Sat
30
Aug
North J. Kroster

Our body is made of cells. Cells are main elements of tissues that are used by our body to maintain and create organs. When few of these cells divide and grow in abnormal ways, they can be cancerous and becomes a mass known as a tumor. When cells get old and die in our body new cells replace them.

When this cellular regeneration process fails the cells have no place to go and that’s partly why they grow into a tumor forms. The tumors are classified as malignant or benign. Cancerous Malignant tumors are surely bad for our health in any case. They can be removed generally yet; they grow again sometimes or attack other tissue or organs close by. The spreading of cancer cells that are malignant to other body parts is known as Metastasis. Tumors that are benign are not cancerous but are scary when detected in our body. They are not a threat to life and can be easily removed. These tumors do not attack cells near to them or spread.

Doctors cannot explain why breast cancer is found in some women while not in others. Women exposed to certain factors of risk are likely to be affected by cancer of breast than women not exposed to such factors. Some factors include:

1. A woman’s age- Old women have greater risk. Young women hardly develop breast cancer before reaching menopause

2. A family history of cancer will increase the risk factor of breast cancer

3. If a woman has cancer in one breast, she will develop it in other breast too.

Remember that women with risk factors that are high may not develop cancer always, and women who develop cancer of breast may not be in the exposed to high risk factors. Hence it’s difficult to find who will develop this deadly disease and who will not. Except higher risk factors, there’s no sure way to predict it. It’s advisable to get screened for it before any development of symptoms. The earlier it is detected, the sooner its treatment can be given and possibly the patient can survive.

For more information u can see this: Aluminium and Parabens and Breast Cancer

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North J. Kroster (12:56 am Saturday, August 30th, 2008)
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