Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
The
Cause Of Cancer |
by:
canro
dicausa |
Cancer
is the disease of the cells. It is an abnormal
growth of cells, which tend to reproduce
in an
uncontrolled way and, in some cases, spread
or
metastasize. A cancerous growth or tumor
is also
known as a malignant growth or tumor. A
growth or
tumor, which is non-malignant is called
benign. Such
tumors are not cancer.
Cancer is not a single disease. It is a
group of more
than hundred different and distinctive diseases.
It is not
contagious. Cancer can involve any tissue
of the body
and have many different forms in each body
area. Most
cancers are named for the type of cell or
organ in which
they start. If a cancer spreads (metastasizes),
the new
tumor bears the same name as the original(primary)
tumor.
Cancer is the Latin word for crab. The ancients
used
the word to mean a malignancy, doubtless
because of
the crab-like tenacity a malignant tumor
sometimes
seems to show in grasping the tissues it
invades.
Cancer may also be called malignancy, a
malignant
tumor, or a neoplasm (literally, a new growth).
In medicine, common term for neoplasms,
or tumors,
that are malignant is known as Cancer. Like
benign
tumors, malignant tumors do not respond
to body
mechanisms that limit cell growth. Unlike
benign
tumors, malignant tumors consist of undifferentiated,
or
unspecialized, cells that show an atypical
cell structure
and do not function like the normal cells
from the organ
from which they derive. Cancer cells, unlike
normal
cells, lack contact inhibition; cancer cells
growing in
laboratory tissue culture do not stop growing
when they
touch each other on a glass or other solid
surface but
grow in masses several layers deep.
Cancer results from mutations of certain
genes that
allow the cells to begin their uncontrolled
growth. These
mutations are either inherited or acquired.
Acquired
mutations are caused by repeated insults
from triggers
(e.g., cigarette smoke or ultraviolet rays)
referred to as
carcinogens. There is usually a latency
period of years
or decades between exposure to a carcinogen
and the
appearance of cancer. This, combined with
the
individual nature of susceptibility to cancer,
makes it
very difficult to establish a cause for
many cancers.
The most significant avoidable carcinogens
are the
chemical components of tobacco smoke. Dietary
components, like excessive consumption of
alcohol or
of foods high in fat and low in fiber rather
than fruits and
vegetables that contain antioxidants and
necessary
micronutrients, have also been linked with
various
cancers. Some cancers may be triggered by
hormone
imbalances. For example, some daughters
of mothers
who had been given DES (diethylstilbestrol)
during
pregnancy to prevent miscarriage developed
vaginal
adenocarcinomas as young women. Aflatoxins
are
natural mold byproducts that can cause cancer
of the
liver.
Certain carcinogens present occupational
hazards. For
example, in the asbestos industry, workers
have a high
probability of developing lung and colon
cancer or a
particularly virulent cancer of the mesothelium
(the
lining of the chest and abdomen). Benzene
and vinyl
chloride are other known industrial carcinogens.
Risk to humans from carcinogens depends
upon the
dose and a person's biologic susceptibility.
Factors
influencing a person's biological susceptibility
to cancer
include age, sex, immune status, nutritional
status,
genetics, and ethnicity.
About the author:
canro dicausa is the owner of
RUS Cancer
which is a premier resource for cancer information.
for more information, go to http://www.ruscancer.com
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|