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Debating The Atheist - Sayed Mohammed Baqer Qazwini & Dr. Rabbie Hanna
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24/03/22
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The Life Of Sayeda Zaineb (sa) - Hajjah Nada Najar
أظهر المزيد
Transcript
[0:56]you you you you you you you you salamualikum' jami an wa
[9:14]rahmatullahi wa barakaatuh smille ar-rahman ar-rahim o salat wa salam ala al
[9:20]anbiya wa l-mursalin say 'i do not wanna be in our Habibi
[9:25]yalla bina Muhammad Allah elevated leaping upon hearing thank you for joining
[9:31]us the Saturday morning for another faith Community Health Initiative presentation before
[9:36]I introduce the guest speakers I just want to give a brief
[9:41]introduction to the committee for those who are first-time attendees my name
[9:45]is Ahmed owada and I am one of the board members of
[9:47]the faith community health initiative located here at the Islamic Institute of
[9:50]America faith community health focuses on the intentional care of the spirit
[9:57]as well as the promotion of holistic health and Prevention or minimization
[10:02]of illness within the context of a faith community we have an
[10:07]amazing committee consisting of multidisciplinary health professionals we all have a passion
[10:12]for helping improve the health and well-being of our faith congregation through
[10:16]providing resources education culturally sensitive trainings and community engagement we will have
[10:24]three tracks to address the needs of the community a wellness and
[10:29]Prevention track a mental health track and an end-of-life and chronic illness
[10:33]track our mission is to advance the physical mental and spiritual health
[10:37]of the Muslim faith community so we can grow a strong healthy
[10:41]community and everyone should have received a survey if you can fill
[10:44]that out on your way out we would greatly appreciate it our
[10:48]session today is titled what to do with a cancer diagnosis presented
[10:52]by dr.
[10:54]Ravi Ahana and dr.
[10:54]Zeta Wahab so we will begin with our first speaker dr.
[10:59]Robbie Hanna did his ob/gyn residency at Wayne State University and Detroit
[11:04]Medical Center followed by fellowship in gynecologic oncology at the University of
[11:10]North Carolina Chapel Hill he is currently a staff gynecologic oncologist starting
[11:14]Henry Ford Health and associate clinical professor at Wayne State School of
[11:18]Medicine please help me welcome him with a loud so allah muhammad
[11:22]wa ala muhammad salam alikom florica to belong solely Allah Muhammad Ali
[11:40]Mohammed so me and my colleague and brother doctors and Wahab we've
[11:44]been friends for masha'Allah almost close to 30 years now both of
[11:50]us are gonna ecological oncologists so we deal with a lot of
[11:53]cancer diagnoses and we have seen that one of the we have
[11:56]with a lot of just our community is how to deal with
[12:01]this cancer diagnosis and what to do what are the backgrounds that
[12:04]some that we would expect what we would want people to understand
[12:09]and know so today we will handle a lot of things that
[12:11]we use in terms that we use and give a simple understanding
[12:15]of what we mean by some of the idioms that we use
[12:17]or words that we use and will kind of allude to some
[12:23]myths or ideas that are in the community about cancer next slide
[12:27]please so basically what is cancer when we talk about cancer it
[12:37]is in an abnormal growth of cells so usually what happens is
[12:44]that our cells when they grow and create the organs or would
[12:48]they repair themselves during our normal a so for example if we
[12:51]think about having an incision a cut on our skin the tumor
[12:56]the cells grow with each other okay until they reach a point
[12:59]where they know they should not grow anymore now we know we
[13:06]see the scar is that's overgrowth a more exaggerated scar is the
[13:11]keloid okay and that's even more gross so that's what how we
[13:16]think about cancer now but with catheters unlimited grow so it keeps
[13:20]on growing and growing and growing it could cause a space L
[13:22]a spatial effect where it causes pressure on the surrounding systems the
[13:27]affected from a space standpoint we could affect it from a pressure
[13:30]standpoint for example if the tumor is growing on the bowel the
[13:38]intestine and then it blocks the intestine or it could affect the
[13:41]function also for example blood cancer would affect the function of the
[13:45]blood of the blood cells next slide please so here for example
