TO
REVEIW AND CHANGE
Prostate
Cancer
I
What is Cancer?
The human body is made up of billions of cells. Normally, cells function
for a while, then die and are replaced by new cells in an orderly fashion.
This results in an appropriate number of cells that are organized by
the body to perform specific functions.
Tumors
Occasionally, however, cells are replaced in an uncontrolled way and
are unable to be organized by the body to perform their normal function.
As a result, there is an abnormal growth of cells that form a tumor.
There are two kinds of tumors: malignant tumors (cancerous) and benign
tumors (noncancerous).
Because of their increasing size, benign tumors squeeze surrounding
parts of the body and expand into nearby areas. This can cause pain
and interfere with normal function, but it is seldom life threatening.
Malignant tumors can cause pain and interfere with normal function,
but they can also cause other systems in the body to act abnormally.
Malignant tumors can invade nearby groups of cells or tissues, crowding
out and destroying normal cells.
Lymph Nodes
Cancer cells can also break away from the main or primary malignant
tumor and travel to other parts of the body. The body fluids, that can
carry cancer cells from the primary tumor to other parts of the body
are the blood and the lymph.
Lymph is a nearly clear fluid that drains waste from cells. The lymphatic
system transports fluid through vessels and into small bean-shaped structures
called lymph nodes.
One function of lymph nodes is to filter unwanted substances, such
as cancer cells, out of the lymph fluid. However, if there are too many
cancer cells, the lymph nodes cannot remove all of them.
Isolated or disseminated tumor cells are single or small groups of
tumor cells that have been separated from the primary tumor and can
be found in the blood, lymph, or bone marrow. They can develop into
life-threatening metastatic disease if they are untreated.
There are more than 100 different types of cancer. In the United States,
men have a 1 in 2 chance that they will develop some type of cancer
during their lifetime. Men in the US have about a 1 in 6 chance of eventually
being diagnosed with prostate cancer.1
In American men, the most common cancer (aside from skin cancer) is
prostate cancer.
For more cancer specific statistics, please visit www.cancer.org.
References
1. American Cancer Society. Estimated New Cancer Cases and Deaths by
Gender, US, 2005. Available at: http://www.cancer.org/docroot/stt/stt_0.asp |