menu 919-999-0831

Breast Cancer Prevention: A Functional Medicine Approach to Prevention

Breast cancer is a malignant tumor originating in the breast, often involving uncontrolled growth of cells.

It is the most common cancer among women worldwide, excluding skin cancers, and the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in females. Globally, it affects about 1 in 8 women. Incidence rates continue to rise, though early detection has improved survival.

Symptoms typically include a painless lump in the breast or armpit, nipple changes, skin dimpling, redness, or swelling like orange-peel texture. Early stages may be asymptomatic, emphasizing the need for screening.

Breast cancer starts from a complex interplay of genetic, environmental, and lifestyle factors. Inherited mutations in genes (e.g BRCA1/2) account for 5-10% of cases, predisposing women to aggressive subtypes. However, most cases (85-95%) stem from modifiable risks: hormonal imbalances (e.g., prolonged estrogen exposure from early menarche or late menopause), obesity, insulin resistance, chronic inflammation, toxins, and poor diet.

Hypercholesterolemia and metabolic syndrome increase risk by promoting cell proliferation and inflammation. Functional medicine views these as interconnected—e.g., insulin resistance drives estrogen production in fat tissue, fueling hormone-positive tumors.

Environmental toxins such as bisphenol A (BPA), phthalates, and parabens act as endocrine-disrupting chemicals that mimic estrogen, potentially promoting breast cancer development and increasing local estrogen levels in breast tissue.

Carolina Total Wellness Physicians prioritize upstream testing to uncover root causes before cancer develops. Inflammation markers like high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) signal chronic immune activation, a precursor to cancer formation.

For insulin resistance, its important to assess fasting insulin, HOMA-IR score, and HbA1c; elevated levels correlate with 20-50% higher breast cancer risk in postmenopausal women.

Hormone panels are crucial: measuring estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, and assessing estrogen breakdown to detect estrogen dominance or imbalances that promote proliferation. Additional tests include advanced lipid profiles for cholesterol components, and toxin panel to assess the toxin burden.

These labs guide personalized prevention, with moderate evidence supporting their role in reducing cancer risk.

A functional approach emphasizes lifestyle to modulate risks.

The Mediterranean diet—rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, olive oil, and fish—reduces breast cancer risk by 20-30% through anti-inflammatory polyphenols and fiber, which lower insulin and estrogen levels. Aim for 25-30g daily fiber to decrease cancer risk.

Physical activity (150 min/week moderate) enhances insulin sensitivity and reduces recurrence.

Targeted supplements include omega-3s (1-2g EPA/DHA daily) for reducing inflammation and vitamin D (2,000-4,000 IU) to optimize vitamin D levels, inversely linked to mortality. Curcumin (500-1,000mg) and sulforaphane from broccoli sprouts support detoxification and improve estrogen metabolism. Our DIM detox formula is an excellent supplement formulation which contains broccoli extract. It is always important to consult with your doctor before starting any new supplements to avoid any interactions.

By addressing inflammation, insulin, toxins, nutrients and hormones through diet and testing, functional medicine empowers prevention. If you would like to be proactive towards breast cancer prevention, consult with one of our physicians at Carolina Total Wellness who can create a personalized plan for you.

Meditation is Medicine: Discover the Healing Power of Mindfulness

Meditation is no longer an abstract, “woo-woo” wellness trend — it’s one of the most well-studied mind-body interventions in modern medicine.

Decades of research across major journals including JAMA and The Lancet confirms that meditation measurably improves stress physiology, pain perception, hormone & immune balance, and emotional regulation — changes powerful enough to interest both physicians, performance scientists and, hopefully, you.

Heart Health Meditation activates the parasympathetic, “rest and digest”, branch of the nervous system. This calms the stress response that constricts blood vessels and raises blood pressure. Elite military units even use similar breath-based techniques to stabilize heart rate and sharpen focus during high-pressure missions.

With consistent practice, research shows that you can lower your resting heart rate and improve heart-rate variability — key markers of cardiovascular resilience.

Reduce Inflammation A 2016 meta-analysis in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences showed meditation improves several immune and inflammatory markers, supporting both inflammation control and infection resistance.

This translates to a reduced risk of metabolic, autoimmune, and degenerative conditions over time.

Balanced Hormones and Blood Sugar Regular mindfulness practices can improve insulin sensitivity and stabilize blood glucose — likely through reduced cortisol and adrenaline surges.

With consistent stillness practice, women in perimenopause or those with adrenal fatigue may sleep better, have more steady energy through the day and experience less hormone fluctuations.

Enhanced Immunity By reducing sympathetic overdrive and time spent in ‘fight or flight’, meditation supports immune regulation — not just boosting defenses but helping them self-modulate. Recent studies showed an 8-week mindfulness program increased antibody response to vaccines and meditators often recover from illness more quickly.

Improved Sleep Quality & Mental Clarity Meditation improves melatonin secretion and reduces nighttime cortisol. A Lancet trial found Mindfulness-Based Strategies as effective as antidepressants in preventing relapse. Corporate mindfulness programs at Google, General Mills, and Nike reduce burnout and boost creativity.

Take just 5 minutes today and begin:

Start small 5 minutes a day of focused breathing or guided meditation.

Anchor it to an existing habit morning coffee, lunch break, or bedtime.

Use tools apps like Insight Timer or Calm; or simply a timer and quiet space.

Progress gradually consistency matters more than duration.

Meditation isn’t “woo.” It’s nervous system retraining that restores physiological coherence — the foundation for hormonal balance, digestion, detoxification, and immune vitality. When you calm your mind, you calm your mitochondria, and healing begins from the inside out.

A few minutes of daily stillness can lower blood pressure, ease inflammation, support hormones, sharpen cognition, and enhance recovery. Meditation is free, portable, and scientifically validated — a true whole-body longevity practice.

Make an appointment with your Carolina Total Wellness health coach to create a plan for stillness that fits into your busy life and supports your unique health goals.

Functional Medicine

Functional medicine is a science-based health care approach to assess, prevent and treat complex chronic disease.

Answers to frequently asked questions provided by Carolina Total WellnessLearn More

Allergy Testing & Drops

After a brief allergy test, you can begin sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT), or allergy drops under the tongue. No more allergy shots!

learn more about Allergy testing and drops provided by [VAR_PRACTICE_NAME]Learn More

About Your Visit

Learn how to prepare for your visit and what to expect at your initial consultation and at your follow-up visits with our office.

What to expect at your appointment with Carolina Total WellnessLearn More

facebook icon twitter icon instagram icon