[13:51]this is the the center this is where the tumor cells are
[13:54]and these are the normal cells next slide please now with cancer
[14:01]with well not all cancers but with some cancers we have what
[14:06]we call the precancerous lesion so from left to right we will
[14:14]look yes thank you how are you these are normal cells here
[14:17]we see one cell is becoming abnormal we still don't call this
[14:24]cancer here we sell more abnormal cells but they don't cause any
[14:28]effect and they're still not causing cancer but pay attention to this
[14:32]what we call the basement membrane it's kind of a thickened tissue
[14:37]between these two levels of tissue at this level here this is
[14:42]what we call pre cancer or dysplasia if we can identify this
[14:49]beforehand and remove it then we have prevented cancer from growing in
[14:54]that organ now if we miss it for some reason or another
[14:59]and it continues to grow then it goes into forming actual cancer
[15:02]and the management would could become different based on the organ next
[15:10]slide please now screening so we have the ability for some cancers
[15:16]to do a test to find the pre cancer lesion and then
[15:24]prevent cancer from happening next slide please for example cancer of the
[15:28]cervix they who are intolerant we are able to see the cervix
[15:35]on examination we swipe it with certain instruments like a brush and
[15:39]we examined the cells the microscope if there's any cell that represents
[15:44]a precancerous lesion then that tells us to go in and possibly
[15:51]take biopsies or anything so that's one form of screening now screening
[15:55]has guidelines the guidelines are based on what we see nationally for
[16:00]example in America we have certain guidelines we start screening for silver
[16:05]cancer at certain age and so on next slide please for example
[16:09]we have the colonoscopies and not on basically what it is a
[16:16]camera goes in inside the anus and it goes all the way
[16:18]up and examines the entire colon and when the surgeon or the
[16:23]gastroenterologist sees a polyp or a lesion they will take it out
[16:29]most of the time if there's if it's a pre cancer then
[16:31]that could cure it or if it's a cancer they might do
[16:36]something else now of course this one also has guidelines for example
[16:39]for colonoscopies anybody who's 50 years old has to have a colonoscopy
[16:43]if it's normal it's repeated every 10 years some people come and
[16:48]say well I want to do it every year so I make
[16:49]sure there's no cancer it makes sense logically or perceptional II but
[16:54]there's no data to support that so we rely on what is
[17:00]published next slide now how do we diagnose cancer we could develop
[17:06]a suspicion of a cancer presence by physical examination okay if I
[17:10]examine the abdomen and if there's a tumor somewhere that will give
[17:16]me a sense of there's something abnormal I might result I will
[17:21]then that might lead me to biopsies if I see the cervix
[17:25]and there's something on the cervix I will take a cut of
[17:27]that lesion and that will give me an answer if it's a
[17:31]cancer or not I might use some blood work that could give
[17:34]me a reflection is there cancer is there not cancer if there
[17:41]is what is my suspicion some cancers rely solely on the blood
[17:46]and blood work numbers the values and others don't so again I'm
[17:50]just giving a general idea of these and we might do radio
[17:54]tests x-rays CT scans MRIs PET scans one misconception people think that
[18:04]the PET scan which is the most expensive one of these is
[18:07]going to give the best results now there are some cancers where
[18:12]the pest the PET scan is what we need and there are
[18:15]other cancers where the PET scan has limited value when I say
[18:18]limited value we say when you compare a PET scan to a
[18:24]CT scan for that cancer is the is there any information that
[18:30]would change what I do that's what we rely on so we
[18:32]because we don't want to order expensive tests that don't make a
[18:35]difference in what we do next slide please so treatments of cancer
[18:45]it's all dependent on where the cancer is it could be a
[18:49]combinate just the use of surgery it could be a combination of
[18:52]surgery than radiation there could be a combination of chemotherapy and radiation
[18:58]without surgery but all depends on what type of cancer which organ
[19:04]is affected what stage the cancer is coming from next slide please
[19:11]now when the patient and the family go to the doctor and
[19:19]they talk about treatment we always talk about what is the right
