Oncology: Starvation and Immunology



Oncology is the study of cancer and cancer pathology. Cancer in essence is a disease that eats away at a living body's capacity to healthily and wholly operate. The means by which one typically combats the issue is by changing dietary habits and medicating any systemic complications that may be obstructing the natural disposition and health of the body. This is seen as typical because the eating habits of the individual as well as the points of structural flow that are a part of their normal lives are all interrupted by treatment. However, there are instances of differing treatment that arise as situations demanding varied dynamics of approach. The key difficulty often seen in cancerous pathologies is framed squarely in the impact that the condition has on the immunological integrity of the body where it is present. Because of how the body operates, as well as how it holistically functions, some level of integrity must be maintained outside of static operancy, due to the variant dynamism of the world's natural environment. The base fundamental in this understanding is one that gives room for the concept of starvation to seed as a wroughtly framed art that, by relevant dimensionality, improves the immune system through mechanics that compound from the body reducing its nutritional intake. By starving the body of what the cancer would need to propagate, the integrity and capacity of the immune system is able to recover the health of the body while maintaining its health at a necessary baseline. Oncological discipline gradates heavily with the above in mind, and both starvation and immunology squarely contextualize this knowledge by strict philosophies of stringent fundamentality.

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