Is cancer a mistake in the process of mitoses?!


Question: I don't think so, no. Not technically. And definitely not in the broad terms your question suggests.

Cancer
(neoplasia : abnormality in cellular differentiation, maturation, and control of growth resulting in the development of a tumour/neoplasm)
results from factors that affect the rate of cell proliferation (growth factor production that is gene regulated, chemical carcinogens, Ionizing radiation, some viruses containing oncogenes etc.)

Cancer cells are different from normal cells. They can have:
-lost/modified cellular glycoproteins jutting out from the cell
-impaired communication between cells resulting in a loss of 'contact inhibition' --- normally cells stop producing if they can't be a certain distance from its neighbours, cancer cells often lose this
-altered permeability and transport mechanisms
-nucleus can be altered
-new/increased surface substances (antigens)

Though with the number of different types of cancer, resulting from different reasons, I wouldn't be surprised if there was a specific cancer resulting from a genetic influence on mitosis. It's been a while since I brushed up on cancer, and my main focus back then was more to do with viral oncogenes


Answers: I don't think so, no. Not technically. And definitely not in the broad terms your question suggests.

Cancer
(neoplasia : abnormality in cellular differentiation, maturation, and control of growth resulting in the development of a tumour/neoplasm)
results from factors that affect the rate of cell proliferation (growth factor production that is gene regulated, chemical carcinogens, Ionizing radiation, some viruses containing oncogenes etc.)

Cancer cells are different from normal cells. They can have:
-lost/modified cellular glycoproteins jutting out from the cell
-impaired communication between cells resulting in a loss of 'contact inhibition' --- normally cells stop producing if they can't be a certain distance from its neighbours, cancer cells often lose this
-altered permeability and transport mechanisms
-nucleus can be altered
-new/increased surface substances (antigens)

Though with the number of different types of cancer, resulting from different reasons, I wouldn't be surprised if there was a specific cancer resulting from a genetic influence on mitosis. It's been a while since I brushed up on cancer, and my main focus back then was more to do with viral oncogenes

It is free radical damage that causes oxidative stress to the cell so that it loses its cell memory as to what and where it belongs. We all have cancer cells in our body right now as I type this, about 175,000 of them every moment we are alive.

Your immune system is beating it right now, and keeping it at bay.

Keep your diet pure to feed your cells so that they can continue to do their job.

You eat crappy and depend upon radiation, toxic debilitating poisons and mutilating surgery without prevention, then death is inevitable.

Sorry for the good and bad news, but life experience of losing all friends around me who would not alter their diet with cancer and friends still alive and standing tall who altered their diet and no medical procedures accept biopsies to confirm they had it as well as cat scans to prove it didn't come back.





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