I have no idea what kind of cell kills cancer cells. Why do you think i asked the question?
Virotherapy is a type of treatment that uses viruses to target and kill cancer cells. The viruses are modified to selectively infect and destroy cancer cells while leaving healthy cells unharmed. Once inside the cancer cells, the viruses replicate and cause the cells to burst, ultimately leading to the death of the cancer cells.
True, NK cells are there to protect the body from any type of abnormal growth in all tissues including cancer cells.
Ionizing radiation, such as X-rays and gamma rays, are used in radiation therapy to kill cancer cells. These high-energy electromagnetic waves can damage the DNA within cancer cells, preventing them from dividing and growing.
I heard that peaches and plums can kill breast cancer cells :)
Cancer kills an organism by destroying the red blood cells.
Yes
Samarium doesn't kill cancer cells. A radioactive isotope of samarium (samarium-153) is used in a chemotherapy agent, but it's the radiation, not the samarium, that kills the cancer cells.
A chemotherapeutic drug used to treat cancer must be more toxic to cancer cells (at least, to the cancer cells of the specific type of cancer which it is intended to treat) than it is to the healthy cells of the body. Otherwise, you could only kill the cancer by also killing the patient.
A type of treatment in which body tissue is exposed to high temperatures to damage and kill cancer cells or to make cancer cells more sensitive to the effects of radiation and certain anticancer drugs.
Small interfering RNA (siRNA) can kill cancer cells by targeting specific genes or pathways that are crucial for cancer cell survival or growth. When siRNA enters the cancer cells, it binds to its complementary mRNA, leading to degradation of the mRNA and inhibition of protein synthesis. This disrupts crucial cellular processes in the cancer cells, ultimately leading to their death.
chemotherapy
no