• Join Us!
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • Join Us!

  • Get the Fitness Geared Forum App Now!
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer


  • Join Us!
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • alchohol causes cancer
  • Join Us!
  • You have 1 new Private Message Attention Guest, if you are not a member of Fitness Geared - Body Building & Fitness Community, you have 1 new private message waiting, to view it you must fill out this form.
  • Amused
  • Angry
  • Annoyed
  • Awesome
  • Bemused
  • Cocky
  • Cool
  • Crazy
  • Crying
  • Depressed
  • Down
  • Drunk
  • Embarrased
  • Enraged
  • Friendly
  • Geeky
  • Godly
  • Happy
  • Hateful
  • Hungry
  • Innocent
  • Meh
  • Piratey
  • Poorly
  • Sad
  • Secret
  • Shy
  • Sneaky
  • Tired
  • Wtf
  • Thanks Thanks:  0
    Likes Likes:  0
    Dislikes Dislikes:  0
    Results 1 to 12 of 12

    Thread: alchohol causes cancer

    1. #1
      ketsugo's Avatar
      ketsugo is offline *BANNED*
      Points: 3,957, Level: 26
      Level completed: 53%, Points required for next Level: 143
      Overall activity: 0%
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      ----
       
      Join Date
      Dec 2010
      Location
      New England Pats Land
      Posts
      612
      Points
      3,957
      Level
      26
      Rep Power
      0

      Default alchohol causes cancer



      • Get the Fitness Geared
        Forum App Now!
      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer

      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer
      Alcohol causes cancer, and here’s the evidence

