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Health & Fitness
 

Medical imaging ups breast cancer risk

Tuesday - Jun 12, 2012, 11:20pm (GMT+5.5)
[+] Text [-]

Washington -  A review of all the available scientific data compiled to date about potential environmental risks of breast cancer have identified two factors that are likely to cause  the illness.

The factors that increase the chances of breast cancer in women are post-menopausal hormone replacement therapy and radiation exposure from medical imaging.

The study looked into the factors such as pesticides, beauty products, household chemicals, and the plastics used to make water bottles.

Commissioned by the breast cancer foundation Susan G. Komen for the Cure, the IOM report concluded that there was not enough data to confirm or rule out that exposure to most of these  factors caused breast cancer.

Now, a special article in the journal Archives of Internal Medicine details the findings of the IOM report as they relate to medical imaging and what women can do to minimize their risk of  breast cancer.

“The single thing that the IOM highlighted that a woman can do to lower her risk of breast cancer is to avoid unnecessary medical imaging,” said Rebecca Smith-Bindman, MD, a professor of  radiology and biomedical imaging, epidemiology and biostatistics at UCSF, who wrote the article, and who contributed to the IOM report.

While CT scans and other forms of medical imaging have revolutionized medicine and can be life-saving, said Smith-Bindman, women need to engage their doctors in the decision-making

process and insist on the necessity and safety of all radiological scans they undergo.

“They should understand the risks and benefits and ask their doctor to explain the risks and benefits,” Smith-Bindman said.

She suggested that patients ask their doctors questions like:

Is this scan absolutely necessary?
Is it necessary to do it now?
Are there other, alternative tests?
How can I be sure the test will be done in the safest way possible?
Will having the scan information change the management of my disease?
Can I wait until after seeing a specialist before getting the scan?





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