The use of alternative medicine and dietary supplements is extremely popular among cancer patients. Statistics show that the percentage of cancer patients using alternative medicine and dietary supplements can be as high as 73.1% in some European countries. It is important to realize that this phenomenon is a consequence of a completely normal and expected mental and emotional reaction in a patient in an attempt to regain control over their own health.
It is a huge problem that patients can easily be misled by people of no medical education offering false healing practices or inappropriate and non-standardized nutrients, not tailored to the therapy being administered and the body’s demands, which not only carry a risk of cross-reactions with the medical treatment, but may also encourage patients to completely abandon conventional medical approaches.
Dietary supplements should add to the diet both quantitatively and qualitatively, providing an easy way of highly concentrated intake of healthy nutrients.
Dietary supplements should be considered a means of further enrichment of an already optimized diet in people with increased nutritional demands who are experiencing difficulties in reaching a balanced diet due to external factors.
Intake of dietary supplements during antitumor treatment should be under the supervision of the primary doctor.
An appropriate time to take concentrated nutrients is often during the recovery period in the days between antitumor treatment courses – in this way the risk of cross-reactions is minimized.
Important
It is essential to avoid taking doses above the maximum daily allowances of substances (overdosing), as well as various nutrients that are strong and moderate modulators of CYP450 family enzymes, such as grapefruit juice, St. John’s wort, goldenseal (hydrastis), cat’s claw, methystic pepper (kava kava), kratom, echinacea, red clover (trifolium pratense), chamomile, licorice, etc., since they carry a high risk of causing a side reaction with medical therapies.
Properly administered dietary supplementation under medical supervision contributes to correction of nutritional deficiencies, accelerated recovery processes and counteracts malnutrition, fatigue, lack of appetite, nausea, involuntary loss of body mass and many other common toxicities during cancer therapies.
The use of Prima Sanitas dietary supplements during antitumor therapy should be tailored to your treatment schedule and the risk of developing malnutrition. Ask your primary doctor if you are suitable for administration of Prima Sanitas Regimen.
Suitable for cancer-related fatigue; chemotherapy-related nausea and vomiting.
Helps reduce oxidative stress and inflammatory reactions; prebiotic stimulation of the gastrointestinal microbiome.
Suitable for anorexia, cachexia and constipation.
Contributes to reduction of chronic inflammation and inflammatory markers, lipid profile improvement; hepatoprotection; cardiovascular health, prevention of chemotherapy-related peripheral neuropathy.
Suitable for dysbiosis due to antibiotic and antitumor therapies.
Contributes to reduction of chemotherapy-related diarrhea and constipation; reduction of opportunistic infections and gastrointestinal inflammation and improved immune function.
Suitable for lean muscle mass and electrolytes loss.
Contributes to activation of anabolic processes in skeletal muscles; improved immune function; recovery of gastrointestinal mucosa; improved protein intake.
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