The cell cycle goes out of control and cancer develops.
Cancer. If it kills you, your digestive system no longer works, does it?
When the cell cycle is no longer regulated, cells can undergo uncontrolled division leading to the formation of a tumor or cancer. This can result in abnormal growth of tissues and potentially invade other tissues in the body, causing harm. It is important for cells to maintain proper regulation in the cell cycle to prevent these issues.
Complete remission or response. The cancer completely disappears. The course of chemotherapy is completed and the patient is tested regularly for a recurrence.
Ernest H. Rosenbaum has written: 'A comprehensive guide for cancer patients and their families' 'How to Prevent Cancer' 'You can't live forever, you can live 10 years longer with better health' -- subject(s): Cerebrovascular disease, Lifestyles, Cancer, Hypertension, Prevention, Osteoporosis
there is rabies which is a disease that animals get from other infected animals. They start foaming from the mouth, and become very rabid. There is also cancer. A type of common cancer in cats is mammary cancer (breast cancer) in cats. This is where is small, or more than one tumors around the nipple appear. If not treated, that animal doesnt have much longer to live.
tropic of cancer
tropic of cancer
remission
Of course! Leukemia, a cancer of the blood, is very treatable especially in children but should not be considered benign or as something that might blow over. As with any disease, the longer it goes without treatment, the worse the conditions gets and the lower the chance of survival. However, after a couple rounds of chemotherapy, most people survive.
Cancer is what you die of if you don't die of something else first. As people and animals live longer and don't die of other more treatable diseases, we're living long enough that cancer - both for animals and people - is becoming more of a problem.
Full remission refers to a state in which a disease, particularly cancer, is no longer detectable in the body and the patient shows no signs or symptoms of the illness. In this context, it indicates that the disease has been effectively treated and controlled, although it does not necessarily guarantee that the disease will not return. Full remission can be temporary or long-lasting, and ongoing monitoring is often required to ensure the disease does not relapse.