[19:23]treatment to do so this is this takes us to the term
[19:28]what is standard of care what that means is that I expect
[19:31]if this patient goes anywhere in the country they will give them
[19:39]the same recommendation of treatment okay that's what we call standard of
[19:43]care and this is where we say we don't recommend treatments on
[19:47]personal experience in the general sense of cancer unless we have certain
[19:53]unique circumstances for example if I have somebody who comes to me
[20:01]and we think we have an ovarian cancer we know nationally and
[20:05]internationally as of now as of today the best treatment is surgery
[20:09]followed by chemotherapy let's say that patient goes to doctor X in
[20:17]a different place and that person says in my experience you're better
[20:22]off doing chemotherapy only that is not considered standard of care okay
[20:28]so when a patient goes and ask for treatments that one of
[20:32]the questions that we ask is is that standard of care meaning
[20:38]are you relying on national guidelines that direct you towards the right
[20:44]treatment without using your personal experience there might be some different options
[20:51]of standard of care that's where the personal experience might be reflected
[20:55]based on the data locally and nationally we also have what we
[21:03]call clinical trials a lot of people think of clinical trials as
[21:06]a negative option because they think they're experimenting on them and this
[21:10]is where we have to break down what a clinical trial is
[21:15]basically a clinical trial it means that we are going to try
[21:18]something new now most clinical trials we look at a standard of
[21:25]care option and compare it to a standard of care option plus
[21:30]something experimental now each scenario each disease state if it's early diagnosis
[21:39]and initial diagnosis or if it's a recurrence those options are that
[21:43]clinical trial might change but the majority of time we revert to
[21:51]clinical trials where we believe the option of experimental drug will make
[21:56]a difference for us and there are some clinical trials that we
[22:00]have evaluated where we believe that we say you know what we
[22:03]don't believe this is appropriate care so we don't use those clinical
[22:10]trials next slide please one of the very very important issues is
[22:14]when we have a diagnosis of cancer is you have a good
[22:22]oncology team now you as a layperson how can you evaluate if
[22:27]that oncology office is a good office for you to follow or
[22:32]not or should you really take your care go somewhere else so
[22:36]it begins from scheduling you will have a good sense of how
[22:40]organized the office is in scheduling your appointments in preparing the paperwork
[22:47]for your appointments and doing their homework to see you for example
[22:52]when I have a new patient come to me my office arrange
[22:58]all the paperwork gets all the studies from the referring physician and
[23:01]I have it beforehand before I see the patient because I want
[23:05]to study about the patient before I meet that patient so and
[23:09]then also look at what are the components of that office meaning
[23:15]who for example when you come in if somebody comes and sees
[23:17]me or doctor's aide who is it who's at the team is
[23:22]it just him by himself that might be too much there might
[23:23]be too much strain that's compared to having nurses and nurse practitioners
[23:27]or assistants and do we have tumor boards what that means is
[23:34]am I going to meet with other people in my specialty in
[23:37]my location and talk about patients or am I just going to
[23:42]give my personal opinion that's very important so we can reach a
[23:45]consensus opinion and of course also is that office going to tell
[23:51]me how I can communicate with them what if I have a
[23:54]question so if my patient leaves the office day and at home
[23:58]they thought of five questions do they have to make an appointment
[24:00]can they call all of that is going to be essential because
[24:06]the communication between visits is very very important so we don't lose
[24:11]any information and then also a lot of people think or believe
[24:15]that if they come and see me and they want to get
[24:20]a second opinion that I would be insulted by getting a second
[24:23]opinion the majority of us we welcome second opinions we welcome third
[24:27]opinions because the our goal is to serve the patient and our
[24:33]ego so next slide please this segues to my brother dr.
[24:40]Sejal Wahab I'm going to interest doctors in Oaxaca document left the
[24:46]room basically dr.
