Recommended Reading: Women's Health

Here are some of my favorite books on women's health.
I started this post in 2010 but I update this list frequently.
I hope you will enjoy them as much as I did.

        Check out these links for other books:


Cosmetics Unmasked
By Stephen Antczak, PhD and Gina Antczak





Eight Weeks to Women's Wellness
By Marianne Marchese, N.D.

The Garden of Fertility
By Katie Singer


Origins: How the Nine Months Before Birth Shape the Rest of Our Lives
By Annie Murphy Paul


Pushed: The Painful Truth About Childbirth and Modern Maternity Care
By Jennifer Block


Real Food for Mother and Baby
By Nina Planck





Taking Charge of Your Fertility
By Toni Weschler, MPH


The Wisdom of Menopause
By Christiane Northrup, MD





Women's Bodies, Women's Wisdom
By Christiane Northrup, MD





Women's Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine: Alternative Therapies and Integrative Medicine for Total Health and Wellness
By Tori Hudson, ND


Younger Next Year for Women
By Chris Crowley and Henry S. Lodge, MD

Recommended Reading: Health and Medicine

Here are some of my favorite books on health and medicine.
I started this post in 2010 but I update this list frequently.
I hope you will enjoy them as much as I did.

        Check out these links for other books:


    Anticancer: A New Way of Life
    By David Servan-Schreiber, MD, PhD





    Big Fat Lies: The Truth about Your Weight and Your Health
    By Glenn A. Gaesser





    Clean, Green, & Lean
    By Walter Crinnion, ND

    Cosmetics Unmasked
    By Stephen Antczak, PhD and Gina Antczak





    Disconnect: The Truth About Cell Phone Radiation, What the Industry Has Done to Hide It, and How to Protect Your Family
    By Devra Davis




    Epigenetics: How Environment Shapes Our Genes 
    By Richard C. Francis

    Exposed: The Toxic Chemistry of Everyday Products and What's at Stake for American Power
    By Mark Schapiro




    Green Housekeeping
    By Ellen Sandbeck


    Hippocrates’ Shadow
    By David H. Newman, MD 






    The Hundred Year Lie: How Food and Medicine are Destroying Your Health
    By Randall Fitzgerald



    The Instinct to Heal: Curing Stress, Anxiety, and Depression without Drugs and Without Talk Therapy
    By David Servan-Schreiber, MD, PhD 




    Lights Out: Sleep, Sugar, and Survival
    By T.S. Wiley



    Live a Little!
    By Susan Love, MD and Alice Domar, PhD



    Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine is Making Us Sicker and Poorer
    By Shannon Brownlee




    Rethinking Thin: The New Science of Weight Loss and the Myths and Realities of Dieting
    By Gina Kolata





    Self-Hypnosis and Subliminal Technology 
    By Eldon Taylor
    The Untold Story of Milk: The History, Politics and Science of Nature's Perfect Food: Raw Milk from Pasture-Fed Cows by Ron Schmid, ND




    Younger Next Year
    By Chris Crowley and Henry S. Lodge, MD





    Younger Next Year for Women
    By Chris Crowley and Henry S. Lodge, MD





    Zapped: Why Your Cell Phone Shouldn't Be Your Alarm Clock and 1,268 Ways to Outsmart the Hazards of Electronic Pollution
    By Ann Louise Gittleman

    Recommended Reading: Healthy Eating

    Here are some of my favorite books on healthy eating.
    I started this post in 2010 but I update this list frequently.
    I hope you will enjoy them as much as I did.

            Check out these links for other books:


    Animal, Vegetable, Miracle
    By Barbara Kingsolver





    The Art of Fermentation: An In-Depth Exploration of Essential Concepts and Processes from Around the World 
    By Sandor Ellix Katz


    Bottomfeeeder: How to Eat Ethically in a World of Vanishing Seafood
    By Taras Grescoe







    Eat Fat, Lose Fat
    By Mary Enig, Ph.D. and Sally Fallon

    Eating in the Dark
    By Kathleen Hart





    Fast Food Nation
    By Eric Schlosser





    Fields of Plenty: A Farmer's Journey in Search of Real Food and the People Who Grow It
    By Michael Ableman




    Food Rules
    By Michael Pollan





    Good Calories, Bad Calories: Fats, Carbs, and the Controversial Science of Diet and Health
    By Gary Taubes




    Healing Spices: How to Use 50 Everyday and Exotic Spices to Boost Health and Beat Disease
    By Bharat B. Aggarwal, PhD




