Harmon was diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) on Oct. 4, 1983, just one month shy of his third birthday.
Some type of cancer
No you can't
There are many types of lung cancer some are more aggressive then others. You first need to know what type your are asking about. Then see in general how fast that type of cancer spreads.
yes, but in the 2003 version he played ryan. if you go onto www.imdb.com and either type in the film or person they will tell you. as the site is the movie database.
Depends on the type of skin cancer. Some are more serious than others.
You can find information about the colon cancer at the National Cancer institute. With that type of cancer, you will have some surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, immunotherapy, and vaccine therapy. There are also some clinical trials that accepts patients.
it pends on what kind of lung cancer you have all are bad but some more than others
The type of treatment used depends on the type of cancer. Some cancers have spread to different parts of the body and only chemotherapy can be used. The type of cancer determines which chemicals will be used. Some cancers in the bone will respond to transplants. Some cancers will not respond to transplants. Cancer is a catch all name for many different problems. When you say, "I hurt," you could be talking about anything from a sprained ankle to a sinus headache. Cancer is the same way.
Grammar cancer.
No she did not have cancer!!
There are a number of procedures performed at a cancer treatment center. All of the available treatments are designed to rid the patient of cancer cells. Some procedures include surgeries and chemotherapy. The type of procedure one has will depend on the type of cancer they have.
The words pandemic and epidemic refer to infectious diseases and their spread, and cancer is not considered an infectious disease in that respect. Sometimes a localized outbreak of a specific type of cancer that is unusually high and might mark an environmental hazard, may be called a "cancer outbreak in epidemic proportions" in a headline, as a descriptive phrase, but cancer is usually not referred to in that context.