my son has had his testicle removed.
they said that they seen adnormal cells.
can you give some light on this ta
yours Keith
If abnormal cells are found around the edge of the biopsy, then further surgery will be required to excise any remaining cancer.
because the cell will not function well and causes to have abnormal cells.
Before lymph nodes are removed, a small amount of tissue is usually removed. A biopsy will be performed on it to check for the presence of abnormal cells.
Finding abnormal cells in a needle biopsy may indicate the presence of cancer or precancerous changes in the tissue sample. Further testing, like a surgical biopsy, may be needed to confirm a diagnosis and determine the extent of the abnormality. Treatment options would depend on the specific type and stage of the abnormal cells found.
The left testicle does the same as the right testicle, which is to produce sperm cells. Combined both testicles actually make 1,000 sperm cells a second. Although, you must take into account a large number of those cells will be deformed / unusable. (About half)
neoplasms
Squamous epithelial cells are the type of cells found on the cervix. That phrase on its own does not indicate any abnormality.
If all the normal cells aren't removed, then either your body will help heal the reduced number of abnormal cells, and your next pap will be normal, or your next pap will be abnormal and a repeat colposcopy will be needed. The scenario you describe is not common, and I urge you to contact your health care provider to discuss your question so you can put your mind at ease.
Only some bone marrow stem cells produce abnormal cells when a person has leukemia. These abnormal cells are known as cancer stem cells.
That means your cells are not normal
t cells
Cellular immunity uses helper cells and killer cells to identify and destroy abnormal cells.