Simply put, cancer is a cellular malfunction. When we
are suffering from cancer, the human body loses normal cellular controls,
which results in the malignant cell’s unregulated growth. These cancer
cells have a lack of differentiation and invade local tissue, travel
elsewhere and metastasize. The disease itself begins by one cell that
mutates or changes. The abnormal cell maintains that mutation through
the cell’s reproduction process despite the efforts of the human
body’s defense system, which tries to eliminate abnormal cells.
These mutated cells (resulting from abnormal DNA) then travel through
the body, setting up residency in one or more of the body’s organs.
There are now well over one hundred types of cancer that can exist
within the human body.
Since there are so many types of cancer, each with their own abnormal
DNA and different set of signs and symptoms, it is impossible in this
short review to cover all of them. From my experience at the John
Hopkins Hospital, the most common symptom that I observed was the loss
of energy.
Definition from Neil Solomon,
M.D.,PHD
Our bodies fight off cancer cells everyday with a
healthy immune system. It is important to learn how to
maintain a healthy body.