[24:47]Zeile Wahab finished his residency in ob/gyn away State University Detroit Medical
[24:51]Center and then that was followed by a fellowship on gynecologic oncology
[24:56]at Wayne State University at Carr monos and then he is now
[25:03]a senior gynecologic oncologist at Beaumont and he the associate professor at
[25:10]the auckland university beaumont hospital right mashallah colonic I call hanami because
[25:17]he looked up to him so it's okay so next part of
[25:25]the lecture I'll be talking about misconceptions and myths about cancer that
[25:30]commonly we get asked about almost every day or every week and
[25:33]in our offices can we have next slightly so it's cancer a
[25:45]death sentence dad no can you click on it next next so
[25:54]it's not the most important thing with cancer diagnosis is to be
[25:58]able to diagnose it earlier so currently the survival has improved dramatically
[26:02]90% of the patients with the most common cancers like breast cancer
[26:07]or prostate cancer actually survive more than five years after diagnosis the
[26:12]most important thing with cancer is is being able to diagnose it
[26:15]early the earlier the diagnosis of cancer the more chance of cure
[26:20]and the less chance of this cancer coming back again in the
[26:25]future so survival has improved dramatically in the last 2025 years and
[26:29]it's getting better and better every year with new chemotherapy drugs and
[26:35]new medications and treatments for cancer next line will eating sugar make
[26:40]my cancer worse it's a very common question I get asked about
[26:44]it almost every day yeah I get asked about this question everyday
[26:48]okay should I stop sugar with sugar cause my cancer if I
[26:56]stop sugar will can I cure my cancer so the answer is
[27:01]no cancer cells like other any other human cell needs sugar to
[27:05]divide and multiply and grow but the same time other cells in
[27:08]the body also needs the sugar so let's assume theoretically we stop
[27:12]eating sugar for a year okay at the same time we check
[27:17]our blood sugar every day for this entire here blood sugar will
[27:20]stay normal level on the blood okay despite that why because we
[27:26]have our liver which is a very important organ in our body
[27:28]and if we eat fat or we eat protein will automatically sense
[27:33]that is less sugar in the body we'll switch that fat and
[27:35]protein into sugar so even if we stop eating sugar sugar will
[27:40]be a normal level in the blood the only organ in the
[27:42]body that uses sugar only is actually the brain cells and if
[27:48]you know diabetic patients or patients with very low blood sugars they
[27:51]will faint because there is no enough energy to the brain so
[27:56]it's a very common myth get asked almost every day and stopping
[27:59]sugars will not change anything with this next one artificial sweeteners are
[28:06]they dangerous are they healthy the answer we don't have evidence for
[28:11]that you click on it so there is no these are all
[28:17]different types of sweeteners Splenda equal all of them has been they
[28:20]have been studied so far none of them has been known to
[28:25]cause carcinogen or cancer by themselves so so far they are safe
[28:29]unless we have more evidence in the future next slide it's cancer
[28:33]contagious so if someone diagnosed with cancer a family member or a
[28:37]friend or a partner will I get the cancer from that Paris
[28:42]person can you click on it so the answer is no okay
[28:44]cancer cannot spread from one person to another the only theoretic way
[28:50]of cancer going from one person to another is organ donation if
[28:54]someone is donating a liver or kidney to another person and has
[28:58]cancer cells in it the practically that person can pick up that
[29:03]cancer and because of that reason patients who are diagnosed with cancer
[29:07]even if they are cured they are not allowed to donate their
[29:12]organs while they are alive where they are dead okay but at
[29:15]the same can you click the next slide at the same time
[29:19]there are some viruses that can spread among humans and bacteria click
[29:24]again so for example human papilloma virus HPV virus so virus sexually
[29:30]transmitted between partners and there is hepatitis B and hepatitis C can
[29:36]be transferred also sexually transmitted or by IV drug abuse the virus
[29:41]can spread from one person to another it doesn't bring the cancer
[29:47]with them but can cause the infected person to get cancer cervical
[29:53]cancer or liver cancer next question can cancer surgery or tumor biopsy
[29:59]cause the cancer to spread also is a very common misconception that
[30:03]if I go take a biopsy from that cancer would I cause
[30:08]it to spread to other organs well it depends which kind of
[30:12]organ it is for example an ovary if we need to remove
[30:16]it I wouldn't biopsy it I would remove the whole ovary put
[30:19]it in a bag and then send it to the lab so
[30:23]the answer is no but surgeons are well trained and be careful
[30:25]to prevent the spread by putting a needle to get take a
[30:31]biopsy or by removing the entire organ and putting it in a
[30:34]bag before removing it so we'll cancel get worse if exposed to
