CARCINOGENS








Home INTRODUCTION HOW CANCER DEVELOPS Safety Systems Fail Proto-Oncogenes Become Oncogenes Tumor Suppressor Genes Stop Working Cell Cycle Clock Malfunctions Cells Achieve Immortality Cells Break Free and Spread Tumor Forms Tumors Spread CAUSES OF CANCER Carcinogens Tobacco Smoke Diet Pathogens Radiation Environmental and Occupational Chemicals Hereditary Factors Steroid Hormones Population Demographics TYPES OF CANCER Prostate Cancer Breast Cancer Lung Cancer Colorectal Cancer Lymphoma Bladder Cancer Uterine Cancer Skin Cancer Kidney Cancer Leukemia Pancreatic Cancer Ovarian Cancer Stomach Cancer Bone Cancer Cervical Cancer Blood Cancer DIAGNOSIS Detection Staging TREATMENT Surgery Radiation Therapy Chemotherapy Hormone Therapy Immunotherapy PREVENTION Lifestyle Changes Screening and Early Detection CANCER RESEARCH Clinical Trials Basic Research TROPIC OF CANCER Polyp (Tumor) Ketoconazole Home

HEALTH EDUCATION PROGRAMS
Risk Factors For Cancer (tumor)

 Cancer (medicine), any of more than 100 diseases characterized by excessive, uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells, which invade and destroy other tissues. Cancer develops in almost any organ or tissue of the body, but certain types of cancer are more lethal than others. Cancer is the leading cause of death in Canada and second only to heart disease in the United States.


 One of the greatest risk factors for cancer is prolonged or repeated exposure to carcinogens—chemical, biological, or physical agents that cause the cellular damage that leads to cancer. The details of how carcinogens cause cancer remain unclear. One theory is that exposure to carcinogens, when combined with the effects of aging, causes an increase in chemicals in the body called free radicals. An excessive number of free radicals causes damage by taking negatively charged particles called electrons from key cellular components of the body, such as DNA. This may make genes more vulnerable to the mutating effects of carcinogens.

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