      Alcohol causes at least seven types of cancer
      This week, the Department of Health is launching a new advertising campaign to raise awareness of how alcohol can affect your health in the long-term.
      Many of us are aware of the short-term effects of drinking too much – feeling sick, a hangover, a spot of embarrassment, a vague but hard-to-pin-down sense of guilt – but the long-term effects often slip under the radar. These include a higher risk of many cancers, heart disease, stroke and more.
      Cancer Research UK is supporting the new campaign so we wanted to use this blog post to discuss some of the science around alcohol and cancer.
      So is alcohol really linked to cancer?
      Yes. Surveys tell us that only about a third of people realise that alcohol can increase the risk of cancer but actually the evidence in this area has been very strong for a number of decades.
      The International Agency for Research on Cancer produces reports that are widely seen as the gold standard for working out what causes cancer and what doesn’t. They first said that there is “sufficient evidence” that “alcoholic beverages are carcinogenic to humans” way back in 1988. Since then, many more studies have been published. There are too many to list completely here, but this is a good review for the scientifically minded among you. IARC, incidentally, confirmed their ruling in 2007, and again last year.
      Which cancers are affected? And how many?
      Alcohol causes at least seven types of cancer, including cancers of the mouth, oesophagus (food pipe), pharynx (upper throat), larynx (voice box), breast, bowel and liver. There is also increasing evidence linking alcohol to pancreatic cancer.
      Estimating the number of cancers that are linked to alcohol is always going to be a rough business. One analysis by IARC estimated that in Western European countries like the UK, around 5 per cent of cancers are linked to alcohol, which works out to around 15,000 cases a year. In the Oxford Textbook of Medicine, Professors Richard Doll and Richard Peto estimated that 6 per cent of cancer deaths in the UK are caused by alcohol, adding up to around 9,000 a year.
      What level of drinking affects the risk of cancer?
      There is a clear linear relationship between the amount of alcohol someone drinks, and their cancer risk. In other words, the more people drink, the higher their risk.
      But cutting back drinking so you don’t feel drunk doesn’t mean you avoid risks to your health. Alcohol can increase the risk of cancer at levels too low to make an average person drunk. Studies have consistently shown that as little as three units a day – the amount in a pint of strong lager or a large glass of wine – can significantly increase the risk of mouth, oesophageal, laryngeal, breast and bowel cancers. At this level, the risks are fairly small but they get bigger the more you drink.
      However, it seems that alcohol only increases the risk of liver or pancreatic cancers if people drink large amounts. This is because alcohol affects the risk of these cancers by causing cirrhosis or pancreatitis, conditions that are linked to heavy drinking.
      Which is worse: binge drinking or spreading my drinking across the week?
      We don’t actually know, and this is one of the big holes in the current evidence. Imagine someone who generally drinks nothing during the week but then knocks them back at weekends. So far, there’s not been enough research to tell if they have a higher or lower risk of cancer compared to someone who drinks the same total amount, but spread throughout the week.
      There are hardly any published studies looking at the effects of different drinking patterns. One study suggested that weekend drinking had particularly strong effects on the risk of breast cancer, but it’s not conclusive in itself. As we said above, it’s the total amount that matters.
      How high are the risks?
      There’s a good meta-analysis (an overview of existing studies) that compares the effects of different levels of drinking on different cancer types. By collecting the results of previous studies, this analysis concluded, for example, that drinking 6 units a day (around 2 pints of strong lager):
      • increases the risk of mouth cancer by 3 times (200 per cent)
      • increases the risk of oesophageal cancer by 2 times (100 per cent)
      • increases the risk of breast cancer by 55 per cent
      • increases the risk of bowel cancer by 10-19 per cent
      These figures are “relative risks”. They show how a person’s odds of developing cancer change as they drink, but they don’t tell you what those odds were in the first place. Those are called “absolute risks”.
      For example, for a woman, the lifetime risk of breast cancer (the odds of developing the disease at some point in one’s life) is 11 per cent or 1 in 9. If that goes up by 55 per cent, the new absolute risk becomes 17 per cent or 1 in 6.
      For a man, the lifetime risk of oesophageal cancer is 1.3 per cent or 1 in 75. If that doubles, the new absolute risk is 2.6 per cent or 1 in 38.
      It is worth noting that breast and bowel cancer are far more common than mouth or oesophageal cancers so the absolute risk of developing these cancers is much higher. Even if that risk goes up by a relatively small amount, that translates to a large number of actual cases. For example, the Million Women Study concluded that if 1,000 UK women under the age of 75 drank an extra unit a day, they would develop 15 extra cancers, 11 of which would be breast cancer.
      How do these studies actually work?
      There are two main types. “Case-control studies” compare people with cancer to healthy people to see if differences in their drinking habits are linked to their disease. “Cohort studies” are generally stronger. They follow large groups of healthy people, collect detailed information about their lifestyle, medical history and more, and see what happens to their health over the course of years or even decades.
      In both cases, it is important to collect information on other aspects of a person’s lifestyle that could also affect their risk of cancer. For example, if you were studying the link between alcohol and mouth cancer, it’s important to account for whether people smoked or not, since smoking is a major cause of mouth cancer and smoking and drinking often go hand-in-hand. Likewise, being overweight also causes cancer, and drinking alcohol can make people put on weight. These are called “confounding factors” and scientists use statistical methods to adjust for them. In this way, they can consider the effects of alcohol alone.
      Typically, scientists measure alcohol consumption with questionnaires that ask people to report how much they drink. These questionnaires have an obvious drawback in that they rely on people being honest rather than playing down how much they drink – and indeed this is a criticism frequently levelled at studies of alcohol consumption.
      But actually, it turns out that alcohol drinking is measured very well by questionnaires, at least for those used by the best and biggest studies. For example, the Million Women Study validated their questionnaire by comparing it to a 7-day food diary where participants write down everything they eat/drink on a daily basis for a week. They found a good level of agreement between the two measures. The EPIC study validated its questionnaire against actual urine and blood samples and found that alcohol was actually one of the parts of people’s diets most accurately measured by the questionnaires.
      How does alcohol actually cause cancer?
      There are probably many answers to this question because alcohol does a lot of things in our bodies. First and foremost, your body converts alcohol into a toxic chemical called acetaldehyde – responsible for many of the symptoms of a hangover. But acetaldehyde can also damage DNA – it sticks bulky molecules onto the famous double-helix and prevents our cells from repairing this damage.
      Genetic studies support this idea. Some people in East Asian countries, like China and Japan, have genetic faults that either make them better at converting alcohol to acetaldehyde, or worse at getting rid of acetaldehyde. Either way, they build up unusually high levels of this chemical when they drink. And when they drink, they have a higher-than-usual risk of cancer.
