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Transcript
What Is Cancer?
Cancer is not
just one disease,
but many
diseases – over
200 different
types of cancers
584,000
deaths in
2014
ESTIMATED DEATHS - MALE
ESTIMATED DEATHS
Cell DIVISION TIMELINE
 Normal
body cells grow, divide
and die in an orderly fashion
 All Cells have a varying life span
 Quick Dividing Cells: Skin, digestive
system cells
 Slow dividing cells – liver pancreas
 Muscle Cells, Heart Cells, Brain Cells
Rarely divide
Cells divide at different rates
Cell Division
Frequency of Cell Division
Cell Type
Approximate Life Span
Skin Cells
2 weeks
12 to 24 hours
Red Blood Cells
4 months
Derived from stem cells in red bone
marrow (erythropoietin) – triggered by
low oxygen to make more
Intestines
4 to 5 days
12 to 24 hours
Liver Cells
300 to 500 days
Once a year
Muscle cells in
intestines
16 to 18 years
Rarely
Brain/Nerve
Many
Rarely
Embryo
Every 20 minutes
CELL CYLCE –What could go wrong w/ steps
Cell Division Checkpoints
Cancer Definition
Uncontrolled
Cell Growth
Failure of cell cycle control
Points
Failure to Repair DNA
Failure of Cell Division Check Points
If DNA Cannot Repair Itself or if Cell
Check Points Fail
 Autolysis or apoptosis is the last resort
to prevent a cell from getting out of
control
 Cancer – if DNA damage interferes with
cell death or encourages out-ofcontrol cell division
Examples of Carcinogens

Chemicals – radon gas, cigarettes, formaldehyde,
asbestos, mustard gas, benzene (CDC lists
approximately 1,000 potential carcinogens

Radiation – UV rays for the sun, sunlamps, X-rays,

Viruses –
 Human
Papillomavirus (HPV)- causes cervical,
vaginal, penile, and certain head and neck
cancers,
 Epstein-Barr
(mononucleosis) linked to
lymphoma (cancer of the lymph nodes),
 Hepatitis
B and C (liver cancer)
•DNA controls all cell activities including cell division
•Some cells lose their ability to control their rate of cell
division – the DNA of these cells has become damaged or
changed (mutated)
•These super-dividing cells form masses called tumors
•Cyclins – Proteins that initiate cell division
•Oncogenes – genes with potential to cause cancer – Stuck
On/gas pedal
•P53 Genes promote cell growth (On or gas pedal) tumor
suppressor genes inhibit cell division and survival. (off or
brake)
Tumor – solid growth or mass of
cells from uncontrolled cell
growth
Tumors
A large ductal carcinoma
In a mastectomy specimen
•Benign tumors are not cancerous – these cells do not spread to
other parts of the body
•Malignant tumors are cancerous – these cells break loose and can
invade and destroy healthy tissue in other parts of the body
(called metastasis)
ANGIOGENESIS
Benign (not cancer)
tumor cells grow
only locally and cannot
spread by invasion or
metastasis
l (cancer) cells invade
neighboring tissues,
Angioenclosed
enter
blood
vessels,by a seed or
andVessel
metastasize to
different
Genesissites
– new
Blood supply to the tumor allowing
The tumor/cancer cells to spread
Malignant
Time
CANCER WARNING SIGNS








Changes in bowel or bladder habits
Sore that will not heal
Unusual bleeding
Thickening or a lump in the breast or somewhere else
Chronic indigestion
Obvious change in a mole
Nagging cough
Also look for extreme tiredness, weight loss, fever
and sometimes pain
Diagnosis of Cancer Cells

Patient History-

MRI, X-rays, CT, ultrasounds to “look” inside the body to
identify location and size of tumor

Biopsy is performed- removal of sample tissue for a
specialist to check for cancer cells- look for
abnormalities.

Determine if the cancer has spread to other organsmetastasis of malignant tumor. - blood or lymph testing
can indicate spread of cancer – if cancer cells are present

Patients will visit and oncologist- doctor who examines
tissue for diseases like cancer

Remission – period of time when the cancer is responding
to treatment or is under control
STAGING OF CANCER

Generally, the lower the stage, the less advanced the
cancer is and the better the treatment outcome is likely
to be.

Stage 0 = pre-cancer

Stage 1 = small cancer found only in the organ where it
started

Stage 2 = larger cancer that may or may not have spread
to the lymph nodes

Stage 3 = larger cancer that is also in the lymph nodes

Stage 4 = cancer in a different organ from where it
started
SKIN CANCERS

Most common types include squamous cell and
basal cell carcinoma (both benign) and melanoma
(malignant)

3.5 million cases of basal and squamous cell
carcinomas each year in the U.S.

Approximately 73,000 cases of melanoma each
year in the U.S.- w/ about 10,000 deaths

Approximately 13,000 skin cancer deaths (10,000
from melanoma)
ABCDE RULES FOR MOLES
This 28 year old woman had a smaller
melanoma on her neck.
Breast– women mammograms – Age 40
Colon – Colonoscopy – women & men-Age 50
Prostate – men- age 50 – discuss to determine
Cervical – pap smears- women- age 21
Oral Cancer – dentists
Work Exposures – as needed
Cancer Treatments
Surgery
(removal of the tumor)
Radiation – targeting radiation
Chemotherapy –chemical
substances – cytotoxic
Natural Options (research option)
Research- nanotechnology
Directions for Cancer Pamphlet
Research a specific type of cancer and create a pamphlet for this cancer

Name of the Cancer

Causes of the Cancer

Risk Factors of the Cancer

Death rate - treatability

How to lower risk factors of this cancer

Treatments of this cancer