Lecture 1 & 2 Flashcards

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1
Q

What is cancer?

A
  • a collection of related diseases of proliferation
  • some of the body’s cells begin to divide without stopping and spread into surrounding tissues
  • cancer cells are less specialized than normal cells
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2
Q

What is the leading cause of death in Canada?

A

Cancer is responsible for 29.9% of the deaths in Canada

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3
Q

In the levels of the skin, what are the various kinds of cancer found in the cell types?

A

Basement membrane - carcinoma
Fibroblast and epithelial cells - sarcoma
Blood cells - Leukaemia

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4
Q

What are some of the Canadian Cancer Statistics from 2013?

A
  • About 850000 Canadians were alive at the beginning of 2009 with a cancer diagnosed in the previous 10 years
  • 2 in 5 Canadians will develop cancer in their lifetime
  • 187600 Canadians will be diagnosed with cancer in 2013
  • 63% is the likelihood of Canadians with cancer surviving 5 years relative to the general population
  • 1 in 4 Canadians will die of cancer
  • 75500 Canadians will die of cancer in 2013
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5
Q

How is the geographical distribution of cancer relevant to the cause of it?

A

Geographical variation indicative of environmental, genetic, behavioural, natural causes, etc.

Canada (leukaemia), USA (colon), Brazil (Cervical), UK (Lung), China (Liver), Japan (Stomach) and Australia (Skin)

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6
Q

What is a tumour?

A

Any abnormal growth (neoplasm) or mass of tissue which exceeds and is uncoordinated with that of normal tissue and persists in the same excessive manner after the stimuli, which evoked the change, is removed
- may be benign or malignant

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7
Q

What are examples of stimuli?

A

Growth factors, infection, the microenvironment, etc.

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8
Q

What are the microscopic differences between benign and malignant tumours?

A

Nuclear size - small vs. Large (due to the increase in DNA synthesis)
N/C ration (ratio of nuclear size to cytoplasmic volume) - low vs high
Nuclear shape - regular vs pleomorphic (irregular shape)
Mitosis index (relative number of dividing cells) - low vs high
Tissue organization - normal vs disorganized
Differentiation - well differentiated vs poorly differentiated (anaplastic)
Tumour boundary - well defined (encapsulated) vs poorly defined

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9
Q

What is metastasis?

A

The process through which the cancer establishes itself at another site(s)

  • invade surrounding tissues and vessels
  • then transported Bt the circulatory system to distant sites
  • reinvade and grow in a new location
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10
Q

Where does prostate, small cell lung, neuroblastoma and breast cancers frequently metastasize? Why?

A
Bone
Brain
Liver
Liver
Due to how the blood circulates, liver for example is where the blood is filtered.
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11
Q

What is the hypothesis given by Seed and Soil about cancers frequently metastasizing to specific sites?

A

Certain tissues or organs are particularly favourable for the growth of some cancers

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12
Q

Why do some think capillary bed entrapment is the reason for some cancers metastasizing in certain tissues frequently?

A

Organ preference is a function of entrapment of cancer cells in the first capillary bed encounter

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13
Q

What are the 4 kinds of cell growth?

A

Hypertrophy, hyperplasia, dysplasia and neoplasia

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14
Q

What is hyper trophy?

A

Cells increase in size with normal organization

Caused by external stimuli and is reversible

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15
Q

What is hyperplasia?

A

Increase in cell number with normal organization

Caused by external stimuli and reversible

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16
Q

What is dysplasia?

A

Disorganized growth (may or may not be reversible)

17
Q

What is neoplasia?

A

Disorganized growth
There is a net increase in number of dividing cells
No stimuli required and not reversible

18
Q

Does the size of tumour determine its malignancy?

A

Size does not determine how malignant a tumour is

19
Q

Can you die from a benign tumour?

A

Usually no, but it does depend on where in the body the tumour is.

20
Q

Provide some examples on why there is poor correlation between cancer and cell division frequency.

A
  • brain cells divide rarely, yet the tumours in the supporting tissue can be frequent
  • small intestinal tumours are rare yet the average human produces ~40kg of gastrointestinal cells/year and 10kg of white blood cells (rapid growth)
  • a human fetus requires 9 months to achieve a weight of 4kg while a patient can die from a tumour that is less than 5kg that took years to develop
21
Q

What is the major cause of tumour growth?

A

Imbalance between cell division, cell death and cell differentiation

  • differentiation is the hallmark of cancer prevention
  • cell death pathways are not being regulated
22
Q

What are the ratios of cell birth to cell death in a normal cell and a tumour cell?

A

Normal - 1 born : 1 dies

Tumour - ratio altered - too much cell birth to too little cell death

23
Q

In what types of cells does cancer arise?

A

Stem cells, restricted-potential stem cells and progenitor cells.