      As well as producing acetaldehyde, alcohol can also boost levels of oestrogen in the body, which could explain the link with breast cancer. And it increases the odds of developing cirrhosis, which, in turn, causes liver cancer. Finally, it can also make it easier for the tissues of the mouth or throat to absorb other cancer-causing chemicals, such as those found in cigarette smoke.
      Do all types of alcohol affect the risk of cancer? Even wine? What about red wine?
      You’ll see from the section above that, as far as cancer goes, the harmful effects of alcohol are common to all drinks, rather than any specific type. All alcoholic drinks, for example, produce acetaldehyde in the body.
      There are some disagreements. Take wine, for example. It is difficult to untangle the possibility that wine consumption could simply be linked to generally healthier lifestyles. Some studies have found that wine increases the risk of cancer to a lesser degree than beer or spirits, others have said that it has the same effect, and yet others have concluded that it’s particularly harmful when it comes to cancers of the mouth or throat. For example, the Million Women Study found that women who only drank wine have similarly higher risks of cancer than those who drank all types of alcohol.
      Red wine contains a chemical called resveratrol, which has some anti-cancer effects in laboratory cells. Many studies are looking at resveratrol as a possible drug for treating or preventing cancer, but as we’ve discussed elsewhere on this blog, this is a far cry from saying that red wine could protect people from cancer. A purified form of a chemical is not the same as the food or drink that contains it, and work in laboratory cells doesn’t automatically translate to effects in living people.
      Isn’t some alcohol good for you?
      There is evidence that drinking small amounts of alcohol can reduce the risk of heart disease in certain age groups. However, heavy drinking increases the risk of heart disease. Interestingly, a recent review of the global effects of alcohol estimated that alcohol causes twice as many cases of heart disease as it prevents.
      We have to weigh up the heart disease effect against the links between alcohol and cancer, high blood pressure, some types of stroke, cirrhosis, liver disease, pancreatic disease and more. One analysis of 34 studies found that people who drink less than a unit a day have around 17-18 per cent lower risks of “total mortality”, which means that at any given age, they are less likely to die of any cause. These benefits disappear at roughly the level of alcohol drinking that the Government guidelines are set at.
      It’s also important to realise that the benefits of light-drinking only applies to older age groups. According to one study, if you look at overall mortality, there is no beneficial level of drinking for women under 55 or men under 35.
      The balance between the risks of cancer, heart disease and other conditions is why we are not suggesting that anyone avoids alcohol altogether. Instead, Cancer Research UK’s advice is to limit one’s drinking to one small drink a day for women (which is about two units a day) and two small drinks a day for men (about three to four units a day).
      However, the important point is that, as we said above, there is a linear relationship between the amount you drink and your risk of cancer. This means that whatever you drink already, cutting down by some amount will help to reduce your risk. And, of course, doing so is entirely down to individual choice.
      Alcohol and cancer
      • There is no doubt that alcohol can cause seven types of cancer.
      • The more you cut down on alcohol, the more you reduce your risk of cancer.
      • There is limited risk if you only drink a little - such as one small drink a day for women or two for men.
      • You don’t need to be drunk to increase your risk.
      • Drinking and smoking together are even worse for you.
      The consequences of drinking too much alcohol go well beyond the evening’s embarrassing antics or the morning’s hangover. Scientific studies have confirmed that alcohol can also cause cancer.
      Obviously, not everyone who drinks will develop cancer. But on the whole, scientists have found that cancer is more common in people who drink alcohol than people who don’t.
      Which cancers are affected?
      Drinking alcohol can increase your risk of:
      • Mouth cancer
      • Pharyngeal cancer (upper throat)
      • Oesophageal cancer (food pipe)
      • Laryngeal cancer (voice box)
      • Breast cancer
      • Bowel cancer
      • Liver cancer
      Every year, alcohol causes about 6% of cancer deaths in the UK, killing over 9,000 people.
      Along with smoking, alcohol causes the vast majority of mouth and food pipe cancers. In the last decade, mouth cancer has become much more common and this may be because of higher levels of drinking.
      Can light drinking increase the risk of cancer?
      Alcohol can increase the risk of cancer at levels far too low to make an average person drunk. It’s not just people who have ‘drinking problems’ who have higher risks.
      As little as 3 units a day can increase the risk of mouth, throat, food pipe, breast and bowel cancers. That’s the amount in one pint of premium lager or a large glass of wine!
      Alcohol has a weaker effect on the risk of breast cancer than on other cancers, but it starts having an effect at a lower level.
      What about heavy drinking?
      The more alcohol you drink, the higher your risk of developing cancer. Heavy drinking can cause cirrhosis of the liver, which can in turn cause liver cancer.
      Heavy drinking can also cause heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure, stomach ulcers, pancreatitis and, of course, injuries.
      Are there safe limits?
      There is limited risk if you only drink a little, such as:
      • one small drink a day for women (about two units a day).
      • two small drinks a day for men (about three to four units a day).
      But remember that:
      • your risk increases the more you drink, and
      • some drinks may contain more alcohol than you imagine.
      Which is worse: binge drinking or spreading my drinking across the week?
      Research tells us that the total amount of alcohol you drink over time has a much bigger effect on cancer risk than when or how it is drunk.
      People are more likely to develop cancer if they drink a lot of alcohol, no matter whether they save it up and drink it in one go, or drink it steadily over a week.
      Does drinking matter if you smoke?
      People who smoke and drink multiply the damage they receive, because tobacco and alcohol work together to damage the cells of the body. Alcohol makes it easier for the mouth and throat to absorb the cancer-causing chemicals in tobacco.
      Studies have found that, on average, people who smoke and drink are up to 50 times more likely to get some types of cancer than people who neither smoke nor drink.
      Do all types of alcohol increase the risk of cancer?
      All types of alcohol increase the risk of cancer, even red wine. It is the alcohol itself that does the damage, regardless of whether it is in the form of beer, wine or spirits.
      Elsewhere in this section, you can read about whether alcohol has any benefits for your health.
      Why are women recommended to drink less than men?
      The slightly different recommendations for men and women are based on biological differences between the two sexes.
      • A woman’s liver produces less of an enzyme called alcohol dehydrogenase that breaks down alcohol. So alcohol stays in a woman’s body for longer.
      • There is some evidence that drinking just one unit of alcohol a day can significantly increase the risk of breast cancer. Smaller bodies can absorb less alcohol than large ones and on average, women are smaller than men.
      • Because of their curvy shape, women also tend to have more body fat and less body water than men. This means that any alcohol a woman drinks becomes more concentrated in her body that it would be in a man of the same size.

