thats not what it is for! so that would be misuse of the drug. and that's a silly answer, although I'm not a doctor. I'm a patient and the real answer is yes. All humans and cancers are unique, but there have been multiple studies done in laboratory settings that proved chemicals produced in the cannabis plant attack and destroy cancer cells and tumors in rats and mice. I had survived over a year beyond median expectancy for my cancer before I had a seizure that drove me to cannabis. I've been a daily smoker since July of '08, when the prescribed anti-seizure caused severe irritability. That seizure was very likely caused by tumor growth too small to be detected by MRI. Today I have a good quality of life and am physically healthy, thanks to cannabis.
No. It is used to counter the side effects of chemotherapy.
Yes if it cancerous and untreated
Radioactive implants are devices that are placed directly within cancerous tissue or tumors, in order to deliver radiation therapy intended to kill cancerous cells.
It rips easily.
Cancer cells have higher mitotic index because they have a mutation in the DNA so they reproduce uncontrollably and therefore divide faster which means they have a higher mitotic index. ex. In a normal lung tissue, % of cells dividing is 5% while in a cancerous lung the % of cells divding is 25 %
Mastectomy is surgical removal of the whole breast. Lumpectomy is surgical removal of only the cancerous tissue.
No, laboratory tests have shown that marijuana actually has anti-cancerous properties.
mohs' surgery
Cancerous. The opposite of benign
Kaposi's sarcoma is a cancerous tumour of the connective tissue.
The tissue sample will then be examined under a microscope for the presence of cancerous cells.
no
A mass of tissue growing uncontrollably is a cancerous tumor.