How does radiation permanently damage cancer cells but not normal cells?
Heard that radiation therapy will permanently damage the DNA structure of cancer cells in order to not reproduce, but normal cells will heal from this.
Heard that radiation therapy will permanently damage the DNA structure of cancer cells in order to not reproduce, but normal cells will heal from this.
It’s been said that Graviola kills cancer cells and is 10,000 times stronger than chemotherapy but has only been tested on rats. Do you think it might have similar results if used on humans?
In other words, if a scientist just had a group of cancer cells could they match those cells to a particular person and the particular organ that was cancerous? Would that match be based on DNA? Or, is the DNA of a cancer cell enough mutated that it could not be connected to a specific patient?
Could somebody explain in basic terms how capsaicin helps kill certain cancer cells? Also, has anyone figured out why it affects only particular cells?