Topical Error

19th January 2009

by Adele Weber
by Adele Weber

Often overlooked, the side-effects of topical creams is more important than credited. Lidocaine is a topical numbing agent frequently used before mammograms. The cream is spread on the skin and allowed to absorb for 45 minutes. It is also used to dull pain from laser hair removal, or any other surgery covering a large amount of skin. Research studies found no side-effects; however, the clinical trial did not have enough of a sample size to account for rare and unusual side effects.

This became apparent when two women spread lidocaine and tetracaine on their legs, covered it in plastic, and left it for 45 minutes. They experiences seizures, fell into comas, and died.

Experts theorize that broken skin or elevated temperature might have raised the amount of the drug entering the bloodstream to toxic levels.

When using topical analgesic, use the minimum amount, and avoid broken skin.

By Edna Milay

A recent study demonstrates a proven way to lower breast cancer risk and occurrence by half.

Sounds too good to be true? It’s not, because a huge proportion of breast cancer cases can be traced to something women voluntarily do: take replacement hormones.

Women who took estrogen and progestin post-menopause to replace hormones doubled their risk for breast cancer. Even more dramatic, when they stopped taking hormones, their risk subsided within two years.

This is not to say that everyone taking hormones should drop them immediately. The risk increases with time, so short-term use is not likely to result in cancer.