    2. #2
      Dzone's Avatar
      Dzone is offline Super Moderator
      Points: 118,339, Level: 100
      Level completed: 0%, Points required for next Level: 0
      Overall activity: 44.0%
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      Happy
       
      Join Date
      Mar 2008
      Posts
      17,387
      Points
      118,339
      Level
      100
      Blog Entries
      2
      Rep Power
      500

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      Great information, bro. Two thumbs up. I love being a non drinker. I wont even take a sip. There is nothing good about alcohol. Not one single thing.

    3. #3
      ketsugo's Avatar
      ketsugo is offline *BANNED*
      Points: 3,957, Level: 26
      Level completed: 53%, Points required for next Level: 143
      Overall activity: 0%
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      ----
       
      Join Date
      Dec 2010
      Location
      New England Pats Land
      Posts
      612
      Points
      3,957
      Level
      26
      Rep Power
      0

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      Quote Originally Posted by Dzone View Post
      Great information, bro. Two thumbs up. I love being a non drinker. I wont even take a sip. There is nothing good about alcohol. Not one single thing.
      I new there was something I felt a kindred connection to you about LOL. I never drink- hate it, the taste, the feeling, people that drink being around them yuck yucky blah

    4. #4
      daved150's Avatar
      daved150 is offline Platinum
      Points: 161,310, Level: 100
      Level completed: 0%, Points required for next Level: 0
      Overall activity: 4.0%
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      ----
       
      Join Date
      Dec 2004
      Location
      detroit
      Posts
      20,776
      Points
      161,310
      Level
      100
      Rep Power
      1114

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      really? huh...peopel seem to like me better drunk than sober...wait...have i ever been sober?
      HE WHO MAKES A BEAST OF HIMSELF, GET'S RID OF THE PAIN OF BEING A MAN!!


      https://www.infinitymuscle.com/forum.php







      "Actually for once your actually starting sound quite logical!"-djdiggler 07/10/2007

      I LOVE BOOBOOKITTY...

    5. #5
      rocco-x's Avatar
      rocco-x is offline Platinum
      Points: 11,380, Level: 70
      Level completed: 33%, Points required for next Level: 270
      Overall activity: 0%
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      Happy
       
      Join Date
      Mar 2009
      Posts
      387
      Points
      11,380
      Level
      70
      Rep Power
      68

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      great info Ketsugo...!wish i knew this years ago,altho i did have fun,from what i was told,lol.isn't it funny how two of the most dangerous substances,tobacco and alcohol,are legal and advertised like they're great but mention aas,HGH,ancillaries,etc and you're put in a class with heroin users,drug dealers and the like.all cause the government makes crazy coin on the taxes from these items.our government,the biggest mob around.if they don't have their hands in it to make profit then it's deemed as illegal.strange...
      "Who me? I'm like 500lbs. Who me? I'm like at least 150. What do I weigh? I'm like 7ft tall" Lester Beetlejuice Green

    6. #6
      ketsugo's Avatar
      ketsugo is offline *BANNED*
      Points: 3,957, Level: 26
      Level completed: 53%, Points required for next Level: 143
      Overall activity: 0%
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      ----
       
      Join Date
      Dec 2010
      Location
      New England Pats Land
      Posts
      612
      Points
      3,957
      Level
      26
      Rep Power
      0

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      Rocco- thats true, isnt it really messed up, that alchohol is so increadibly bad for you, kills you slowly or others get taken indeirectlyby drunk driving- yet look at how profitable a business it is. How much money do bars and restaurants make off the liqiuor sad sad world. Then they try to make you think that there are health benefits- based on twisted perceptions of a study or two.

