Healthcare Trans
Healthcare Trans
Healthcare Trans
Carcinogens
• Cancer is a class of diseases characterized by out-of- • Carcinogens are a class of substances that are directly
control cell growth, with the capacity of invading the responsible for damaging DNA, promoting, or aiding
neighboring parts of the affected area spreading to other cancer. Tobacco, asbestos, arsenic, radiation such as
organs. There are over 100 different types of cancer, and gamma and x-rays, the sun, and compounds in car exhaust
each is classified by the type of cell that is initially affected. fumes are all examples of carcinogens.
• Cancer harms the body when damaged cells divide C. Genes - the family type
uncontrollably to form lumps or masses of tissue called • Cancer can be the result of a genetic predisposition that is
tumors (except in the case of leukemia where cancer inherited from family members. It is possible to be born
prohibits normal blood function by abnormal cell division with certain genetic mutations or a fault in a gene that
in the blood stream). Tumors can grow and interfere with makes one statistically more likely to develop cancer later
the digestive, nervous, and circulatory systems, and they in life.
can release hormones that alter body function. Tumors that D. As we age, there is an increase in the number of possible
stay in one spot and demonstrate limited growth are cancer-causing mutations in our DNA.
generally considered to be benign. E. Several viruses have also been linked to cancer such as: human
• More dangerous, or malignant, tumors form when two papillomavirus, hepatitis B and C and Epstein-Barr virus,
things occur: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) - and anything else
• A cancerous cell manages to move throughout the body that suppresses or weakens the immune system - inhibits the
using the blood or lymph systems, destroying healthy tissue body's ability to fight infections and increases the chance of
in a process called invasion. developing cancer.
• That cell manages to divide and grow, making new blood
vessels to feed itself in a process called angiogenesis. How is cancer classified?
• When a tumor successfully spreads to other parts of the There are five broad groups that are used to classify cancer.
body and grows, invading and destroying other healthy 1. Carcinomas are characterized by cells that cover internal
tissues, it is said to have metastasized. This process itself is and external parts of the body such as lung, breast, and
called metastasis, and the result is a serious condition that colon cancer.
is very difficult to treat. 2. Sarcomas are characterized by cells that are located in
• How cancer spreads – scientists reported in Nature bone, cartilage, fat, connective tissue, muscle, and other
Communications (October 2012 issue) that they have supportive tissues.
discovered an important clue as to why cancer cells spread. 3. Lymphomas are cancers that begin in the lymph nodes and
It has something to do with their adhesion (stickiness) immune system tissues.
properties. 4. Leukemias are cancers that begin in the bone marrow and
• In 2007, cancer claimed the lives of about 7.6 million often accumulate in the bloodstream.
people in the world 5. Adenomas are cancers that arise in the thyroid, the
• WHO reports that cancer is the second leading cause of pituitary gland, the adrenal gland, and other glandular
death worldwide, accounting in 2008 to 7.6 million deaths tissues.
(around 13% of all deaths). Lung, stomach, liver, colon,
and breast cancer cause the most cancer deaths each year. Characteristic of malignant neoplasms
• Malignant cells are more agile than non-malignant 1. Malignant neoplasms are rather poorly separated from
ones - scientists from the Physical Sciences-Oncology normal tissues. From the periphery, where growth is active,
Centers, USA, reported in the journal Scientific infiltrating processes extend out to impinge on and destroy
Reports (April 2013 issue) that malignant cells are much the surrounding tissue.
“nimbler” than non-malignant ones. Malignant cells can 2. They metastasize.
pass more easily through smaller gaps, as well as applying 3. They tend to recur when removed surgically because the
a much greater force on their environment compared to tumor cells have widely infiltrated the surrounding tissues
other cells. and the borders are poorly outlined.
4. They cause extensive destruction of tissues
What causes cancer? 5. They produce such effects in the body such as anemia,
• Cancer is ultimately the result of cells that uncontrollably weakness, loss of weight, tumor and cachexia.
grow and do not die. Normal cells in the body follow an 6. They have little resemblances to the normal cells of the
orderly path of growth, division, and death. Programmed parent tissue. The arrangement of the cells in the malignant
cell death is called apoptosis, and when this process breaks tumor does not conform to that of any normal adult tissue.
down, cancer begins to form. Unlike regular cells, cancer 7. They kill, regardless of location, unless properly and
cells do not experience programmatic death and instead vigorously treated
continue to grow and divide. This leads to a mass of
abnormal cells that grows out of control. Danger signs of cancer
A. Genes – the DNA type 1. Any sore that does not heal.
• Cells can experience uncontrolled growth if there are 2. A lump or thickening in the breast or elsewhere.
damages or mutations to DNA, and therefore, damage to 3. Unusual bleeding or discharge from the body orifice
the genes involved in cell division. 4. Any change in a wart or mole.
• Four key types of gene are responsible for the cell division 5. Persistent indigestion or difficulty in swallowing
process: 6. Persistent hoarseness or cough
1. Oncogenes tell cells when to divide, 7. Any change in the normal bowel habits
2. Tumor suppressor genes tell cells when not to
divide How is cancer diagnosed and staged?
3. Suicide genes control apoptosis and tell the cell • Imaging techniques such as X-rays, CT scans, MRI
to kill itself if something goes wrong, and scans, PET scans, and ultrasound scans are used
4. DNA-repair genes instruct a cell to repair regularly in order to detect where a tumor is located and
damaged DNA. what organs may be affected by it. Doctors may also
conduct an endoscopy, which is a procedure that uses a leukemia and lymphoma cases can be treated with the
thin tube with a camera and light at one end, to look for hormone cortisone.
abnormalities inside the body. 6. The goal of gene therapy is to replace damaged genes with
• Biopsy – the only absolute way to diagnose cancer. ones that work to address a root cause of cancer: damage
• Physicians will analyze your body's sugars, fats, proteins, to DNA. For example, researchers are trying to replace the
and DNA at the molecular level. For example, cancerous damaged gene that signals cells to stop dividing (the p53
prostate cells release a higher level of a chemical called gene) with a copy of a working gene. Other gene-based
PSA (prostate-specific antigen) into the bloodstream that therapies focus on further damaging cancer cell DNA to the
can be detected by a blood test. point where the cell commits suicide.