Here is a link on breast cancer and exercise. (50% benifit reported)
Lots of trials suggest benifits for greens, oxidant high foods, balancing omega threes and sixes etc. Have a look a the breast cancer diet on the "Articles of Interest" section. The body is very complex and so are foods, so it is probably better to rely on really good diet as a basis with supplements on top. Any spplements are likely to work better if the body has got all the other things it needs.
My top tip is balance you omega three and six intake. See The Importance of Omega three and Six to breast cancer on the Articles of interest section.
As with all these things it is always best to check it out for yourself if you have time.
There is lots on Q10 on this site as well.
RB
http://medicineworld.org/cancer/lead...-function.html
http://www.breastcancercare.org/inde...iew&ANN_id=108
ABSTRACT
A new study from researchers at Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School finds that exercise after diagnosis may help breast cancer patients live longer and better. The study appears in the May 25th issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, JAMA.
One doesn’t have to be a marathon runner in order to benefit. Compared to physically inactive women with breast cancer, women who engaged in moderate exercise equivalent to three to five hours of walking per week lowered their risk of death by approximately 50 percent. Even a minimal amount of exercise was better than none at all. Walking just one hour per week helped promote breast cancer survival.
Previous studies have shown that exercise can help to prevent breast cancer as well as other diseases, but this new study is the first to show that regular exercise can add years to the life of breast cancer survivors. “We found that women who are physically active after breast cancer diagnosis may lower their risk of death from breast cancer and cancer recurrence,” said Michelle D. Holmes, MD, DrPH, lead author of the study.
The prospective observational study included almost 3,000 female registered nurses in the Nurses’ Health Study who were diagnosed with stage I, II, or III breast cancer between 1984 and 1998. These women were followed by questionnaires until June 2002.
Women who received the greatest benefit from exercise had the most common type of cancer, one in which the breast tumors are susceptible to hormone levels. This finding suggests that exercise may improve survival by reducing hormone levels and thereby suppress tumor growth and recurrence.