, we decided to include that as part of the game. It will definitely make a dramatic addition to the series so we urge people to enter and experience what will be a uniquely different Big Brother Africa!”

Produced for M-Net by Endemol South Africa, the new season of Big Brother Africa will be headline sponsored by Coca-Cola for the second consecutive year and will be screened to 47 countries across the continent, live 24/7 for 91 days on DStv channel 198. The series starts Sunday May 6.

Source: Myjoyonline.com   

Nick Cannon back in hospital

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“America’s Got Talent” host Nick Cannon said via Twitter Wednesday he is back in the hospital for a scheduled procedure.
Cannon, who is married to pop star Mariah Carey, was hospitalized earlier this month for “mild kidney failure.”
Details regarding his medical condition and what treatment he has been undergoing were not released to the public, but Cannon returned to work two weeks ago and said he has been feeling better.
Cannon said he was back in an unnamed hospital but expected to resume working Thursday.
“No worries, it’s only for the day,” he tweeted. Not an emergency. This was a scheduled procedure. I just dislike hospitals.”
Cannon did not describe the nature of the procedure.

Efya shoots world class video

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Songstress Efya Awindor’s video for her hit single, ‘A Moment’s Notice’, is scheduled to hit the music scene in the first quarter of this year.
Behind the scenes footages of the music video so far gives a deep impression that she will be serving something unique that is likely to garner worldwide attention.
Recently, legendary and world class South African musician, Hugh Masekela, compared Efya’s style of singing to Fela Kuti. “…but she was fantastic; the things she did were like medieval and artistes like that need a medieval setting. See artistes like Efya need their own club, the way Fela had the shrine. You know but she needs her own place where she can do this stuff,” he added.
The new video exonerates Hugh and places Efya on a high pedestal.
“I just don’t want to be that girl that came and sung and left,” Efya said.
The shoot began Thursday and should be done in no time. The video is directed by Nana Asihene and Paa Kwesi David under One Nation Productions and Management.
It promises a lot of interesting visuals for music video lovers and Efya’s large fan base.
As usual, the Efya factor of good voice, stage command and stage presence, among others, will all come to play in the upcoming video.
Locations for the shoot included Dei Center at Tesano and Taverna Tropicana pub off the ring road in Accra.
The video’s concept centre’s around the emotions of a young man falling for the beauty of his heart. He enters a pub, sees a framed photo of Efya and starts to hallucinate. In a moment the photo turns into Efya on stage.
The full details of the video story will however be out when the video hits the big screens. That will be heralded by behind the scenes video of the shoot.
Simply put, Efya is a legendary singer in the making and her upcoming video is her first of a series of things to happen to her music career. There are other videos to follow suit. Currently, her upcoming album is almost ready and will be out in April. There is also an upcoming nationwide tour, which is still in its planning stages.

Daily Guide

Fire destroys property at La Timber Market

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Fire gutted the Timber Market at La in the Greater Accra Region  around 0230 hours on Sunday, destroying property estimated at millions of Ghana cedis and rendering a number of people homeless.
An eye-witness, Nii Kofi Abrah III, sub-chief of Asere Kotopon of La and resident of the area said he woke up around 0230 hours and saw a thick cloud of smoke around a nearby local restaurant.
He said he raised the alarm and with the support and ingenuity of Mr George Gogoe, a fire officer in the area the fire was brought under control until the arrival of a fire tender from the Ghana National Fire Service Headquarters in Accra to curb the disaster.
The Leader of the Fire Brigade, Fire Officer Nii Amarh Ashietey told the GNA that the cause of the fire is not known.
Mr Ago Tetteh, an opinion leader of the area, has appealed to the National Disaster Management Organisation to come to the aid of the affected persons.

Darfur rebel leader’s death hampers peace effort: UN

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The killing of Darfur’s most powerful rebel leader could split his group and complicate efforts to end the fighting in the Sudanese region, the head of an international peacekeeping mission said on Wednesday.
The Darfur conflict has been rumbling on since 2003 when mainly non-Arab rebels took up arms against the Arab-dominated government in Khartoum, accusing it of political and economic neglect.
In December, the Sudanese army killed Khalil Ibrahim, head of the most militarily powerful rebel group, the Justice Equality Movement (JEM).
Ibrahim Gambari, head of the U.N./African Union (UNAMID) peacekeepers, said he feared JEM would fracture after Khalil’s death, which would hurt attempts to bring it to the negotiating table.
Apart from the ongoing fighting, divisions among the rebels are one of the biggest obstacles to peace because the international community has to deal with dozens of groups. JEM was one of the last insurgent groups of any size.
“My fear is that they might (split). They may have nobody to unify,” Gambari said in an interview.
He said JEM could splinter into several factions of field commanders if Khalil’s brother Jibril did not emerge as the new leader. In any case, the group would be unlikely to discuss resuming negotiations until they sorted out the succession.
Asked if JEM might rejoin peace talks soon, Gambari said: “I doubt they will. They just lost their leader.”
In July, Sudan signed a Qatar-sponsored peace agreement with the Liberation and Justice Movement (LJM), an umbrella organisation of small rebel groups. JEM and the other larger insurgent groups refused to join.
Many analysts fear the Doha agreement will fail like a 2006 peace deal in Abuja due to fighting and rebel divisions.
But Gambari said he was confident the Qatar deal would be more successful because it focussed on development which would help to wean support away from rebel groups.
“The peace agreement is not complete … but we want to create facts on the ground,” he said.
In contrast to the Abuja agreement, the Doha deal called for providing substantial economic aid as well as setting up special courts and a local authority, he said.
Gambari said the security situation remained a challenge but there were some positive signs, with more displaced people returning home and violence hitting an all-time low last year.
Around 300,000 people have died and some two million displaced in the vast western region, the United Nations has estimated. Khartoum puts the death toll at 10,000.
“Violence is 70 percent down (in 2011 compared to 2010),” he said. “People are returning, not in huge numbers yet, but not in insignificant numbers. People move from north to southwest.”

