News & Community eLanka

eLanka

Tuesday, 26 May 2026
  • Home
  • Read History
  • Articles
    • eLanka Journalists
  • Events
  • Useful links
    • Obituaries
    • Seeking to Contact
    • eLanka Newsletters
    • Weekly Events and Advertisements
    • eLanka Testimonials
    • Sri Lanka Newspapers
    • Sri Lanka TV LIVE
    • Sri Lanka Radio
    • eLanka Recepies
  • Gallery
  • Contact
Newsletter
Sri lankan news
  • eLanka Weddings
  • Property
  • eLanka Shop
  • Business Directory
eLankaeLanka
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Home
  • Read History
  • Articles
    • eLanka Journalists
  • Events
  • Useful links
    • Obituaries
    • Seeking to Contact
    • eLanka Newsletters
    • Weekly Events and Advertisements
    • eLanka Testimonials
    • Sri Lanka Newspapers
    • Sri Lanka TV LIVE
    • Sri Lanka Radio
    • eLanka Recepies
  • Gallery
  • Contact
Follow US
© 2005 – 2026 eLanka Pty Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Home » Goodnews Stories Srilankan Expats » Articles » Exercise may prevent, and treatment made easier with Cancer – Good advice by Harold Gunatillake
ArticlesDr Harold Gunatillake

Exercise may prevent, and treatment made easier with Cancer – Good advice by Harold Gunatillake

eLanka admin
Last updated: June 27, 2023 4:31 pm
By
eLanka admin
ByeLanka admin
Follow:
Share
4 Min Read
SHARE
Views: 22

Exercise may prevent, and treatment made easier with Cancer – Good advice by Harold Gunatillake

Dr. Harold GunethilakeCancer is a dreaded disease on the increase globally, a disease we do not want to have, even our enemies.

Did you know that one in three people in Denmark develop cancer? In 2014, around 267,500 Danes lived with cancer diagnosis.

The WHO age standardized incidence of breast cancer in Sri Lanka was observed to have increased from 9.2 per 100,000 in 2001 In a population of 20 million people, 23,530 new cases of breast cancer, and 14,013 cases have died, in a survey done in 2018. The incidence of cancer seems to be high in Sri Lanka due to the poor lifestyles, consuming processed foods much cheaper and tastier on the taste buds, than un-processed foods, and having no time for exercise.

The incidence of colorectal and prostatic cancer among males, seems to be very high in Sri Lanka.

When your doctor tells you., you have cancer the degree of shock and self-devastation is self-implicit and further description is not required. You think of your self and your loved ones you leave behind soon, in most situation causing extreme depression and helplessness.

You can avoid this situation.

The conventional treatment, including surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and immunotherapy that your oncologist plans is not an absolute cure, it is all temporizing regimes to prolong your agony of extended living. This opens the avenues for the charlatans to boast of cancer cures and extract money from the distressed victims.

There is one avenue to prevent and make therapy easier, and that would be daily exercise.

Flexibility exercises (stretching), resistance training (lifting weights or isometric exercise), which builds muscles, or just walking daily 20,000 steps (with smart health watch in your wrist) is all that you need to do. The smart-health watch is an encouragement and impetus for your daily walks.

A new study shows that exercise is an effective way to prevent cancer. Adrenalin released during intensive training prevents the spread and development of metastases elsewhere in the body. This not only restricts the spread of cancer but also makes it easier to treat.

Exercise lowers blood estrogen, it helps lower a woman’s breast-cancer risk. Exercise also reduces your insulin secretion from your pancreas, being a cancer growth factor, reduces its resistance. Even old women after attaining menopause do produce estrogen in their fat cells. So, staying slim reduces fat (triglycerides) in your fat cells and your risk of cancer is lowered.

There are other factors we do not know, but analysis showed that an “exercise-dependent induction of adrenaline accounts for all the beneficial molecular mechanisms.

Red meat and cancer risk Beef, lamb, and pork are all red meat. Pork looks white, but it is red meat. Researchers do not know yet how red meat can cause cancer of the breast colorectal and pancreatic cancer.

One known factor is that red meat has no fibre, and high fibre diets seems to lower the risk of cancer, diabetes and heart disease, among others. Gut microbes play an important role by fermenting fibre to produce short chain fatty acids and butyric acid that prevents damage to the inner lining of the gut that may be a factor in cancer development. Eating high fibre diets consuming less red meat reduces the risk of Colo-rectal cancer.