[30:41]air you take the cancer out or you open the patient belly
[30:44]or lung or any tissue will this code make it worse the
[30:49]answer is no cancer when exposed to air will not grow further
[30:52]will not get bigger it will be the same next question are
[30:59]there herbal products Asha can help to cure cancer the answer is
[31:03]no currently we don't know there are some Chinese medicine has been
[31:07]people think it make your cancer just keep in mind a lot
[31:14]of chemotherapy drug davell Kamiya we're a lot of them actually are
[31:17]extracted from plants so some chemotherapies are actually we got them from
[31:23]plants and the process them and calculate how much the dose we
[31:25]can get the problem with herbal medicine is you don't know what's
[31:35]the dose of that drug so we don't know the dose of
[31:39]the drug plus another problem with taking herbal medicine Asha while getting
[31:44]treatment for example chemotherapy or radiation it can cause more side effects
[31:49]from the from those medications or radiation it can block the effect
[31:54]and make that that treatment not effective by using the herbal medicine
[31:58]Laksha at the same time so currently we don't have specific herbal
[32:02]medicine that can cure cancer next question if someone might and my
[32:10]family had cancer will I get cancer so sometimes for example breast
[32:14]cancer colon cancer the question will be can we can I get
[32:17]the cancer also the answer is not necessarily why because actually about
[32:23]80 to 90% of cancers are sporadic we call them there they
[32:27]are not inherited by families okay only about five or ten percent
[32:34]maximum 20% depends on new studies can run in the family you
[32:36]can suspect there is something going on the family of multiple family
[32:42]members the first second-degree relatives and they have the same cancer for
[32:45]example multiple women in the family their breast cancer or there is
[32:49]colon cancer or ovarian cancer those patients is recommended that family members
[32:54]who had cancer do genetic testing to know there is something running
[32:58]in the family but actually 80 to 90 percent of cancers are
[33:01]not hereditary cancers next question another important one is using the audience
[33:09]will it cause breast cancer the answer is no we don't have
[33:16]evidence right now next question excuse me using a hair dye super
[33:24]sharp will it cause cancer the answer is no but the our
[33:27]studies have shown that barbers get exposed to a lot of chemicals
[33:34]jalapeno a have a increased risk of bladder cancer next question it's
[33:38]cancer a man-made modern disease I get asked this a lot and
[33:44]where was it there before how can you judge Bible and or
[33:47]now because of all the technology we have people are more getting
[33:52]cancer actually it's not there are evidence even checking bones of dinosaurs
[33:58]that they are they some dinosaurs from old relics they had bone
[34:01]cancer and them there are relics from Egypt Egypt and Greek those
[34:08]people had cancer there is an old hero glyph mater here Olivia
[34:11]I mean hot tub is one of the engineers who built one
[34:16]of the big pyramids actually describing a female patient with breast cancer
[34:20]in a way description a mass it's going it's getting deep but
[34:26]he didn't have a treatment for it yes correct yeah for two
[34:34]main reasons first reason is we able to diagnose it now okay
[34:41]so the microscope was discovered 100 to 150 years ago so when
[34:43]I have a tissue I can look at the microscope when I
[34:49]see cancer cells okay 200 500 years ago we didn't have this
[34:52]test to know that okay the other reason also about almost till
[34:59]the last 100 years actually people used to die from other reasons
[35:04]famines major had her boob infections any simple simple flu flu Enza
[35:09]in 1915 killed millions of people for example cholera typhoid plague all
[35:16]different types of infection so began an eyelid Amara Hardy I'm rather
[35:24]witty Hobart Carew bottle ice Popp Australian mote raha in Sun our
[35:29]life expectancy getting longer and longer so we're picking up more cancer
[35:33]because most of the cancers actually happens in more advanced age Janna
[35:36]the older we get the more risk of having cancer so that's
[35:40]the reason I mean it could be someone died for example 300
[35:44]years ago for example and had an infection but the cause of
[35:49]the infection could be cancer but Saku evidence he had a hot
[35:52]table a vomit dinosaur at mixed area no okapi her cancer a
[35:58]tablet his son a hot dad did for I know and the
[35:59]Luna need evidence and no cancer Shamu judicata to ELISA it's a
[36:08]modern disease next one so hookah smoking is it is it safer
[36:11]than cigarette smoking so cigarettes de gaia is the most common preventable
[36:16]cause of cancer and and heart disease death we know very well
[36:21]it's very directed to a lot of cancers of the body there
[36:27]is a misconception that hooker the water pipe will argue ler less
[36:31]risky than that okay next slide so it's very common actually one
[36:37]in five college students now in this country they smoke a different
