Lumps and Bumps to Watch Out For:
Detecting Cancer & Other Health Issues
© 2023 eNurture LLC Update
Cancer experts recommend regularly checking your body for lumps or bumps that appear out of the ordinary. Should you discover something that may be, in fact, cancer finding it early will give you the best chance to overcome it.
Here's a breakdown of what to keep an eye out for.
Breast Lumps
Experts recommend that women do a breast self-exam once a month to check for anything out of the ordinary. Feel for distinct lumps along with areas of "thickness," skin redness, distension, dimpling or pitting, asymmetry, pain, nipple inversion or unusual nipple discharge.
While most breast lumps are noncancerous, you should see a doctor right away if:
Testicular Lumps
Men should examine their testicles for lumps at least once a month, beginning in their mid-teens. This should ideally be done after a shower or bath, as the heat from the water relaxes your scrotum, which makes it easier to find abnormalities.
If you detect any pain, swelling or lumps (even non-painful ones) in your testicles or groin area, you should see a doctor immediately.
Skin Bumps and Lumps
Most skin cancers spotted early on are curable. The Skin Cancer Foundation recommends getting a yearly skin exam by your doctor, along with performing your own self-examination once a month.
You should check all areas of your body -- even those not exposed to the sun. This includes your scalp, palms of hands, soles of feet, underarms, stomach, and even inside your mouth. Use a mirror for those hard-to-see places. You're looking for what The Skin Cancer Foundation and other organizations call the "ABCDs" of moles and melanoma.
Here's what to look for:
Further, you should watch for changes in regular moles, such as changes in color, size, elevation, sensation (like itching) or shape. If you notice anything suspicious, see your doctor right away.
Being proactive by protecting your body with a good, high antioxidant diet and supportive supplements is wise when you want to lower your risk for cancer and other health issues. Diets high in cruciferous vegetables like broccoli and cauliflower are backed by documented evidence showing that they may reduce the risk of several forms of cancers. Broccoli, in particular, contains substances that produce a health-promoting compound called sulforaphane. Once it is inside of cells, sulforaphane has the ability to turn on natural cellular defenses housed inside the cells, giving broccoli an incredibly high nutrition value. It would take 500 grams of fresh broccoli to acquire the same level of sulforaphane that you would get in one capsule of Designs for Health's BroccoProtect supplement. BroccoProtect is an excellent choice to have in a nutritional arsenal designed to reduce your body’s risk of developing chronic disease.
CoQ10 has demonstrated effective antioxidant activity against disease-causing free radical increase. CoQ10 is favored to improve immunity, support energy production and build better, healthier cells. High potency Q-EVAIL® 100 delivers 200 mgs of CoQ10 in a highly absorbable form due to its millions of tiny nano-sized colloidal droplets of solubilized CoQ10 that are so easily absorbed in the GI tract.
Don't forget about the highly touted and many health benefits of frequent consumption of green tea. Because it contains the active ingredient, EGCg, which is an antioxidant and protector of DNA, it is highly recommended when increased antioxidant activity in the blood is desired. EGCg 250mg is standardized to contain 50% EGCg in each 500 mg green tea extract veggie capsule.
Be wise and regularly check yourself for unwanted lump and bumps but take it a step further and be wiser yet by being proactive about protection and immune system support.
Your bodies healing powers are innate; listen carefully to it.
"Your mind will answer most questions if you learn to relax and wait for the answer."
— William S. Burroughs
Sources
MayoClinic.com: Testicular Cancer
MayoClinic.com Breast Lumps