这是现代医学的共识。中医有什么说道和实验依据?

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Slide 24
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What Causes Cancer?
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Cancer is often perceived as a disease that strikes for no apparent reason. While scientists don't yet know all the reasons, many of the causes of cancer have already been identified. Besides intrinsic factors such as heredity, diet, and hormones, scientific studies point to key extrinsic factors that contribute to the cancer's development: chemicals (e.g., smoking), radiation, and viruses or bacteria.

What Causes Cancer?
Slide 25
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Population-Based Studies
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One way of identifying the various causes of cancer is by studying populations and behaviors. This approach compares cancer rates among various groups of people exposed to different factors or exhibiting different behaviors. A striking finding to emerge from population studies is that cancers arise with different frequencies in different areas of the world. For example, stomach cancer is especially frequent in Japan, colon cancer is prominent in the United States, and skin cancer is common in Australia. What is the reason for the high rates of specific kinds of cancer in certain countries?

Population-Based Studies
Slide 26
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Heredity? Behaviors? Other Factors?
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In theory, differences in heredity or environmental risk factors might be responsible for the different cancer rates observed in different countries. Studies on people who have moved from one country to another suggest that exposure to risk factors for cancer varies by geographic location. For example, in Japan, the rate of colon cancer is lower, and the rate of stomach cancer is higher, than in the United States. But this difference has been found to gradually disappear in Japanese families that have moved to the United States. This suggests that the risk of developing the two kinds of cancer is not determined primarily by heredity. The change in risk for cancer for Japanese families could involve cultural, behavioral, or environmental factors predominant in one location and not in the other.

Heredity? Behaviors? Other Factors?
Slide 27
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Tobacco Use and Cancer
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Among the various factors that can cause cancer, tobacco smoking is the greatest public health hazard. Cigarette smoke contains more than two dozen different chemicals capable of causing cancer. Cigarette smoking is the main cause of lung cancer and contributes to many other kinds of cancer as well, including cancer of the mouth, larynx, esophagus, stomach, pancreas, kidney, and bladder. Current estimates suggest that smoking cigarettes is responsible for at least one out of every three cancer deaths, making it the largest single cause of death from cancer. Other forms of tobacco use also can cause cancer. For example, cigars, pipe smoke, and smokeless tobacco can cause cancers of the mouth.

Tobacco Use and Cancer
Slide 28
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Low-Strength Radiation
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Some atoms give off radiation, which is energy that travels through space. Prolonged or repeated exposure to certain types of radiation can cause cancer. Cancer caused by the sun's ultraviolet radiation is most common in people who spend long hours in strong sunlight. Ultraviolet radiation from sunlight is a low-strength type of radiation. Effective ways to protect against ultraviolet radiation and to prevent skin cancer are to avoid going into strong, direct sunlight and to wear protective clothing. Sunscreen lotions reduce the risk of some forms of skin cancers.

Low-Strength Radiation
Slide 29
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High-Strength Radiation
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Increased rates of cancer also have been detected in people exposed to high-strength forms of radiation such as X-rays or radiation emitted from unstable atoms called radioisotopes. Because these two types of radiation are stronger than ultraviolet radiation, they can penetrate through clothing and skin into the body. Therefore, high-strength radiation can cause cancers of internal body tissues. Examples include cancer caused by nuclear fallout from atomic explosions and cancers caused by excessive exposure to radioactive chemicals.

High-Strength Radiation
Slide 30
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Lag Time
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Chemicals and radiation that are capable of triggering the development of cancer are called "carcinogens." Carcinogens act through a multistep process that initiates a series of genetic alterations ("mutations") and stimulates cells to proliferate. A prolonged period of time is usually required for these multiple steps. There can be a delay of several decades between exposure to a carcinogen and the onset of cancer. For example, young people exposed to carcinogens from smoking cigarettes generally do not develop cancer for 20 to 30 years. This period between exposure and onset of disease is the lag time.