[36:42]type of hooker you can see here like 60 minutes of hookah
[36:46]smoking is equal to 100 or 200 cigarettes smoking correctly so now
[36:54]we have more exposure to tobacco you know how many carcinogens how
[36:58]many chemicals cause cancer and then one cigarette sixty okay yeah and
[37:02]it's a teen but the Kimmy our veggie garden where the could
[37:06]we have an idea why that so we can sir it's a
[37:09]teen when this area now hooker social smoking sitting you don't know
[37:14]how long you've been there but echo a lot of studies have
[37:19]shown sir entertain and our Gila had an Mia meeting Jakara the
[37:23]Train okay now there are no new studies have shown the unknown
[37:28]stamina stamina and mobile bill are Guinea in my IDO al muazzama
[37:32]sardonically item toss actor mineral vegetable sonic I'm actually actor so bad
[37:38]after so it a movement of so total it tobacco and Jakara
[37:43]idea when the way adequate actually worse than that next slide so
[37:49]vaping another another problem now happening these days for the last 10
[37:53]days so e cigarettes electronics cigarette cigar Ellicott road here theory behind
[37:59]it is with Armada Gaara or it would have been had a
[38:02]nicotine leash my stamina nicotine oh what a Hannah BG garlicy thrown
[38:09]here so should i bill bill electronic cigarette here that you and
[38:14]wash car little chargeable ones will battery replacement was Sheena silently star
[38:20]my bill to guarantee Catania so has glycerin it it really humid
[38:24]the Moodle vacuum Yaya has propylene glycol basically antifreeze messiah hod love
[38:31]Saturday Panama Dido in nicotine Oh nicotine away we are abided by
[38:35]time or I at the neck Hawaiian a highly analyse cigarettes the
[38:42]criminal and sixty five different flavors so the problem we have ll
[38:48]jagdtiger Ellicott rodeo was they start making any China actually in a
[38:52]way to replace animal mutiny magic I'll it recorded together with our
[38:57]garlic atrani hanumana Paulo in which gallantly slaughtered and the whole blood
[39:02]what was that dear colleague art they start smoking it more frequently
[39:06]by H Mikado flavor and the hamsa City flavor harem we cool
[39:15]arrival cool atomically noir October next slide so highly Turkey bill electronic
[39:19]cigarette OG garlic running a coup battery battery a kajita Annabelle Matata
[39:25]then hit area factor into register Harari Amir Ashley in Fahrenheit the
[39:29]river they basically Erica lil vapor by the Atlanta carbon in vapor
[39:37]with a communal vapor harder so Amelia could have highly alien here
[39:41]shuttle a GD that very new thing we don't know a lot
[39:45]about it but we know a lot of those patients or people
[39:47]who smoke cigarettes eventually wants to crave more nicotine later on in
[39:52]life and they have more risk of becoming real tobacco smoker later
[39:55]on in life so actually in the the the goal of preventing
[40:00]smoking actually makes it worse later on in life after GG sub
[40:04]nicotine actor beggarman de han gr DET ronia what a hamsa a
[40:09]scenario with a conjugal ally but but if dr8 elated energy is
[40:16]power a cahal italian Bible Yashiro in Kahala or halcyon michigan mer
[40:21]de Mouton reservable de garlic atrani state of Michigan that are for
[40:26]Hylian so is the annual governor mild Michigan so in suspension completely
[40:30]a little flavored electronic cigarettes right now so could be a pad
[40:36]I accompany honey an American man who I am a loom at
[40:38]an Italian of a chichi did a jig is our Mia meteors
[40:42]and a massive definite no valium attack the e-cigarette is a new
[40:48]thing okay next slide so treatment of cancer alleged cancer Victor Ribera
[40:54]hashish way oh bugger I will follow about treatment for cancer or
[41:01]okay question it's the same risk second-hand smoking area that you I
[41:12]had to guide the vegetation NASA duck energy level so my deduction
[41:18]who are highlighted honest about it I will be enough silver Colonel
[41:22]in nicotine and he'll sit in model Mesaba navigate to the gallon
[41:29]Hadid and for a Abbas the hundred is a wagon hey what
[41:36]if yeah we have it started at parties okay anti-cancer treatment okay
[42:08]we don't have evidence that had they have cancer effect b-17 anywhere
[42:16]I did Martin lived at least seed he actually say night yeah
[42:23]fellow a cyanide hello we're safe really come at them but the
[42:29]summer yeah we don't have evidence I would say right now on
[42:34]under all of it and Michigan there is no research to prove
[42:40]it's working okay so treatment for cancer I mean the main treatments
[42:45]for cancer there are four main things surgery jaha Kim yaoi chemotherapy
[42:50]radiation sha a red light will hormone odd but and wild cancer
[42:56]Tessa's Lee hormone at with an insulin pump restarting with a sudden
[43:03]will raha so sometimes part of the treatment we add hormonal therapy
[43:08]at the same time to block the effects of it treatment can
[43:12]be different from one cancer to another depends on the stage of
[43:15]the cancer where did the cancer go so sometimes surgery she'll cancer
[43:19]remove it surgically sometimes the chemotherapy at waking me out here at
[43:24]waking me away a minute dr.
