When This Woman Was Told She Has Months To Live, She Made A Simple Diet Change That Saved Her Life

Jun 26, 2018 by apost team

This Wisconsin mom is sharing her miracle story: beating terminal cancer after doing a simple diet change.

Kathy Mydlach-Bero was given a diagnosis of inflammatory breast cancer in 2005.

Her doctors told her that, best case scenario, she had about 21 months left to live. She underwent radiation, chemotherapy, and surgery. But her cancer continued to spread despite the aggressive treatment. Eleven months after she was first diagnosed, a high-grade tumor was found in her neck and head. Though treatment continued, the medication was beginning to affect her healthy body.

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Her heart, lungs, liver, and kidneys were all damaged or failing. Frustrated with the slow progress of her treatment, she began to do research into more natural and alternative treatment methods. She told her oncologist that she was done with the mainstream treatments, because she was going to die either way. She didn't want to die in pain.

She began eating a diet of anti-angiogenic foods.

After she stopped chemotherapy, she followed a friend's diet suggestion. Anti-angiogenic foods are foods that block your body from creating blood vessels. In theory, this can slow a cancer's progression. Foods in this category include walnuts, blueberries, and leeks.

Amazingly: the cancer stopped spreading as soon as she changed her diet.

According to Mydlach-Bero, all her doctors could say was, "That's interesting." No one really believed that a diet change would be able to do what advanced cancer treatments hadn't. And yet Mydlach-Bero is here to tell her tale, thirteen years after she was given 21 months to live.

Mydlach-Bero is completely cancer-free now.

She shares her diet with others in the hopes that her miracle cure will help someone else. She also coaches people battling cancer and gives them lists of foods that have cancer-fighting properties.

Harvard University is even doing research to see if her method could help other people. She says that the university's study helps her feel validated. It's been a tough road feeling like a "crazy cancer patient." The researchers at Harvard plan to study people who have had incredible results occur when they use natural treatment options.

Healthy diets affect the body's overall health for sure, but this is on another level! What do you think? Could this help other people?

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