Lag Time
Slide 31
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Viruses
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In addition to chemicals and radiation, a few viruses also can trigger the development of cancer. In general, viruses are small infectious agents that cannot reproduce on their own, but instead enter into living cells and cause the infected cell to produce more copies of the virus. Like cells, viruses store their genetic instructions in large molecules called nucleic acids. In the case of cancer viruses, some of the viral genetic information carried in these nucleic acids is inserted into the chromosomes of the infected cell, and this causes the cell to become malignant.

Viruses
Slide 32
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Examples of Human Cancer Viruses
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Only a few viruses that infect human cells actually cause cancer. Included in this category are viruses implicated in cervical cancer, liver cancer, and certain lymphomas, leukemias, and sarcomas. Susceptibility to these cancers can sometimes be spread from person to person by infectious viruses, although such events account for only a very small fraction of human cancers. For example, the risk of cervical cancer is increased in women with multiple sexual partners and is especially high in women who marry men whose previous wives had this disease. Transmission of the human papillomavirus (HPV) during sexual relations appears to be involved.

Examples of Human Cancer Viruses
Slide 33
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AIDS and Kaposi's Sarcoma
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People who develop AIDS after being infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are at high risk for developing a specific type of cancer called Kaposi's sarcoma. Kaposi's sarcoma is a malignant tumor of blood vessels located in the skin. This type of cancer is not directly caused by HIV infection. Instead, HIV causes an immune deficiency that makes people more susceptible to viral infection. Infection by a virus called KSHV (Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus) then appears to stimulate the development of Kaposi's sarcoma.

AIDS and Kaposi's Sarcoma
Slide 34
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Bacteria and Stomach Cancer
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Viruses are not the only infectious agents that have been implicated in human cancer. The bacterium Helicobacter pylori, which can cause stomach ulcers, has been associated with the development of cancer, so people infected with H. pylori are at increased risk for stomach cancer. Research is under way to define the genetic interactions between this infectious agent and its host tissues that may explain why cancer develops.

Bacteria and Stomach Cancer
Slide 35
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Heredity and Cancer
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Cancer is not considered an inherited illness because most cases of cancer, perhaps 80 to 90 percent, occur in people with no family history of the disease. However, a person's chances of developing cancer can be influenced by the inheritance of certain kinds of genetic alterations. These alterations tend to increase an individual's susceptibility to developing cancer in the future. For example, about 5 percent of breast cancers are thought to be due to inheritance of particular form(s) of a "breast cancer susceptibility gene."

Heredity and Cancer
Slide 36
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Heredity Can Affect Many Types of Cancer
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Inherited mutations can influence a person's risk of developing many types of cancer in addition to breast cancer. For example, certain inherited mutations have been described that increase a person's risk of developing colon, kidney, bone, skin or other specific forms of cancer. But these hereditary conditions are thought to be involved in only 10 percent or fewer of all cancer cases.

所有跟帖: 

回贴已经说了。 帮你翻译总结一下:先天遗传与后天因素(食品与环境致癌化合物, 病毒,细菌,电离辐射等)。 -26484915- 给 26484915 发送悄悄话 26484915 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/12/2014 postreply 06:32:41

他说得没错啊. WHO的癌症中文信息: -闽姑- 给 闽姑 发送悄悄话 闽姑 的博客首页 (1307 bytes) () 11/12/2014 postreply 06:58:48

复习一下什么叫充分必要条件。 -26484915- 给 26484915 发送悄悄话 26484915 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/12/2014 postreply 07:06:29

他说的就是癌症病因啊.你要扭曲发挥,并视WHO信息为零,我也不奇怪.你就这样儿. -闽姑- 给 闽姑 发送悄悄话 闽姑 的博客首页 (6 bytes) () 11/12/2014 postreply 07:10:58

一点也不奇怪。要把实际的东西虚化,才能用阴阳虚实来忽悠人嘛。 -26484915- 给 26484915 发送悄悄话 26484915 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/12/2014 postreply 07:14:23

太同意了! -TBz- 给 TBz 发送悄悄话 TBz 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/12/2014 postreply 13:30:55

把简单的东西复杂化,这样更容易忽悠人 -医者意也- 给 医者意也 发送悄悄话 医者意也 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/13/2014 postreply 04:04:34

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