    7. #7
      daved150's Avatar
      daved150 is offline Platinum
      Points: 161,310, Level: 100
      Level completed: 0%, Points required for next Level: 0
      Overall activity: 4.0%
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      ----
       
      Join Date
      Dec 2004
      Location
      detroit
      Posts
      20,776
      Points
      161,310
      Level
      100
      Rep Power
      1114

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      everything causes cancer!!! processed meats....sprayed vegtables, canned corn, shmores, red jelly beans, yellow m&m's....list goes on....you live long enough, you'll get cancer
      HE WHO MAKES A BEAST OF HIMSELF, GET'S RID OF THE PAIN OF BEING A MAN!!


      https://www.infinitymuscle.com/forum.php







      "Actually for once your actually starting sound quite logical!"-djdiggler 07/10/2007

      I LOVE BOOBOOKITTY...

    8. #8
      badcompany487's Avatar
      badcompany487 is offline Senior Resident
      Points: 10,183, Level: 67
      Level completed: 34%, Points required for next Level: 267
      Overall activity: 0%
      Achievements:
      First 1000 Experience PointsGot three Friends
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      ----
       
      Join Date
      Oct 2010
      Location
      michigan
      Posts
      975
      Points
      10,183
      Level
      67
      Rep Power
      72

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      Daves opinions are also cancerous fyi
      LIFT BIG, EAT BIG, GET BIG!

    9. #9
      firstenrgy's Avatar
      firstenrgy is offline Platinum
      Points: 24,080, Level: 94
      Level completed: 73%, Points required for next Level: 270
      Overall activity: 0%
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      ----
       
      Join Date
      Jun 2003
      Location
      Conservative Paradise
      Posts
      2,161
      Points
      24,080
      Level
      94
      Rep Power
      163

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      I'll be caressing my martini glass tonight gently saying "don't listen, all is okay"
      A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have. -Thomas Jefferson

    10. #10
      6p6's Avatar
      6p6 is offline Super Moderator
      Points: 103,722, Level: 100
      Level completed: 0%, Points required for next Level: 0
      Overall activity: 29.0%
      is armed and ready...R U?
       
      I am:
      Wtf
       
      Join Date
      May 2003
      Location
      the desert
      Posts
      12,316
      Points
      103,722
      Level
      100
      Rep Power
      592

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      Quote Originally Posted by firstenrgy View Post
      I'll be caressing my martini glass tonight gently saying "don't listen, all is okay"
      I will be doing the same to my wine glass! Sorry guys but I don't think a drink or two a night can cause cancer not when people been drinking like that since man figured out how to ferment fruit. I will agree 100% that alcohol is a killer with long term over abundance useage. It also will kill you because your it makes you stupid in the brain with bad decisions like driving your car, having sex with someone you shouldn't, letting depression take over and you kill yourself, beating someone up etc etc etc...

      Now weed! Thats good stuff we are already a lazy society so why not go with it! lmao!

    11. #11
      Dzone's Avatar
      Dzone is offline Super Moderator
      Points: 118,339, Level: 100
      Level completed: 0%, Points required for next Level: 0
      Overall activity: 44.0%
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      Happy
       
      Join Date
      Mar 2008
      Posts
      17,387
      Points
      118,339
      Level
      100
      Blog Entries
      2
      Rep Power
      500

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      ^LMAO!!!!

    12. #12
      Dzone's Avatar
      Dzone is offline Super Moderator
      Points: 118,339, Level: 100
      Level completed: 0%, Points required for next Level: 0
      Overall activity: 44.0%
      This user has no status.
       
      I am:
      Happy
       
      Join Date
      Mar 2008
      Posts
      17,387
      Points
      118,339
      Level
      100
      Blog Entries
      2
      Rep Power
      500

      Default Re: alchohol causes cancer

      • Get the Fitness Geared
        Forum App Now!
      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer

      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer
      • alchohol causes cancer
      I don't drink alcohol, but I would not judge anyone who does.

    Posting Permissions

    • You may not post new threads
    • You may not post replies
    • You may not post attachments
    • You may not edit your posts
    •  
    Pro Wrists Straps
    Join us
    About us
    www.Fitnessgeared.com is a Bodybuilding Fitness health & Training Discussion forum for all levels from beginner to advanced. We offer everything from Nutrition, Supplements, Fat Loss, Weight Training, Dieting, to achieve your goals to get in the shape you want.