Benign tumors are not cancerous. But left untreated, some can pose a health risk, so they are often removed. When these tumors are removed, they typically do not reappear. Most importantly, the cells of a benign tumor do not spread to other parts of the body or invade nearby tissue.
Malignant tumors are made of abnormal cells. Malignant tumor cells can invade nearby tissue and spread to other parts of the body. A malignant tumor that develops in the breast is called breast cancer.
To continue growing, malignant breast tumors need to be fed. They get nourishment by developing new blood vessels in a process called angiogenesis. The new blood vessels supply the tumor with nutrients that promote growth. As the malignant breast tumor grows, it can expand into nearby tissue. This process is called invasion. Cells can also break away from the primary, or main, tumor and spread to other parts of the body. The cells spread by traveling through the blood stream and lymphatic system. This process is called metastasis.
When malignant breast cells appear in a new location, they begin to divide and grow out of control again as they create another tumor. Even though the new tumor is growing in another part of the body, it is still called breast cancer. The most common locations of breast cancer metastases are the lymph nodes, liver, brain, bones and lungs.
There are genes that control the way our cells divide and grow. When these genes don't work like they should, a genetic error, or mutation, has occurred. Mutations may be inherited or spontaneous. Inherited mutations are ones you were born with - an abnormal gene that one of your parents passed on to you at birth. Inherited mutations of specific genes, such as the BRCAI and BRCA2 genes, increase a woman's risk of developing breast cancer.
Spontaneous mutations can occur within your body during your lifetime. The actual cause or causes of mutations still remains unknown. Researchers have identified two types of genes that are important to cell growth. Errors in these genes turn normal cells into cancerous ones.
You need to be aware that cells may be growing out of control before any symptoms of the disease appear. That is why breast screening to find any early changes is so important. The sooner a problem is found, the better a your chance is for survival.
Experts recommend that women 40 years and older have a mammogram every year. If you have a history of breast cancer in your family, talk with your doctor about risk assessment, when to start getting mammograms and how often to have them. If your mother or sister had breast cancer before menopause, you may need to start getting mammograms and yearly clinical breast exams before age 40. It is important for all women to have clinical breast exams done by a health care provider at least every three years starting at age 20 and every year after age 40 and to do breast self-exams once every month starting by age 20.
The Treatment Of Breast Cancer
Breast cancer is the most common type of cancer that occurs in women and, next to lung cancer, it is the second leading cause of cancer death in females. In the year 2004 no fewer than 186,770 new cases of breast cancer were reported by the American Cancer Society and this number would seem to be going up on a yearly basis.
It should also be noted that breast cancer is not confined only to women and that some 1,815 men were also diagnosed with the disease in 2004 and that 362 men died of breast cancer in the same year.
Women's breasts are complex structures which consist of fat, glands and connective fibrous tissue. They have numerous lobes which are divided into lobules ending in the milk glands and there are also numerous tiny ducts from the milk glands which join together and culminate in the nipple.
Eighty percent of breast cancer cases originate in these ducts and this condition is known as infiltrating ductal cancer. It is also fairly common for cancer to occur in the lobules where it is referred to as lobular cancer. Other types of cancer are merely referred to as inflammatory breast cancer.
Changes such as pre-cancerous changes (known as 'in situ') are also common in women and are changes which have not yet spread from the place in the breast where they started. If these changes occur within the ducts then the condition is referred to as ductal carcinoma in situ or DCIS and if changes are found in the lobules they are known as lobular carcinomas in situ or LCIS.
The most serious type of breast cancer is metastatic cancer which involves the spread of a cancer from the place where it began. Breast cancer most frequently metastasizes into the lymph nodes above the collarbone or under the arms on the same side of the body as the cancer which leads to pain and swelling to the affected area as the lymphatic drainage system becomes compromised. Other common sites of breast cancer metastasis include the liver, brain and bones.
Apart from the very obvious factor of gender, age is a critical factor when looking at the risk of contracting breast cancer. Although breast cancer can and does develop at any age the risk of developing it increases with age. A normal woman of 30 will normally have a 1 in 280 chance of getting breast cancer by the time she reaches 40. However, this then rises to a 1 in 70 chance of developing breast cancer when that same women reaches her forties.
Family history is also an important risk factor for breast cancer with the risk being at its highest when you have a close relative (such as an aunt or mother) who has developed cancer of the breast at a young age.
Although it has yet to be confirmed, there is believed to be a cancer gene which can be passed down from mother to daughter.
Both Ann Knapp & Donald Saunders are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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