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2007-02-24 20:38:59 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Health Diseases & Conditions Cancer

8 answers

Have you try this link http://www.healthcastle.com/cancer_general_mets.shtml

2007-02-24 20:43:43 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Our DNA is such a complex thing, they reproduce themselves at such a high pace, like when you grow your hair, or have a sunburn, or are an infant. The DNA copies itself when the two cells split apart and make two, often times to replenish the ones we have lost to old age,,,,,,(that is why wrinkles happen, as you grow older, our cells do not replenish themselves as often.)

We shed our skin, most of what you vaccum up off the floor is actually dead skin cells, that we call dirt.

Anyways, cancer is when the DNA doesn't copy itself exactly, and can be accelerated through carcinogens, like tobacco, or just growing older. The DNA mutates, then and starts growing something other than what it should be growing. The DNA that started growing where something shouldn't have been growing could be either benign or malignant.

Benign means that your DNA made a mistake, made those cells, and aren't doing it anymore. This is the best case scenario for cancer, since it is likely that your body will not make the same mistake again.

Malignant is much worse, your body has copied the DNA and in mistake, made a cell that can copy itself. That cell can over time make many more copies of the mistake and make a tumor, or growth that isn't supposed to be where it is, if at all.

This tumor, or DNA mistake can spread by your blood stream if it is in the right organ, or through rapid mutation like lung cancer. Cancer is like rust on an old car, it will eat away at that car until nothing is left of it. This happens to a lot of people and ways are being studied to help prevent those DNA mistakes in the first place, but much is yet to be done.

2007-02-25 04:53:52 · answer #2 · answered by kaliroadrager 5 · 0 1

Cancer tumors are called "malignant" because they have the ability to invade normal tissues (replacing healthy cells with cancer cells) and to metastasize or spread to other parts of the body. Death from cancer often comes not from the primary site (where the cancer first began) but from the metastases or the spread site. For example, a patient with stomach cancer may actually die from liver failure after the cancer has spread to that organ.

When a certain type of cancer spreads to another part of the body, it does not change its type. For example, if a person with a lymphoma develops a tumor in the lung which is a metastasis (a spread site) from this lymphoma, the tumor growing in the lung has the same characteristics as the lymphoma. It does not represent a new lung cancer of the type which would develop if the cancer was to start in, or to be "primary" in the lung. It is important to understand this as the treatment that will be effective against the metastasis will be the same treatment that will be used for the primary lymphoma. This is why it is most important for the doctors treating a patient to be able to establish the primary site at which any cancer orginated.

Cancer Spreading, or Metastases takes place in many ways: through the lymphatic system, through the bloodstream, by spreading through body spaces such as the bronchi or abdominal cavity, or through implantation.

The most common way for cancer to spread is through the lymphatic system. This process is called "embolization". The lymph system has its own channels that circulate throughout the body, similar to the veins and arteries of the bloodstream. These channel are very small and carry a tissue fluid called lymph throughout the body.

Often when a solid tumor is removed by surgery, the surgeon will remove not only the tumor but the neighboring lymph glands, even though there is no visible sign of cancer in those glands. This is done as a precautionary measure, because if even one cell has broken away from the tumor and lodged in the lymphatic system, the cancer could continue growing and spreading.

Cancer can also spread through the bloodstream. Cancer cells, like healthy cells, must have a blood supply in order to live, so all cancer cells have access to the bloodstream. Malignant cells can break off from the tumor and travel through the bloodstream until they find a suitable place to start forming a new tumor. (Tumors almost always spread through the veins rather than through the arteries.) Sarcomas spread through the bloodstream, as do certain types of carcinomas, like carcinoma of the kidneys, testicular carcinoma, and Wilms' tumor, a type of kidney cancer seen in young children. Cancers may spread by more than one route.

Cancers can also spread by local invasion -- that is, by intruding on the healthy tissue that surrounds the tumor. Some cancers that spread this way do not venture very far from the original site. An example of this kind of cancer is basal cell carcinoma of the skin. When this kind of cancer is removed by surgeon, a wide area of healthy tissue surrounding it is also removed and it is usually "cured" immediately. Unless some cells have been left behind, it is very unlikely that it will recur. (However, it is possible that a second cancer of the same kind may start to grow at a later time at a completely different site -- the new growth having nothing to do with the first.)

A very rare type of metastasis is caused by implantation or inoculation. This can happen accidentally when a biopsy is done or when cancer surgery is performed. In this case malignant cells may actually drip from a needle or an instrument (this is also called a "spill"). It is desirable, therefore, if possible and if the cancer is small to remove it completely at the initial surgery -- that is at the time of the biopsy.

Cancers do not spread in a completely random fashion. Some parts of the body are more vulnerable to becoming metastatic sites than others. For example cancers rarely metastasize to the skin, but they often metastasize to the liver and lungs. Each type of cancer has its own pattern for metastases.

2007-02-25 04:44:24 · answer #3 · answered by qt pie 2 · 3 0

As Cancer grows, it invades the surrounding structures and causes damage. It spreads to the draining lymph nodes. Through the blood stream it spreads to the others parts of the body like lung, liver, bones, brain etc.

2007-02-25 04:42:46 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

By a process called metastasization.

2007-02-25 04:40:47 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

blood

2007-02-28 19:35:45 · answer #6 · answered by duc602 7 · 0 0

cell to cell and cell to blood and to cell

2007-02-25 04:47:59 · answer #7 · answered by keral 6 · 0 0

by evil demons

2007-02-25 04:43:27 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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