    The Hundred Year Lie: How Food and Medicine are Destroying Your Health
    By Randall Fitzgerald



    Hunt, Gather, Cook: Finding the Forgotten Feast
    By Hank Shaw


    In Defense of Food
    By Michael Pollan





    The Locavore's Handbook
    By Leda Meredith





    The Omnivore's Dilemma
    By Michael Pollan





    The Omnivore's Dilemma For Kids
    By Michael Pollan





    The Paleo Diet: Lose Weight and Get Healthy by Eating the Foods You Were Designed to Eat
    By Loren Cordain. PhD 




    Plenty: Eating Locally on the 100-Mile Diet
    By Alisa Smith and J.B. MacKinnon





    Probiotic Foods for Good Health: Yogurt, Sauerkraut, and Other Beneficial Fermented Foods
    By  Beatrice Trum Hunter




    Real Food
    By Nina Planck





    Real Food for Mother and Baby
    By Nina Planck





    Ultrametabolism
    By Mark Hyman, MD






    The Untold Story of Milk: The History, Politics and Science of Nature's Perfect Food: Raw Milk from Pasture-Fed Cows by Ron Schmid, ND

    The Way We Eat: Why Our Food Choices Matter
    By Peter Singer and Jim Mason


    Why We Get Fat 
    By Gary Taubes





    The Wild Table: Seasonal Foraged Food and Recipes
    By Connie Green and Sarah Scott

    Thermography for Breast Cancer Detection

    The use of body temperature to diagnose disease dates back to 480 B.C. when Hippocrates wrote about spreading mud on his patients, suspecting the areas that dried first might indicate possible problems in underlying organs. Since then, technological progress has made thermography, a modern technique for measuring body temperature, possible.

    Thermography has been studied for its usefulness in breast cancer detection since 1956 and the United States Food and Drug Administration approved it as an adjunctive screening tool in 1982. The popularity of screening mammography caused thermography to fall out of favor, but recent revelations about the limitations and adverse effects of mammograms has renewed interested in this promising alternative.

    The Difference

    While mammograms measure anatomy, thermograms measure physiology. Mammography uses compression and ionizing radiation to take pictures of breast tissue, making the procedure painful and increasing the risk of developing cancer. Thermography is a painless test that uses infrared imaging to detect heat patterns on the surface of the skin related to inflammation, blood flow and angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels. Angiogenesis is a critical step in the growth of cancer because as abnormal cells increase in number, so do their requirements for oxygen and nutrients, the food needed to fuel proliferation. To meet their expanding needs, tumors generate new vessels to increase blood flow, and this in turn increases skin temperature.

    Earlier Detection

    Because inflammatory and vascular changes related to cancer growth can be detected sooner than solid tumors, which may take years to grow large enough to block x-ray beams and be identified on mammograms, thermograms can identify signs of malignancy in its earliest stages. Some experts estimate that thermography recognizes cancerous or pre-cancerous changes up to ten years earlier than any other procedure, mammography included.

    Because earlier detection can lead to earlier treatment and improved prognosis, thermograms offer significant survival benefits. A study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology followed almost 500 women diagnosed with breast cancer for five years. Only one of the two groups was screened with thermography. For these women, thermograms tested positive (abnormal), finding malignant cells before physical breast exams and mammograms, which tested negative (normal), could detect them. Both groups were given identical treatment and, after five years, the women whose cancer was detected by thermography lived longer. Screening thermograms increased survival by 61 percent.

    Increased Accuracy

    Another distinguishing difference between thermography and mammography is its accuracy. Mammograms correctly diagnose cancer only three percent of the time, according to a Harvard study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. In contrast, studies have shown that thermograms are highly sensitive and specific. (Sensitivity is the percentage of accurate positive results and specificity is percentage of accurate negative results.) A review of 15 large-scale studies published in the International Journal of Thermal Sciences concluded that breast thermography had an average sensitivity and specificity of 90 percent. Some studies have found sensitivity as high as 98 percent and specificity as high as 94 percent. With false positive rates of 10 percent on average, and as low as two percent, thermography is significantly more accurate than mammography, which has false positive rates as high as 97 percent.

    Thermograms are notably more accurate in individuals who have large breasts, because excessive amounts of tissue can make mammograms difficult to read, and those who have dense breasts, common in younger women. For those who have a higher risk of developing breast cancer, thermography makes starting screening at earlier ages not only safer, but also much more effective.

    The Bottom Line

    Research has shown that abnormal thermograms are the most important indicators in predicting the development and recurrence of breast cancer. Experts even estimate that they are up to 10 times more significant than family history (having a mother, sister or daughter diagnosed with the disease). Because thermograms are painless, noninvasive, reliable and free of side effects, this alternative to screening mammography should be made available to all women.

