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Cancer probably involve abnormal growth of cells. Some viruses such as causing AIDS tends to eliminate certain cells. I just wonder if it could be possible to regulate abnormal cell growth by exposing them to virus of suitable type.

2006-07-03 21:26:59 · 6 answers · asked by bainsal 2 in Health Diseases & Conditions Cancer

6 answers

Viruses will never cure cancer. They may cause them but never cure them. Viruses are mankind's most difficult microscopic foe.
As far as I know, to us they are good for nothing.

2006-07-03 21:31:48 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

All approaches are being tried experimentally for cancer. The problem is that cancer of different sites may have a different cause and cure. Labeled antibodies have been tried, but some cancers are caused by a virus.

2006-07-17 03:53:33 · answer #2 · answered by ringocox 4 · 0 0

The virus, called adeno-associated virus type 2, or AAV-2, infects an estimated 80 percent of the population.

"Our results suggest that adeno-associated virus type 2, which infects the majority of the population but has no known ill effects, kills multiple types of cancer cells yet has no effect on healthy cells," said Craig Meyers, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the Penn State College of Medicine in Pennsylvania.

"We believe that AAV-2 recognizes that the cancer cells are abnormal and destroys them. This suggests that AAV-2 has great potential to be developed as an anti-cancer agent," Meyers said in a statement.

He said at a meeting of the American Society for Virology that studies have shown women infected with AAV-2 who are also infected with a cancer-causing wart virus called HPV develop cervical cancer less frequently than uninfected women do.

AAV-2 is a small virus that cannot replicate itself without the help of another virus.

But with the help of a second virus it kills cells.

For their study, Meyers and colleagues first infected a batch of human cells with HPV, some strains of which cause cervical cancer. They then infected these cells and normal cells with AAV-2.

After six days, all the HPV-infected cells died.

The same thing happened with cervical, breast, prostate and squamous cell tumor cells.

All are cancers of the epithelial cells, which include skin cells and other cells that line the insides and outsides of organs.

"One of the most compelling findings is that AAV-2 appears to have no pathologic effects on healthy cells," Meyers said.

"So many cancer therapies are as poisonous to healthy cells as they are to cancer cells. A therapy that is able to distinguish between healthy and cancer cells could be less difficult to endure for those with cancer."

AAV-2 is being studied intensively as a gene therapy vector -- a virus modified to carry disease-correcting genes into the body.

Gene therapy researchers favor it because it does not seem to cause disease or immune system reaction on its own.

2006-07-03 21:31:54 · answer #3 · answered by dafauti 3 · 0 0

Read the information on my page. We have reversed 54 types of cancer.

2006-07-17 08:50:04 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no. even if it can, how will the virus B cured?

2006-07-17 15:54:33 · answer #5 · answered by gelly700 3 · 0 0

No u will die more worse

2006-07-03 21:29:24 · answer #6 · answered by Lee l 1 · 0 0

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