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Sunday, June 30, 2013

Update June 30th, 2013.

Hello All!!!

Dianita and emma are currently in Bogota, Colombia, for an ongoing treatment that includes: psychologist,  IV's of vitamins (I know some are B12, C....), Ozone IV, etc. All controlled and followed carefully by specialized doctors in this areas. Diana is taking every couple hours the special Chinese herbs given by Dr. Botton also.

The tumors are still present on the nose and right side where the last surgery was, but we feel that the growth has slowed down at least....

The food Diana is taking, is all the recommended vegetables, juices, and grains.... Mom Maritza, sister Caro and Daniela are on top of this....! =) So we are very faithful that things will get better everyday now.....

I use this message also to give you all a huge "thank you" again to all who have helped us in one way or another..!!! without that, Diana would not have been able to do so many necessary things towards her healing....words may not express all the love we have received unconditionally...



Emma went with us before Diana left, to the beach and touched the ocean waters for the first time!!! Here is the pic we would like to share with all....


Love to ALL......







Friday, June 21, 2013

June 21st./2013 - update

Hello all!!

Dianis is keeping control of any tumors in the face through several processes, a big component is a self healing one that she must continue to do everyday.  Dr. Botton is now helping a lot with a whole treatment of acupuncture several times a week, and a strong herb cocktail including xue fu zhu yu tang.... And dr. Lam will continue with local control which is today....

She will be traveling next week to Bogota to continue the treatment with Santiago Rojas for just two weeks and then return down here.

She continues strong and with very positive attitude....

Thanks!!!!



Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Junio 13, 2013 - actualización

Hola a todos!

Dianita estuvo ayer nuevamente donde Dr. Lam, y le realizo una pequeña infiltración en un tumor que ha ido creciendo en la fosa nasal del lado izquierdo, y se espera que este empiece a disolverse en unos dos días... Esto para controlar estos crecimientos... El Dr le puso una dosis de artimisine y una nueva hierba China que no recuerdo el nombre pero la colocare aquí pronto...  

Seguimos con mucha fe y amor a todos los tratamientos que se han ensayado. Pronto dianita debe hacerse una resonancia magnética en la cabeza para ver como esta todo x dentro...

Emmita esta grande y fuerte! Creciendo ya casi con 3 meses y medio...! Ver fotico... Esta acompañándonos estas semanas la abuelita Luz Elvira....

Gracias!!!




Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Investigators Sequence the Genome of ACC...!!!


A new article about Dianitas type of Cancer!!! Good news.....

http://www.mskcc.org/blog/investigators-sequence-genome-rare-head-and-neck

Investigators Sequence the Genome of a Rare Head and Neck Cancer

Pictured:  Timothy ChanPhysician-scientist Timothy Chan
Since the completion of the Human Genome Project in 2003, many researchers have turned their efforts toward sequencing the genomes of various kinds of cancer. Collaborative groups including The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), a government-funded project created to accelerate our understanding of the molecular basis of cancer, have published genomic information on lung, ovarian, and colorectal cancers, among others.
Memorial Sloan-Kettering has played a role in many of these multicenter efforts, sharing both tumor samples and the expertise of its clinician-scientists. But despite these efforts, these studies only examine a small fraction of the many different types of human malignancies. Now our investigators have performed complete sequencing and analysis of a large set of a rare head and neck cancer called adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC), which is an aggressive form of salivary gland cancer.
“Sequencing rare cancers such as ACC is a great way for Memorial Sloan-Kettering to take the lead in unraveling cancer genomics,” says Timothy A. Chan, a radiation oncologist and investigator in the Human Oncology and Pathogenesis Program (HOPP), and the senior author of the study, which was published online May 19 in Nature Genetics. “Just as we have the specialized knowledge and experience to treat rare cancers in the clinic, analyzing their genomics is an area where we believe we can make an important contribution.”

An Enigmatic Malignancy

ACC is one of the most difficult cancers to treat. Some patients are cured by surgery alone, but the disease can return or spread to other parts of the body, and no known chemotherapy agent is effective, although many patients are treated with radiation therapy. The cancer, which affects 800 to 1,000 people in the United States annually, can recur for as many as ten to 15 years after treatment.
Until the current study, little was known about the molecular changes that lead to these cancers. The investigators sequenced 60 matched pairs: the complete genomes or exomes of tumor samples from 60 patients along with normal tissue samples from those same 60 patients.
“By comparing the mutational landscape of tumors to normal DNA and comparing tumors with other tumors, you can determine which genes are mutated in these cancers and also how these tumors can differ from one another,” Dr. Chan explains.
The investigators found that ACC tumors could be divided into three general subtypes: those with mutations in PI3-kinase pathway genes, which encode enzymes involved in cell growth and proliferation; those with mutations in chromatin remodeling genes, which control how other genes are expressed; and those with mutations in a pathway called Notch, which also modifies gene expression.
Targeted therapies are already in development for these three types of mutations in other cancers, raising hope that clinical trials for ACC could start quickly.

Quiet Genomes

The most surprising part of the discovery was that ACC tumors carry very few mutations when compared with most other solid tumors.
“We call these quiet genomes,” Dr. Chan explains. “Breast and lung cancer are very noisy, with about 100 times more mutations than ACC. This is one of the main reasons why targeted therapies for those cancers usually work for only a short time.”
Because ACC tumors have so few mutations, Dr. Chan and his colleagues expect that targeted therapies against them will be more effective than for many other cancers with similar mutations. He compares the number of mutations seen in ACC to the number in chronic myeloid leukemia, a type of blood cancer for which targeted therapies have been very effective.
“It is very unusual for a solid tumor to have so few mutations,” he adds.

Sunday, June 2, 2013

June 1st. Update

Hello!!

Diana continues her treatment and taking a lot of care with the food.

She started lately a different approach with the TCM treatment and results seem to be promising; her tumors are still blocking the nose passages, but pieces have fallen and the swollen parts have been reduced a lot.

The ethanol dissolves the tumor but causes swelling also, and pain. So the new procedures include local cupping to remove stagnated blood and make that part were tumors are, to flow more renewed blood.
The palate is still hurting and it'sdifficult eating hard things, so Diana has been taking more creams and soups...

We continue on this journey that takes us to a complete healing.....