Out-going Health Minister Inspects Projects

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The out-going Minister of Health, Joseph Yelleh Chireh says government will fulfill its promises of ensuring that people have easy access to quality healthcare irrespective of where they live.
He said it for this reason that the government was putting up health and other facilities across the country.
Mr Chireh stated this when he inspected work on the five polyclinics under construction in various districts of the Upper West Region.
In August last year President Mills cut the sod for work to begin on the construction of the five polyclinics in four districts in the Upper West Region. The districts are Lambussie-Karni, Lawra, Jirapa and Wa West.
Each of the five polyclinics has a 24 bed capacity and staff accommodation. The tour of the Minister was meant to inspect progress of work on those projects. At Ko in the Lawra District, seventy percent of the work has been done. Workers were busily fixing tiles and doors at the clinic when the Minister and his entourage got there.
At Babile, eighty percent of the work was also done with the building already painted and doors fixed. At Lambussie, work done on the polyclinic was sixty percent. One major challenge which has been identified to impede the effective running of the facilities at Ko and Hain is the constant dust emanating from the main roads which passes in front of the facilities.
A part from the equipment which are likely to be affect by the dust, clients who visit the facilities are also being affected.
Giving his impressions on the tour, he expressed satisfaction with the work done so far, saying with the pace of work currently going on, the contractor will be able to complete all the five projects in July this year as scheduled.
The facilities he noted will enable the beneficiaries to access quality healthcare without necessarily travelling as far as they used to do.
He gave the assurance that government will post medical assistants to the areas to effectively man the facilities. He re-iterated that government will introduce incentives for doctors who will agree to serve in rural areas.
On the problem of dust, Mr Chireh said the roads leading to the facilities will be tarred to avoid the dust. He said government has increased the number of medical schools to train more doctors for distribution to remote areas.
Commenting on the delay of work on the regional hospital the out-going Health Minister said work was expected to resume this month and called on people of the region to be patient with the government.

B.M.J Seidu/Ghananewslink.com

Equatorial Guinea shocks Senegal

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Favourites Senegal crashed out of the Africa Cup of Nations after a 2-1 loss to minnows Equatorial Guinea.
Despite creating plenty of chances throughout the game, Senegal struggled to stamp their authority and were punished by a second-half goal from Iban Iyanga.
Substitute Moussa Sow netted an equaliser just before injury time, but David Alvarez popped up with the winner for Equatorial Guinea, who moved into the quarter-finals.
Senegal went all guns blazing right from the start, with the pace and skill of winger Issiar Dia causing plenty of trouble for Equatorial Guinea.
Laurence Doe made a couple of crucial interventions at the back early on as he first out-jumped Demba Ba to head away a dangerous cross in the fifth minute, and shortly after superbly dispossessed Dia.
Senegal created yet another chance shortly after as a cross from Dia found Ba completely free inside the box, but the Newcastle striker could only strike wide from 11 yards out.
Equatorial Guinea improved significantly after the break, and created a good chance in the 57th minute through Javier Balboa, who delivered a solid pass from the right wing for Thierry Fidjeu, but Souleymane Diawara was first to the ball.
The home side was rewarded moments later as a cross by David Alvarez was headed home by Iyanga from inside the box to put Senegal on the brink of elimination.
Cisse missed a great chance in the 71st minute, when he was released near the penalty spot, but chose to pass back instead of shoot from eight yards.
Senegal found the goal they deserved in the 89th minute through substitute Sow, who scored with an acrobatic finish.
Alvarez, however, had the final say scoring with a thunderous long-range strike in injury time.
Laurence Doe was sent off moments later, but it mattered little as Equatorial Guinea progressed.
In the rain-affected earlier game, Libya midfielder Ahmed Saad Osman gave his country the lead twice, but Zambia grabbed a share of the spoils in a 2-2 draw.
Walid Al Khatroushi provided a defence-splitting pass for Osman who slotted past badly-positioned Zambia goalkeeper Kennedy Mweene.
Zambia equalised through an acrobatic Mayuka volley on 28 minutes after Rainford Kalaba had provided an intelligent cross into the penalty box.
Libya surprised their opponents with another Osman goal three minutes into the second half.
Chisamba Lungu’s failed clearance allowed the Club Africain player to wriggle his way past a second defender, slicing his shot in off the post.
The north Africans’ lead lasted even less than their first one, though, and it only took nine minutes for the Zambians to pull level again, this time through a Katongo header off a spectacular Mayuka scissor-kick cross.
The result leaves the Zambians on four points and severely dents the Libyans’ already slim chances of qualifying