Do Hot Baths Help Uncomplicated Pancolonic Diverticular Disease?
I asked Google AI the question in the title of this post and received this answer.
Yes, hot baths and warm compresses may help to relieve the pain and muscle spasms associated with uncomplicated pancolonic diverticular disease, or diverticulitis, by relaxing abdominal muscles and improving blood circulation to the area. While there’s no evidence that heat cures diverticulitis, it is a simple, non-invasive way to soothe cramps, and your doctor may recommend it alongside other self-care measures.
When my late wife was alive, this was our morning routine.
- I would bring her a cup of hot Marmite and often I would run her a hot bath.
- C liked her baths very hot.
- After she had got dressed and gone off to work, I would often use her hot bath to have a good soak.
- Both of us, weren’t too keen on showers, but we never complained about water usage or the other’s cleanliness.
These days, I generally have a hot bath every day.
Can Uncomplicated Pancolonic Diverticular Disease Make You Feel Listless?
I asked Google AI the question in the title of this post and received this answer.
Yes, while uncomplicated diverticular disease often causes no symptoms, some people can experience listlessness (fatigue or general unwellness) from either the inflammation of diverticulitis or chronic symptoms like bloating and pain. Fatigue can stem from infection, inflammation, disrupted sleep, nutritional deficiencies, or the impact of chronic pain. If you’re experiencing persistent listlessness, it’s important to speak with a healthcare provider, especially if it’s accompanied by other symptoms like fever, severe abdominal pain, or changes in bowel habits.
I have certainly suffered from listlessness over the years, but until recently, I have always had a good woman ; my mother or C, to perk me up.
Study Highlights Increased Risk Of Second Cancers Among Breast Cancer Survivors
The title of this post, is the same as that of this news story from the Cambridge University.
This is the sub-heading.
Survivors of breast cancer are at significantly higher risk of developing second cancers, including endometrial and ovarian cancer for women and prostate cancer for men, according to new research studying data from almost 600,000 patients in England.
These are the first three paragraphs of the story.
For the first time, the research has shown that this risk is higher in people living in areas of greater socioeconomic deprivation.
Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in the UK. Around 56,000 people in the UK are diagnosed each year, the vast majority (over 99%) of whom are women. Improvements in earlier diagnosis and in treatments mean that five year survival rates have been increasing over time, reaching 87% by 2017 in England.
People who survive breast cancer are at risk of second primary cancer, but until now the exact risk has been unclear. Previously published research suggested that women and men who survive breast cancer are at a 24% and 27% greater risk of a non-breast second primary cancer than the wider population respectively. There have been also suggestions that second primary cancer risks differ by the age at breast cancer diagnosis.
I have a few thoughts.
The Data
The story says this about the data.
To provide more accurate estimates, a team led by researchers at the University of Cambridge analysed data from over 580,000 female and over 3,500 male breast cancer survivors diagnosed between 1995 and 2019 using the National Cancer Registration Dataset. The results of their analysis are published today in Lancet Regional Health – Europe.
A large number of cases were analysed and with these types of analysis, more is definitely better.
I would hope that this study will be repeated in a few years, when more data is available.
The Death Of My Wife
This happened to my late wife.
At about 55 in 2004, my wife developed breast cancer. Strangely, it was in the same position, where a car air-bag had bruised her breast, when it went off in an accident, a few years before.
Chemotherapy was recommended and she tried one round at home, but she couldn’t get on with it.
So she eventually had a long course of radiotherapy in Harley Street going up every day on the train. She was also doing as many court cases as she could to pay for it all.
It appeared everything had worked well and in the Autumn of 2007, she was given the all clear for the breast cancer.
But in October 2007, she was diagnosed with a squamous cell carcinoma of the heart.
She died in December 2007 at just 59.
My wife’s second cancer and her death seems to fit the pattern of the patients in the news story.
My Wife’s Genetic Background
This is rather bare, as she was adopted. Although, I do have her plaits from, when the cut them off at 18, as she’d kept them and I found them after she died.
But she didn’t come from a deprived background.
I Am Coeliac
If I have one regret, it’s that I didn’t encourage her to go gluten-free after the first cancer.
It might have boosted her immune system to help.
Conclusion
Anybody, who has breast cancer must beware a second attack of cancer.
Uf it can kill my fit 59-year-old wife, it can kill anyone.
The Great Cadaver Shortage: Inside Doctors’ Latest Crisis
The title of this post, is the same as that of this article in The Times.
This is the sub-heading.
Faced with a dwindling supply of fresh bodies to train on, British medical schools are having to turn to America’s low-regulation ‘tissue trade’. Would you donate yours, asks Jenny Kleeman
My late wife, C; left her body to medical science and I may well choose to do the same with my body.
She left her body to St. George’s Medical School, mainly because one of her friend’s mother had done the same and there had been no problems.
Looking back on the nearly twenty years since she died, I remember a few months after her death, there was a multi-faith joint Memorial Service in Southwark Cathedral for all those who’d donated their bodies, in the previous year.
None of my family were or are religious, but I’m sure the service helped our grieving, as it was a very moving and inclusive service, that was the Church of England at its best, with assistance from other faiths.
Perhaps if donation were to be linked to support for the bereaved and perhaps a Memorial Service, this might increase the level of donations.
What sort of affect would it create in a city like Liverpool, if the yearly service alternated around the major places of worship in the city and was well-covered on local media?