How Cancer Surgery Often Causes Metastasis
Executive Summary
- Surprisingly, there is a strong relationship between cancer surgery driving the spread of cancer.
- In this article, we examine the connection.
Introduction
Something never discussed by the medical establishment is why metastasis so often follows cancer surgery.
The following quotes are from the book The Cancer Industry: Crimes, Conspiracy and The Death of My Mother.
Important Point #1: Cancer Surgery is a Primary Promoter of Metastasis?
Cancer metastasis is the primary cause of most cancer deaths, and yet the public remains almost completely unaware that surgical removal of a tumor has been known to cause cancer metastasis for over 100 years.
In 1910, researchers implanted tumors into mice and found when they left the tumors alone, cancer metastasis almost never occurred. But when they incompletely cut out the tumors, metastasis frequently occurred.
A few years later a similar experiment was conducted using highly metastasizing tumors, and the results were the same – tumor resection increased cancer metastasis compared to control mice whose tumors were left untouched. This same phenomenon was demonstrated in humans by Dr. Warren Cole of the University of Illinois in 1974. In a series of experiments published in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Dr. Cole wrote, “Ten of our patients underwent an unsuccessful attempt by a surgeon to remove the tumor. All surgeons know that this procedure is usually followed by an increased growth of the tumor…metastasis develops so commonly after excision of the primary.”
German professor of Radiology Dr. Ernst H. Krokowski provided further evidence that surgery, and even tumor palpation and biopsy promote the spread of cancer. In a 1979 study, Dr. Krokowski wrote, “… manipulation of the tumor, such as severe palpation, biopsy or surgery, results in a sudden increase of the number of tumor cells released into the blood circulation.” Dr. Krokowski also stated that about 90% of patients die from metastasis or secondary tumors and “Therefore it should be of great concern to therapists as well as patients that already more than 30 years ago it was conclusively shown that cancer surgery is the main cause of metastasis. However, this research was completely ignored by the profession, it was just too awful to contemplate, and patients never got to know about it.”
Think about that statement for a moment — “cancer surgery is the main cause of metastasis.”
Important Point #2: The Activation of Dormant Tumors
Tumors can stay dormant for many years — and these same dormant tumors can and are often activated by the stress of cancer surgery as is explained in the following quotation.