    References

    Fletcher SW and Elmore JG. Mammographic Screening for Breast Cancer. New England Journal of Medicine, 348(17):1672-1680, 24 Apr 2003.

    Gautherie M. Thermobiological assessment of benign and malignant breast diseases. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 147(8):861-9, 15 Dec 1983.

    Gros C and Gautherie M. Breast Thermography and Cancer Risk Prediction. Cancer, 45:51-56, 1980.

    Haberman J. The present status of mammary thermography. CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 18: 314-321,1968.

    Louis K, Walter J and Gautherie M. Long-term assessment of breast cancer risk by thermal imaging, Biomedical Thermology, Alan R. Liss, Inc. pp. 279-301, 1982.

    Ng EY-K. A review of thermography as promising non-invasive detection modality for breast tumor. International Journal of Thermal Sciences, 48(5):849-859, May 2009.

    Ng EY et al. Computerized detection of breast cancer with artificial intelligence and thermograms. Journal of Medical Engineering and Technology, 26(4):152-7, Jul-Aug 2002.

    Stark  A and Way S. The Screening of Well Women for the Early Detection of Breast Cancer Using Clinical Examination with Thermography and Mammography. Cancer, 33:1671-1679, 1974.

    Mammograms Misunderstood

    The United States Preventive Services Task Force recently changed their recommendations regarding screening mammography. After a thorough review of the research, this independent panel of experts appointed by the Department of Health and Human Services concluded that most women should be tested every two years between the ages of 50 and 74, replacing previous recommendations for yearly lifelong tests starting at age 40.

    The new guidelines have been met with confusion and outrage. Critics have dismissed them as a cost-cutting measure and described them as “a giant step backward.” The new recommendations have been called “deadly for women” and even “gendercide.” Although they could save billions of dollars in unnecessary testing and treatment, the financial savings are only a bonus. The new guidelines really are good for women and a review of the literature can quickly clear up the controversy.

    Zero Benefit

    In 2001 the benefits of screening mammography underwent serious scrutiny by the well-respected Cochrane Collaboration, an international, independent, not-for-profit research organization. They performed an objective and systematic review of the seven largest screening mammography studies ever done and examined the effects in a half million women from the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and Sweden.

    Two of the seven studies met the gold standard for research: randomized controlled trials. They followed 130,000 women for 13 years and compared women who received regular mammograms to those who did not. Researchers found that the rate of death from breast cancer, and from any other cause, was the same in both groups. When all seven studies were considered, mammograms were still not associated with a statistically significant reduction in the risk of death. Surprising as these studies are, the results are clear: screening mammography does not save lives.

    False Positives

    Mammograms are positive when abnormal tissue is detected. False positive tests occur when mammograms mistakenly identify cancer in normal tissue. A 2005 review of randomized controlled trials published in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that 95 percent of positive mammography results are false. A Harvard study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that only three percent of abnormal mammography results were valid, making the frequency of failure 97 percent.

    False positive results can be a grave matter. A study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that 47 percent of women with high-suspicion mammograms experience substantial anxiety. While most women are relieved to learn that their test results were wrong and they do not have cancer, many suffer unnecessary emotional turmoil.

    Harmful Effects

    Screening mammography can have other harmful effects. Women with false positive results are needlessly subjected to biopsies, lumpectomies and associated adverse effects, including pain, infection and scarring. Those with true positive results are too often treated for cancers that would have otherwise gone unnoticed. A 2009 study published in the British Medical Journal concluded that one out of every three breast cancers identified on screening mammograms is overdiagnosed and would not cause symptoms or death. The surgery, chemotherapy and radiation used to treat these tumors are always harmful. Side effects and complications can include mouth sores; fatigue; vomiting; digestive problems; skin rashes; hair loss; damage to peripheral nerves; changes in brain function affecting memory, concentration and learning; premature menopause; leukemia (cancer of the blood); and death.

    Ionizing radiation from mammograms is another valid concern. It can damage genetic material in cells and cause cancerous mutations. These tests are used to find cancer, but taking too many of them can also cause cancer. This detail has been overlooked in the past because the benefits of mammograms – saving lives – were thought to outweigh the harmful effects. But for most women, screening mammography does not save lives and the risks associated with radiation can no longer be ignored. There is a direct relationship between cumulative exposure to radiation and the risk of cancer, so the more mammograms (and other procedures involving ionizing radiation like CT scans) that women receive over their lifetimes, the more likely they are to develop cancer.

