When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cancer Cells: Types, How They Form, and Characteristics -...

    www.verywellhealth.com/what-are-cancer-cells-2248795

    Cancer cells differ from normal cells in a number of ways. How are they formed, why do they start, and what are some of the characteristics and types?

  3. Cancer Cells vs. Normal Cells: How Are They Different? - Verywell...

    www.verywellhealth.com/cancer-cells-vs-normal-cells-2248794

    Cancer cells are different from normal cells in how they grow, how they look, and what they do in the body. Even though cancer is common, there are actually many steps that a normal cell has to go through to become a cancerous cell. This article will explain how cancer cells and normal, healthy cells are different.

  4. Cancer cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cancer_cell

    Cancer cells are cells that divide continually, forming solid tumors or flooding the blood or lymph with abnormal cells. Cell division is a normal process used by the body for growth and repair. A parent cell divides to form two daughter cells, and these daughter cells are used to build new tissue or to replace cells that have died because of ...

  5. In brief: How do cancer cells grow and spread? -...

    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK279410

    Sometimes these kinds of cells go away on their own. But if they keep on changing and start to divide uncontrollably, forming lumps or growths, then one of the more than 200 diseases called cancer develops. Growths are generally called tumors. The difference between malignant (cancerous) and benign (non-cancerous) tumors is that malignant ones can

  6. Definition. A cancer cell is a natural but immature cell in the body that has developed mutations in its DNA. These mutations cause repetitive, unregulated cancer cell division that leads to similarly mutated, non-specialized daughter cells that themselves continuously divide.

  7. What Is Cancer? - NCI - National Cancer Institute

    www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/understanding/what-is-cancer

    Cancer is a disease caused when cells divide uncontrollably and spread into surrounding tissues. Cancer is caused by changes to DNA. Most cancer-causing DNA changes occur in sections of DNA called genes. These changes are also called genetic changes.

  8. What Is Cancer? | Cancer Basics | American Cancer Society

    www.cancer.org/cancer/understanding-cancer/what-is-cancer

    There are two main categories of cancer: Hematologic (blood) cancers are cancers of the blood cells, including leukemia, lymphoma, and multiple myeloma. Solid tumor cancers are cancers of any of the other body organs or tissues. The most common solid tumors are breast, prostate, lung, and colorectal cancers.

  9. Cancer cells - Cancer Research UK

    www.cancerresearchuk.org/.../what-is-cancer/how-cancer-starts/cancer-cells

    Unlike healthy cells, cancer cells don't carry on maturing or become so specialised. Cells mature so that they are able to carry out their function in the body. This process of maturing is called differentiation. In cancer, the cells often reproduce very quickly and don't have a chance to mature.

  10. Types of cancer - Cancer Research UK

    www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/what-is-cancer/how-cancer-starts/types...

    There are more than 200 types of cancer and we can classify cancers according to where they start in the body, such as breast cancer or lung cancer. We can also group cancer according to the type of cell they start in.

  11. What is cancer? - MD Anderson Cancer Center

    www.mdanderson.org/cancerwise/what-is-cancer.h00-159537378.html

    February 17, 2022. What is cancer? BY Devon Carter. A cancer diagnosis can stir up fear – fear of the loss of life, as well as fear of changes to quality of life. But it can also cause you to fear the unknown. And ask questions like: What is cancer? What is happening inside my body?