Categories of Q&A
Prevention
Risk
Genetics & Breast Cancer
Breast Cancer in Men
Myths
Signs & Symptoms
Breast Cancer Screening
Diagnosis
Treatment
Side Effects
Side Effects on Sex & Intimacy
Integrative & Alternative Medicine
Health for Women
Q&A for Survivors
 The magazine on:

  • Women's health
     
  • Breast health
     
  • Breast cancer
Read for free.
Click here.


Breast Cancer  

What is breast cancer?

Each of our bodies is made up of million and millions of cells. Cells are the building blocks of tissue. There are lung cells, brain cells, blood cells, breast cells, and so on. The appearance and makeup of individual cells are unique to the tissue they compose. Brain cells are different from breast cells, and vice versa.

Most cells in the body normally divide to produce more cells when the body signals them to do so. However, occasionally cells fail to divide at the appropriate time, or cells may start dividing when no new cells are needed. If new cells start being produced when the body does not need them, the cells can form a mass of extra tissue. This extra tissue commonly is referred to as a growth, mass, or tumor. Breast tumors can be benign (not cancerous) or malignant (cancerous).

Malignant tumors are composed of cells that are growing out of control. These breast cancer cells also become undifferentiated, which means that they lose the distinguishing characteristics of the original breast tissue (i.e.: the breast cancer cells no longer have the features that characterize a normal breast cell as a breast cell). Malignant breast cancer cells can invade and injure nearby tissues and organs.

Breast cancer cells can also break away from the tumor and enter the bloodstream or lymphatic system. This is how breast cancer spreads to form secondary tumors in other parts of the body. The process by which cancer spreads to far away places in the body is called metastasis.


Questions Related to Breast Cancer
What is a complete response?
What does spontaneous remission mean?
Can benign cysts become cancerous?
What is gynecomastia?
What is a radiograph?
What is a tumor marker?
What is ductal comedocarcinoma?
What is an adenocarcinoma of the breast?
What is a carcinoma in situ?
What is infiltrating ductal carcinoma? What is invasive ductal carcinoma? What is IDC?
What is infiltrating lobular carcinoma? What is invasive lobular carcinoma? What is ILC?
What is medullary carcinoma?
What is mucinous carcinoma?
What is colloid carcinoma?
What is tubular carcinoma?
What is a Phyllodes tumor? What is a Phylloides tumor?
What is cystosarcoma phyllodes?
What is an adenoma of the breast?
What does axilla mean?
What is angiogenesis?
What is axillary dissection?
What is an axillary biopsy?
What is bilateral breast cancer?
What is unilateral breast cancer?
What is a brain scan?
What is a skeletal bone survey?
What is wire localization?
What is duct ectasia?
What is periductal mastitis?
What is mastitis?
What is an estrogen receptor assay?
What is a progesterone receptor assay?
What does incidence mean?
What does prevalence mean?
What is meant by a surgical margin of a tumor?
What is meant by a negative margin of a tumor?
What is meant by a positive margin of a tumor?
What is meant by a close margin of a tumor?
What is a micrometastasis?
What is mediastinoscopy?
What is a monoclonal antibody?
What is an antigen?
What is needle aspiration?
What is needle localization?
What is nipple discharge?
What is a nuclear medicine scan?
What is nodal status?
What is a nodule?
What is a neoplasm?
What is a scintillation camera?

Page 3 of 4
  Prev | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Next


 

is a trademark of HC Search Corporation.