Bottom line: Do some form of exercise daily, find the time for it, focus on a vegetarian diet and be a winner in life.

TAGGED:chemotherapyImmunotherapyprostatic cancerradiotherapysurgery
Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Arts Centre Melbourne Arts Centre Melbourne And Australian Art Orchestra Present Meeting Points Series: Of Deities And Demons
Next Article Dr Harold Gunatillake (2) Health & Views – October 2019 2nd issue – By Harold Gunatillake
FacebookLike
YoutubeSubscribe
LinkedInFollow
eLanka Wedding
- Advertisement -
Ad image
Most Read

Trump States that the Peace Agreement with Iran is ‘Largely Negotiated’ as the Hormuz Discussions Reach the Final Stage-by Harold Gunatillake

SUNDAY CHOICE – LOVE LIFTED ME – by Charles Schokman

Free ETA , Sri Lanka Tourism , Tourist Visa , Travel Update

Sri Lanka Officially Opens Free 30-Day ETA Access to 40 Countries from May 25

Beach Clean-Up , British School Colombo, Dehiwala Beach

Young Eco-Warriors: British School Colombo Leads Dehiwala Beach Clean-Up

Ahmedabad , FitsAir launches , MICE

FitsAir Connects Ahmedabad and Colombo with New Direct Flights

Related News
Shelley Nitschke signs contact extension
Articles

Shelley Nitschke signs contact extension

Vesak 2026 Melbourne, Millennium Imports Australia, Vesak Bath Dansala Melbourne, Drive-Thru Vesak Dansala, Sri Lankan community Australia, Buddhist celebrations Melbourne, Vesak Sri Lanka Australia, Dandenong South Vesak event, Dana tradition Buddhism, Vesak almsgiving Australia, Sri Lankan Australians, Melbourne Sri Lankan events, Vesak lanterns Melbourne, Buddhist community Australia, Sri Lankan culture in Australia, Vesak Full Moon Poya Day, Sannasa Digital, community service Melbourne, Sri Lankan diaspora Australia, Buddhist charity event, Vesak rice dansala, Melbourne Buddhist events, Sri Lankan heritage Australia, eLanka news, Australian Sri Lankan community, cultural events Melbourne, Buddhist generosity tradition, Vesak food donation, Millennium Imports Dandenong, Sri Lankan Vesak celebration
Articles

Millennium Imports Serves Over 5,000 in Successful 3rd Annual Drive-Thru Vesak Almsgiving

Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Articles

Artificial Intelligence and workforce vulnerability-by Dr. Chandrika Subramaniyan

Articles Charles Schokman

Pentecost Global Day of Prayer-by Charles Schokman

The Ghosts of Mount Mary-A Forgotten Railway Legacy
Articles

The Ghosts of Mount Mary: A Forgotten Railway Legacy

  • Quick Links:
  • Articles
  • DESMOND KELLY
  • Dr Harold Gunatillake
  • English Videos
  • Sri Lanka
  • Sinhala Videos
  • eLanka Newsletters
  • Obituaries
  • Sunil Thenabadu
  • Dr. Harold Gunatillake
  • Tamil Videos
  • Sinhala Movies
  • Trevine Rodrigo
  • Photos
  • eLanka Newsletter

eLanka

Your Trusted Source for News & Community Stories: Stay connected with reliable updates, inspiring features, and breaking news. From politics and technology to culture, lifestyle, and events, eLanka brings you stories that matter — keeping you informed, engaged, and connected 24/7.
Kerrie road, Oatlands , NSW 2117 , Australia.
Email : info@eLanka.com.au / rasangivjes@gmail.com.
WhatsApp : +61402905275 / +94775882546
  • About eLanka
  • Terms & Conditions

Disclaimer:
eLanka is committed to sharing positive and community-focused stories. We do not publish or endorse political, religious, or ethnic viewpoints. The content published on eLanka, including articles and newsletters, reflects the opinions and views of the respective authors and not those of eLanka. eLanka accepts no responsibility or liability for the accuracy, completeness, or consequences of any content provided by contributors.

(c) 2005 – 2025 eLanka Pty Ltd. All Rights Reserved.