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urinary tract infections are more common as one gets older
and as estrogen is depleted. Having the estrogen receptors irreversibly fall of (get degraded)of the cells in your body (mechanism of action of faslodex)--OK for those which get replaced frequently, perhaps not for those which don't--whatever estrogen you might have can't act upon the cells eg, to make the urogenital epithelium more impervious to infection, as they have no receptors to partner with to cause the chemical cascade leading to the effect.
The list of sideeffects of herceptin has to include side effects even if only 1 in several thousand and even if it is uncertain that it directly related to the herceptin.
The likelihood it is due to the herceptin would seem to be less than the likelihood it is due to lack of estrogen function--but like so much else, it is unknown. Remember, until 1.5 years ago only tens of thousands of patients had been on herceptin and many of them not on it that long-term.
Here's to finding out more (you can toast that with your cranberry juice!)
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