The Benefits of Curcumin in Cancer Treatment 
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death. What if there was a  safe, natural herb that could work for nearly every type of cancer? 
 According to Dr. William LaValley, who focuses most of his clinical work on the treatment of cancer, curcumin—a  derivative of turmeric, and the pigment that gives the curry spice  turmeric its yellow-orange color—may fit the bill. It's a natural  compound that has been extensively researched, and has been found to  have numerous health applications.
 Like me, Dr. LaValley was trained in general medicine, but he's  devoted a considerable amount of time to understanding the biochemical  pathways that can support health nutritionally. 
 In 1982, he participated in an exchange program to the People's  Republic of China, where he got first-hand experience with the ancient  practices of traditional Chinese medicine and acupuncture.
 "One of the important messages that I learned there was that  natural products, natural molecules, from plants and animals that are  already available in nature, have been used by the Chinese for at least  hundreds, probably thousands of years. That deeply changed my  perspective in the world of medicine," he says. 
"I came back to medical school, and thereafter, looked at how I  could integrate the perspective of conventional pharmaceutical  administration as well as natural extract, natural product  administration." 
Curcumin Has Potent Anti-Cancer Activity
In 2005, he took a 75 percent sabbatical from clinical practice to  immerse himself in the science of molecular biology, specifically the  molecular biology of cancer. He also devoted approximately 9,000-9,500  hours building a relational database from the PubMed literature about  the molecular biology of cancer. 
 One important lesson he learned through that venture is that the  understanding of molecular biology can be applied across a range of  diseases and symptoms described in the scientific literature. That  knowledge can be applied by searching PubMed and other related  databases, looking at the relevant molecular pathways involved. 
 "In learning the molecular biology of cancer pathways, and in  learning that what the evidence actually shows for the effect of natural  product extracts on various relevant molecular targets in various  cancers, we see that there's actually quite a large amount of evidence  that supports using various molecules, natural products, and  pharmaceuticals that are already approved and that have been around for a  long time to affect anti-cancer activity along that pathway at that  target. That's called molecularly targeted anti-cancer treatment, and  it's widely practiced in oncology today.
What's not widely practiced is the use of the  natural products for the molecularly targeted anti-cancer activity. I  provide that for my patients because the evidence base suggests and  supports the use of these treatment recommendations."
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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