[43:27]Lipman minhwa ramela aha starlet who had to have some storage it
[43:31]into Cheryl model never attended a shark I could move in this
[43:37]time alone with the photo neural x-ray proton electron can be used
[43:41]animal tarragon the more alkali Sora Tania and Bushkill ahead nobility we
[43:46]are we chemotherapy or radiation lemonade yeah it destroys also normal the
[43:54]body so most of the side effects related to the treatment actually
[43:57]related to damaging other normal cells growing in the body any hair
[44:04]loss can happen diarrhea bladder problems from radiation discharge infections can happen
[44:12]from them now those treatments has been advanced a lot in the
[44:16]last 10 20 years and they became more targeted more focused to
[44:19]target the cancer cells alone instead of destroying or damaging the other
[44:23]parts of the body huh double radiation SS are computerized cat scan
[44:27]3d view ala Moodle barber Tanisha it could hide the dal makhani
[44:34]noir Emily with a clear love Laura Allen lava le how little
[44:38]mckernon well we'll talk more about treatment and okay questions I see
[44:43]no yes okay it's a good question surgery is our makan my
[44:57]dude okay Janna method a method of turtle sauropod prostate okay that's
[45:01]on a panel approach that already Manisha in an album and no
[45:06]matter how hard I am Illya Cooper where she'll bus were available
[45:10]prostate hello you people who are socially isolated there is research that
[50:11]shows that their genetic material becomes shorter and shorter over time they
[50:17]die faster people who are more socially attached to other people surrounding
[50:20]and active those coat those chromosomes or Jerry material stays longer same
[50:25]thing with cancer patient I can tell you from our experience when
[50:29]we see a patient who's fighting cancer they do better when they
[50:32]have a good social environment and also if they are well attuned
[50:40]to their faith system whatever it is a lot of people even
[50:44]just simple yoga and meditation makes a huge difference any other question
[50:57]so there was a slide actually I removed about plastics in microwave
[51:04]so if the plastic says is microwave safe we should be ok
[51:08]ok the problem by using in microwave microwave is just heat so
[51:14]you can you can put that piece of plastic in the oven
[51:15]and cook food with it that plastic will melt and will become
[51:20]part of the food and may have carcinogens those who are microwave
[51:27]safe they should be ok foam is no you can't use foam
[51:30]in the microwave no no yeah you can't it's better not to
[51:38]put anything hot in the phone or even don't put it in
[51:40]a microwave and here I can listen it when you break it
[51:46]down what are you microwaving so if you're microwaving for example your
[51:50]food that you made that is healthy you're just using the physical
[51:54]factor of the microwave to heat it up now but if you
[51:57]microwaving prepackaged frozen food which in itself has a lot of problems
[52:03]that increases your risk of having problems and potentially cancer just because
[52:08]that food is not healthy to start with so it's not the
[52:11]function of the microwave is the function of the food that you're
[52:17]eating yeah then microwave is safe yes that's not good it's not
[52:23]recommended no no yeah yeah yeah and remember when you look at
[52:27]the microwave design it shields the surrounding from the way that is
[52:36]coming from it yeah yes sir so really it relies on multiple
[53:31]factors so if let's say for example if we have a patient
[53:33]who has a growth on the ovary okay we will see the
[53:40]examination and how that growth feels we might do an ultrasound and
[53:44]that would give us some information that hints us towards this most
[53:49]likely looks benign or most likely concerning we might also use additional
[53:53]blood work to help us there and that gives us an idea
[53:57]of what should we do should we go ahead and remove the
[54:02]ovary or not to confirm its cancer or not and that revise
[54:04]also on other variables how old is the patient what symptoms does
[54:08]she have what what's final family history does she have so there's
[54:12]a lot of variables but I can tell you nowadays we are
