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Cancer/Oncology

XiMED's Oncologists are leaders in various areas of cancer care and treatment. Among these are prostate cancer, lung cancer, breast cancer, pancreatic cancer, colon cancer, head and neck cancers, gastric cancer, lymphomas, radiation oncology services and blood and bone marrow diseases. Our oncologists are up to date on new cancer care protocols and treatments and are actively involved in clinical trials.

Cancer Basics

Defining Cancer

Every minute, ten million cells divide in the human body. Normally, cell division, accompanied by growth and specialized development, takes place in an orderly pattern. But when a cell becomes malignant, it acts in profoundly abnormal ways.

Cancer develops from a single cell that has undergone mutations in its DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), the genetic material which carries the body's hereditary instructions. Instead of maturing normally and dying, cancerous cells reproduce without restraint. It's not that they divide faster, but that they never stop dividing, and they fail to mature. When removed from the body and placed in a laboratory dish with nutrients, they actually seem to be immortal.

The Word "Cancer"

Hippocrates, the ancient Greek physician, is credited with being the first to recognize the difference between benign and malignant tumors.

The invasion of tumors so reminded him of crab claws that he called the disease karkinos, the Greek name for crab. In English this term survives as carcinoma.

The English language also adopted the word cancer, which is the Latin word for crab.

Causes of Cancer

Researchers would be glad to find a single, major cause of cancer, but cancer represents many diseases, each consisting of a complex, multistage process.

What seems clear is that some cancers have much more to do with our lifestyles than with our genetic inheritance. This is indicated by the finding that when people migrate from one country to another, they and their descendants pick up patterns of cancer in their adopted country. For example, when Japanese people move to the U.S., they lose the high risk for gastric cancer which exists in Japan and assume Americans' high risk for cancer of the colon and breast.

Extensive, worldwide population studies suggest that factors limited to race or genetics play a relatively small role in causing cancer. In fact, only about ten percent of cancers are truly genetic. However, it is increasingly clear that genetic predisposition combined with environmental factors is the major cause of cancer.

Nine Ways to Reduce Your Risk of Cancer

The causes of cancer are complex; therefore, nothing can guarantee that you will never get it. However, individually we have some power of prevention over many cancers. By adhering to guidelines such as the nine listed below, your personal liability to cancer can be reduced.

  1. If you smoke or chew tobacco, quit. Many smokers who conquer the habit do so on their own. Group therapy programs, nicotine replacement therapy and hypnosis are helpful to some.
  2. Adjust your diet. While some foods increase the risk of cancer, other kinds apparently act as anticarcinogens, or cancer preventatives.
  3. Drink alcohol in moderation, or don't drink at all. One or two drinks a day should be the maximum.
  4. Avoid overexposure to direct sunlight. Use protective clothing and sunscreen preparations of SPF 20 or higher. Avoid the sun between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m., when ultraviolet rays are strongest. Even one or two bad cases of sunburn can be dangerous in the long term, particularly for children. For those who want a "bronze" tanned look, self tanning lotions may provide a safe alternative to sunbathing. Never use a tanning bed.
  5. Maintain a healthy body weight. If you are overweight, consult your physician about a plan for weight loss.
  6. Have dental and medical X-rays only as necessary. X-ray radiation doses are usually extremely low. However, before you agree to any X-ray, be satisfied that it is medically necessary or advisable.
  7. Use caution when handling any potentially harmful substance. Use protective clothing and safety equipment around industrial and home-use chemicals. Avoid breathing fumes from rubber and petroleum products, and dust from cotton and coal.
  8. Be alerted to involuntary risk factors. For example, women with a family history of breast cancer should remember they are at greater risk for cancer at that site. And men over 65 should be aware of their high risk, as a group, for prostate cancer.
  9. Have regular physical examinations and all recommended cancer checks and tests for your age group. Those aged 20 to 40 should have a cancer-related medical check-up every three years, and those over 40 should every year.
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