| I
think if you were to take these kind of 'tumor' cancers as a
group, which would otherwise be considered rare cancers, and not focus so much on where they show up in the liver
or kidney or nervous system or reproductive system or blood or
lymph or bones ... A cluster category of their own ... you might get a different 'take'
|
Testicular
Seminoma
Germ
cell cancers
Neuroblastoma (child
and adult) info
Neuroendocrine
Carcinoma in the Colon
Neuroendocrine
Cancer
Medulloblastoma
Adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD)
as
reproductive harm to a woman & then child
Ewing's
Sarcoma (adult)
located on sciatica nerve or
along
the lower abdominal wall
Rhabdomyosarcoma
Gastro
Intestinal Stromal Sarcoma (GIST)
Epitheliod
Hemangioendothelioma
(liver sarcoma)
Hemangioendothelioma,
Epithelioid Hemangioendothelioma etc
vascular cancers
Waldenstrom's
Macroglobalinemia
Pleomorphic
Hyalinizing Angiectatic (PHAT)
Sarcomatoid
Carcinoma of unknown primary
Osteosarcoma
Malignant
Fibrous Histiosarcoma * Randy
Malignant
Fibrous Histiocytoma
Metaplastic
Squamous Carcinoma of the breast
Metaplastic
Mammary Carcinoma *
Paget's
disease (breast)
Malignant
Phyllodes Tumor (breast)
monophasic synovial sarcoma
(breast)
Cervical
Dysplasia
Adeno
carcinoma of the endocervix
Synovial sarcoma
Synovial
Cell Sarcoma--a cancer that attacks the joints and can spread to the
lung This
is the cancer that Robert Urich had
Renal
synovial sarcoma
Biliary Cancer/Bile Duct Cancer
Bile
Duct Adenocarcinoma
Spindle
Cell Sarcoma
Malignant
Paraganglioma
Neural
Sheath Sarcoma
Epthiliod
Sarcoma
Sandoval
Sarcoma Carcinoma
Fallopian Tube Cancer
Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma
Mucinous
Adenocarcinoma
Cholangiocarcinoma
Anaplastic thyroid cancer
Esophical
cancer related to tylosis
Lung
Cancer/chest fluid
PHEOCHROMOCYTOMA
Leiomyosarcoma
Uterine
Leiomyosarcoma
Acinic
Cell Adenocarcinoma of the parotid gland
Myelodysplastic
Syndrome
Testicular Cancer came back in lung and bone.
|
Maybe
you are dealing with a causal factor that attacks the bone and
the lung independently?
|
Dermatofibrosarcoma Protruberans DFSP,
a nodular
melanoma
Islet Cell Carcinoma
Small Intestine Adenocarcinoma
Adrenocortical Cancer - Adrenocortical carcinoma
Multiple Myeloma, assoc with Amyloidosis
Myelofibrosis
Metaplastic carcinoma
Mesenchymal
Chondrosarcoma
Adenoidal
Cystic Carcinoma
Adenocarcinoma
or Small Bowel Cancer
Glomus
tumor/malignant paraganglioma
Gall
Bladder Cancer
Anal
cancer - Anal
Margin Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Cancer
of the Appendix
Chordoma
Burkitts Lymphoma
Liposarcoma of the thigh
Duodenal tumor
Mesothelioma
Leomyosarcoma
t-cell lyphoma (fungoides mycosis)
Sarcoma cancer
Stomach Cancer
Intra-ocular
Melanoma (Eye cancer)
Primary central nervous system lymphoma or
CNS
LYMPHOMA
Non hodgkin's lymphoma in the brain - PAD, B-cell lymphoma NHL
Acute
Promyelocytic Leukemia
Sarcomatoid Carcinoma
Small Cell Cervical Cancer
Lyomyosarcoma-uterine
muscle
LEIOMYOSARCOMA
Cholangio carcinoma
Choriocarcinoma
Mesenchymal
Chondrosacoma
Thymus Cancer
Ampullary Cancer
Carcinoid
cancer - Intestinal
Desmoid Tumors (low grade sarcomas)
Fibromatosis
Liposarcoma
of the thigh
Primary
Cardiac Lymphoma
Urethral Cancer
Urachal
carcinoma
adenocarcinoma
of the bladder originating in the urachus
Pancreatic
cancer - small
cell
Glucagonoma-Pancreatic
Islet Cell Cancer
Peritoneal Mesothelioma
Hepatocellular Liver Cancer
Liver Cancer-Fibro Lamellar
Hepatocellular
Nasopharyngeal
cancer
Sinonasal Undifferentiated Carcinoma
SNUC
Anaplastic Ependymoma
acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL)
Brain
tumors *
such
as Oligodendroastrocytoma, GBM tumors
Astrocytoma
- an astrocytoma brain tumor
And more? Any
with Spleen Removed?