[54:14]very lucky to have a lot of advanced techniques that we can
[54:19]use to help us differentiate what is what but there are a
[54:22]lot of times when we don't know what it is and we
[54:26]can't go put a needle in it to see what it is
[54:29]because if I put a needle in it I have two possibilities
[54:30]I might go to an area that doesn't have cancer and will
[54:35]give me a false result but I can't take true or if
[54:40]there is cancer I might spread that cancer locally so we might
[54:44]say the only way to do this is to go and surgically
[54:50]and remove that organ uterus ovary bowel whatever it is so it
[55:04]depends on what type of cancer so the best way is definitely
[55:11]doing genetic testing so the best way of doing genetic testing is
[55:15]on the person who has cancer and inertia only under certain hueso
[55:22]we fastened genetics - no yeah no it's more like fishing in
[55:24]the ocean otherwise they suit so much of my head like I
[55:28]saw some jello vassals of junk oh I love for me until
[55:30]I love middle G not oh I love mini Gina Thomas R
[55:35]palla Nemo Judah the Aqua family history for example multilingual breast cancer
[55:40]in the family I cook I adapt my genetics Imogen etic counselors
[55:45]is a will her a pioneer family tree my little adhirata Lila
[55:51]has ever had a calculator koretski so more risk - she went
[55:55]get a Korres kalila a Friday Lila method and they can have
[56:00]breast cancer if the risk is high so in fact their blood
[56:03]test to check for the genes for cancer okay yeah Bessel s
[56:12]helper Italian Martha Sheva Sonya and the cancer hueso in the house
[56:19]whether be positive none of America and first-degree relatives generally a lapidary
[56:26]Judah couldn't be army Luna checkup Allah how the genes specifically and
[56:31]better more fishing of unknown roughness Ruffner how are the gene ID
[56:35]other shuttles can shake mythology nan : Marvin Yanni a part of
[56:41]Garagiola I'd had a chance that's the best way to screen for
[56:44]cancer Marathi Jeana serie so we sometimes we have questions that for
[56:49]example I have a patient who says I am very scared of
[56:56]ovarian cancer my friend just died of ovarian cancer I want to
[57:00]go and remove the ovaries okay so that's an emotional response right
[57:08]it is our duty to come and say do I have anything
[57:10]in that person's history that increases her risk for ovarian cancer and
[57:16]if I do is removing the ovaries good idea or not for
[57:24]example if I judge that persons have a chance of developing cancer
[57:29]based on using certain tables is 8% and she is 40 years
[57:35]old and if I remove her ovaries I've eliminated the 8% chance
[57:40]of developing cancer but I gave her a hundred percent chance of
[57:44]becoming menopausal which has negative effect on her life and we know
[57:50]women who are 40 who take out their ovaries that are not
[57:53]cancerous they die sooner than women who stave say their ovaries so
[57:56]there's a given intake and that's why we were very very careful
[58:02]here to make the decision an educated decision and not an emotional
[58:06]decision any other questions okay thank you very much thank you so
[58:16]much Lanza now now Mohammed one in common so I didn't give
[58:30]a chance to give the background under Thursday he did his residency
[58:33]at Wayne State University in Detroit Medical Center as well he eventually
[58:37]did a fellowship in gynecologic oncology at Carr mannose Cancer Institute and
[58:42]he is currently a staff physician at Beaumont Health Royal Oak in
[58:45]Grosse Pointe and associated preface professor at Oakland University William Beaumont school
[58:50]of medicine I want to thank dr.
[58:53]Zeile Wahab and dr.
[58:53]Wahby Honda for those that great information and I know our turnout
[59:01]here wasn't great but online hamdullah we have over 400 viewers so
[59:04]this was a pilot let's say for for future events like this
[59:11]and we want to let everybody know here and all our online
[59:13]viewers the inshallah we will have more programs with dr.
[59:18]Robbie Hanna and dr.
[59:17]Zeta will have and thank you guys so much for coming assalamu
[59:21]alaikum wa rahmatullah wa barakato
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