Mitosis & Cancer
What is Cancer? Mutated cells that are not longer under control Cancer Cells Grow uncontrollably Multiply more rapidly than normal cells Are not able to specialize
Metastasis Cancer cells that has spread from the part of the body where it started (the primary site) to other parts of the body. Metastasized Metastatic cancer Cancer cells break away from tumor Travel to another part of body via bloodstream or lymphatic system (a collection of vessels that carry fluid and immune system cells).
Cancers are named after the part of the body they start. For example: Cancer that starts in the lungs but spreads to the bone is called lung cancer with bone metastases.
Benign Malignant Non-cancerous Stay in one place in the body Not usually life threatening Cancerous Able to metastases Could be life threatening Early symptoms include swelling of nearby lymph tissue Benign vs. Malignant
CAUTION: SOME IMAGES MAY BE DISTURBING TO SOME VIEWERS!!!! CANCER IMAGES
Skin Cancer ABCD’s of skin cancer
Brain Cancer
Oral Cancer
Lung Cancer
Breast Cancer
Canadian Statistics The following statistics and graphs are from the Canadian Cancer Society (2011) Figure 1.1 New Cases & Deaths – Males Figure 1.2 New Cases & Deaths – Females From:
Treatments Primary Treatments Chemotherapy Radiation therapy These 2 methods may be used separately or in combination with one another
Chemotherapy Use of drugs Often a combination of drugs used How it works? Slows or stops the cancer cells from : Growing Multiplying Spreading to other parts of the body
Radiation Therapy Use of a certain type of energy (radiation) From x-rays, gamma rays, electrons and other sources How it works? Damages the DNA in the cancer cells Makes it impossbile for cells to grow and divide
Drawbacks for Treatments Chemotherapy and radiation therapy are: Powerful treatments that affect the whole body Healthy cells can also be damaged BUT… Damage is usually temporary Healthy cells will repair themselves