Starving With Cancer? How Zinc Impacts Appetite Signals and Taste
Category: Appetite Loss Solutions
Starving with cancer isn’t just “not eating enough.” Often, taste changes happen first — metallic, bitter, or just off — and appetite follows because your brain isn’t getting the usual hunger signals.
Zinc plays a key role in how taste and appetite signals work, and low zinc can be one contributor to the struggle.
Labs don’t always tell the full story, and forcing calories doesn’t fix the signal.
For those who can still eat, foods like pumpkin seeds, oats, lentils, mushrooms, and miso broth may help support zinc. But when eating becomes impossible, the conversation needs to shift — sometimes the body needs support for the signal first.
This isn’t about blame. It’s about understanding the signal, supporting your body, and taking one step at a time.
Comment FUEL for my guide showing how I supported my body when eating was impossible.
Cancer Weight Loss Explained: What Cachexia Really Is and How to Help
Category: Appetite Loss Solutions
Helping a Cancer Patient Understand Unexplained Weight Loss If you are helping a cancer patient who is losing weight and strength, there is something critical you need to understand that […]
Baking Soda and Cancer – What the Research Actually Shows (Supportive Care That Works)
Category: Appetite Loss Solutions
Baking soda and cancer. I’m going to tell you what the research actually shows, what it’s useful for, and why you’ll never hear this from your oncologist. Tumors create an acidic environment around themselves, and researchers at the University of Arizona Cancer Center found that baking soda can raise the pH around tumors in mice. In some cases, that slowed metastasis or made chemotherapy work better. Where baking soda is actually useful is supportive care—mouth sores, dry mouth, thick saliva, and metallic taste. A simple baking soda rinse can make food tolerable again when everything tastes like metal or your mouth feels raw.
What to Do When a Cancer Patient Won’t Eat
Category: Appetite Loss Solutions
As a cancer survivor who lost 100 pounds in 3 months to cachexia (wasting syndrome), I know exactly how terrifying this is—for both the patient and the caregiver.
This guide is for caregivers watching someone they love waste away. I’m sharing what’s actually happening in their body, the 5 things every caregiver needs to know right now, and what finally saved my life when I was days away from a feeding tube.
If traditional food isn’t working anymore, there’s still hope. Let me show you what doctors don’t explain.
The Truth About Cancer, Juicing & Muscle Loss: Why Most Patients Still Lose Strength (And How to Fight Cachexia) 🔥 🎙️
Category: Appetite Loss Solutions
When it comes to cancer, one of the things that health nuts like me suggest is sipping the rainbow. Beet juice, berry smoothies, green blends and yes, those colors really […]
How To Integrate the 7 Pillars of Cancer Recovery Into Your Day
Category: Appetite Loss Solutions
Feeling overwhelmed by all the pieces of cancer recovery? Discover how to finally bring together nutrition, supplements, movement, hydration, rest, and emotional support into a daily routine that actually works—so you can reclaim control, build resilience, and start healing from the inside out.
Smart Hydration for Cancer Patients: What to Drink, What to Avoid
Category: Appetite Loss Solutions
Hydration and Recovery When it comes to recovery during cancer treatment, hydration is often overlooked, yet it’s one of the most critical elements of healing. Water and fluids support every […]
How to Manage the Emotional Toll of Cancer: 5 Proven Strategies
Category: Anxiety
The Emotional Weight of Cancer Cancer is not just a physical battle; it’s an emotional and psychological one as well. While scans, treatments, and medications address the tumor itself, the […]
Top 6 Supplements for Cancer Recovery: Safe, Effective, and Backed by Science
Category: Appetite Loss Solutions
When navigating cancer treatment, nutrition is foundational, but sometimes it’s not enough on its own. Side effects from chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery, along with changes in appetite, digestion, and absorption, […]