&
what about these autoimmune things? *
| My thought is that if you were
to group many of these 'rare' tumor type cancers into a single
category & consider a chemical exposure such as those with
CFS or CFIDS or 'gulf war syndrome' groups could have ... that
you may see a pattern develop |
|
|
TABLE 1-1 Summary of Findings in
Occupational, Environmental, and Veterans Studies Regarding
the Association Between Specific Health Problems and Exposure
to Herbicides
Sufficient Evidence of an
Association
Evidence is sufficient to
conclude that there is a positive association. That is, a
positive association has been observed between herbicides
and the outcome in studies in which chance, bias, and
confounding could be ruled out with reasonable confidence.
For example, if several small studies that are free from
bias and confounding show an association that is consistent
in magnitude and direction, there may be sufficient evidence
for an association. There is sufficient evidence of an
association between exposure to herbicides and the following
health outcomes:
Soft
tissue sarcoma
Non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma
Hodgkin's
disease
Chloracne
Porphyria
cutanea tarda (in genetically susceptible individuals)
Limited/Suggestive Evidence
of an Association
Evidence is suggestive of
an association between herbicides and the outcome but is
limited because chance, bias, and confounding could not be
ruled out with confidence. For example, at least one
high-quality study shows a positive association, but the
results of other studies are inconsistent. There is
limited/suggestive evidence of an association between
exposure to herbicides and the following health outcomes:
Respiratory cancers
(lung, larynx, trachea)
Prostate cancer
Multiple myeloma
|
|
Dioxin should cause: Chloracne is a
specific acne-like skin disorder; PCT is a liver
disorder characterized by thinning and blistering of the skin ...
but not all the other ... |
The list below, are the
primary concerns of the Vietnam Vet, although the report I
saw indicated there was inadequate or insufficient
evidence to determine whether an association exists between
exposure to herbicides and the following health outcomes,
This is the list of harm
that would be expected from a pesticide,
solvent, endocrine
disruptor, teratogen,
poison, neurotoxin, such as 2-butoxyethanol
... and if there were 'a list'
to be shared on the 'gulf war syndrome' vet ... or those
with CFS or CFIDS in the general population, it appears that
it would be
pretty much the following, as well:
Hepatobiliary cancers
Nasal/nasopharyngeal
cancer
Bone cancer
Female reproductive
cancers (breast, cervical, uterine, ovarian)
Renal cancer
Testicular cancer
Leukemia
Spontaneous abortion
Birth defects
Neonatal/infant death
and stillbirths
Low birthweight
Childhood cancer in
offspring
Abnormal sperm
parameters and infertility
?
Cognitive and
neuropsychiatric disorders
Motor/coordination dysfunction
Peripheral nervous
system disorders
Metabolic and digestive
disorders (diabetes, changes in liver enzymes, lipid
abnormalities, ulcers)
Immune system disorders
(immune modulation and autoimmunity)
Circulatory disorders
Respiratory disorders
They don't think so on
these?
Skin cancer
Gastrointestinal tumors
(stomach cancer, pancreatic cancer, colon cancer, rectal
cancer)
Bladder cancer
Brain
tumors
Looks like what this
chemical would do ... and some in the military have said
that the Dioxin mixes were mixed with 'kerosene' for it to
adhere to the foliage. Suspect 2-butoxyethanol to be
in that mix, somewhere,
as
this total list, is what it does.
Look for
the 'clues' |
What
happened to the Vietnam Vet?
to
the Cold War Korean Vet?
|
If Dioxin was the
'fall guy' for the Vietnam vets' harm,
and DU, vaccinations
and Saran Gas were the 'fall guy'
for the first Gulf War,
What's the
'fall guy' for
today's harm going to be?
*
*
* *
*
If we look more
at
what
2-butoxyethanol would do,
is it still a 'match?'
*
Will we check into this? *
|
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