Cancer cells can be destroyed by various treatments, including chemotherapy, which uses drugs to target and kill rapidly dividing cells; radiation therapy, which damages the DNA of cancer cells; and immunotherapy, which harnesses the body's immune system to identify and attack cancer cells. Targeted therapies also focus on specific molecular targets associated with cancer. Additionally, surgical removal can physically eliminate tumors.
Cancer cells can be destroyed during chemotherapy, although it does not always work.
Cancer cells are able to take over healthy cells due to multiple mutations in the genes. When the healthy cells become cancerous, the genetic information will be damaged and destroyed.
No. All cells, whether normal or malignant, are destroyed in the process.
With the right limited dose cancer cells could be destroyed. Hence for cancer treatment.
Radium is used. Madam Marie curie discovered that radium destroyed diseased cells in the body and tackled certain types of cancer
No. Cancer occurs when a mutated cell is not destroyed at its creation and then multiplies out of control, simultaneously failing to die off at the appropriate time. This product will not change that. The cancer must be surgically removed and any remaining cells destroyed.
No, not under any normal circumstances.No type of cancer spreads from person to person under normal conditions.The only theoretical way for it to spread would be from surgical implantation of the cancer cells between two patients and even than there is a chance the implanted cells may be destroyed by the implant patients immune system.
You can have cancer anywhere there are cells; where there are cells, there is a possibility of a mutation that causes cancer.
It depends what's removed. In the case of cancer cells, some are usually preserved on a microscope slide - as a specimen for (perhaps) teaching purposes. In the case of amputated body parts, excess skin tissue or diseased organs - they're simply destroyed by incineration.
pre cancer cells are cells with an abnormal appearance suggestive of an increased cancer risk. These cells are not cancerous by themselves alone.
yes certain cancers contain golgi cells such as the colon cancer cell and also the breast cancer cells
dividing out of control .