    Some Exceptions

    Screening mammography may not reduce the risk of death for most women, but for certain women, the benefits can outweigh the dangers. Women who have the highest risk for developing breast cancer have the most to gain from screening tests. These include women with two first-degree relatives (mother, daughter, sister) or second-degree relatives (aunt, grandmother) diagnosed with breast cancer before the age of 50; women who have three first- or second-degree relatives with breast cancer diagnosed at any age; individuals with a history of chest radiation between the ages of 10 and 30; and those who have a known gene mutation linked to breast cancer. These individuals should talk to their doctor about the best screening schedule for them.

    Diagnostic mammograms are another exception. Unlike screening mammography, which is performed on healthy women, diagnostic mammography is used to evaluate known breast problems. For women with lumps, tissue abnormalities, nipple discharge or a history of cancer, these tests can provide life-saving information for diagnosis and treatment.

    Accurate Alternative

    Thermography is a promising alternative to mammography. This infrared imaging technique is painless, non-invasive and free of radiation. It measures heat patterns on the surface of the skin related to blood flow and angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels. Angiogenesis is a critical step in the growth of cancer because as abnormal cells increase in number, so do their requirements for oxygen and nutrients, the food needed to fuel proliferation. To meet their expanding needs, tumors generate new blood vessels to increase blood flow, which increases skin temperature.

    Because these vascular changes can be detected sooner than solid tumors, which may take years to grow large enough to block x-ray beams and be identified on mammograms, thermograms can identify signs of cancer in its earliest stages. Some experts estimate that thermography recognizes cancerous or pre-cancerous changes up to 10 years earlier than any other procedure, mammography included.

    Studies have shown that thermograms are also much more accurate than mammograms. A review of 15 large-scale studies published in the International Journal of Thermal Sciences concluded that breast thermography had an average sensitivity and specificity of 90 percent. (Sensitivity is the percentage of accurate positive results and specificity is percentage of accurate negative results.) Other studies have found sensitivity as high as 98 percent and specificity as high as 94 percent. With rates of false positive and false negative results averaging only 10 percent, thermography is an accurate alternative to mammography.

    The Bottom Line

    Like any medical procedure, the pros and cons of mammograms must be considered carefully. Given the frequently false positive results, lack of benefit and exposure to radiation, screening mammography is not an effective tool for detecting breast cancer in the general population. For most women, preventive measures are much more beneficial: exercising regularly, maintaining an ideal weight, breastfeeding, avoiding pesticides and eating a healthy diet that includes seven or more daily servings of fruits and vegetables, especially cruciferous and dark green leafy vegetables.

    REFERENCES

    Elmore JG, Fletcher SW et al. Screening for breast cancer. Journal of the American Medical Association, 293(10):1245-56, 9 Mar 2005.

    Fletcher SW and Elmore JG. Mammographic Screening for Breast Cancer. New England Journal of Medicine, 348(17):1672-1680, 24 Apr 2003.

    Gøtzsche PC, Nielsen M. Screening for breast cancer with mammography. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2009, Issue 4. Art. No.: CD001877. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD001877.pub3.

    Griffey RT and Sodickson A. Cumulative radiation exposure and cancer risk estimates in emergency department patients undergoing repeat or multiple CT. American Journal of Roentgenology, 192(4):887-92, Apr 2009.

    Haberman J. The present status of mammary thermography. CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 18: 314-321,1968.

    Jorgensen KJ and Gøtzsche PC. Overdiagnosis in publicly organised mammography screening programmes: systematic review of incidence trends. British Medical Journal, 339:b2587, 9 July 2009.

    Lerman C et al. Psychological and behavioral implications of abnormal mammograms. Annals of Internal Medicine, 114(8):657-61, 15 Apr 1991.

    Nelson HD et al. Screening for breast cancer: an update for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. Annals of Internal Medicine, 151(10):727-37, W237-42, 17 Nov 2009.

    Ng EY-K. A review of thermography as promising non-invasive detection modality for breast tumor. International Journal of Thermal Sciences, 48(5):849-859, May 2009. DOI:10.1016/j.ijthermalsci.2008.06.015.

    Ng EY et al. Computerized detection of breast cancer with artificial intelligence and thermograms. Journal of Medical Engineering & Technology, 26(4):152-7, Jul-Aug 2002.

    Stark A and Way S. The Screening of Well Women for the Early Detection of Breast Cancer Using Clinical Examination with Thermography and Mammography. Cancer 33:1671-1679, 1974.