0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (2)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments

Genetic Susceptibility to Cancer (Hardcover, 1998 ed.): Seymour Garte Genetic Susceptibility to Cancer (Hardcover, 1998 ed.)
Seymour Garte
R2,728 Discovery Miles 27 280 Ships in 10 - 17 working days

Despite recent progress in many areas of treatment and control, cancer remains a frightening threat to everyone. While scientists have known for decades that the majority of human cancers are caused by environmental agents such as radiation and the chemicals in cigarette smoke, not everyone who smokes gets lung cancer. Furthermore, many people who assiduously avoid all possible risk from smoking, diet, and pollution still succumb to some form of cancer later in life. Does this mean that there is an element of blind chance in the underlying mechanisms of human carcinogenesis? To what extent do genetic influences play a role in determining the cancer risk of individuals? A number of `cancer families', in which several closely related individuals have suffered from various specific forms of cancer, have been studied by genetic epidemiologists. However, for the majority of cancer cases, little or no discernible genetic influence or family history is found. Recent research has discovered that for many of these `sporadic' (non-familial) cancer cases, defects or aberrations in certain metabolic genes not previously associated with genetic cancer risk may contribute to either causing the disease or at least increasing the chances of developing cancer. It is therefore possible that much of what has previously passed for `bad luck' may turn out to be a new type of `bad genes'. Genetic Susceptibility to Cancer explains that this new idea of `bad genes' may contain an unexpected positive side. The carcinogenic effects of these metabolic genes, unlike those of the oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes that are responsible for the inherited cancer syndromes, can potentially be overcome or nullified. Genetic Susceptibility to Cancer will provide a valuable reference for health professionals, researchers, clinicians and biomedical scientists who are interested in the current thinking in this critically important area of cancer management.

Genetic Susceptibility to Cancer (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1998): Seymour Garte Genetic Susceptibility to Cancer (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1998)
Seymour Garte
R2,614 Discovery Miles 26 140 Ships in 10 - 17 working days

Despite recent progress in many areas of treatment and control, cancer remains a frightening threat to everyone. While scientists have known for decades that the majority of human cancers are caused by environmental agents such as radiation and the chemicals in cigarette smoke, not everyone who smokes gets lung cancer. Furthermore, many people who assiduously avoid all possible risk from smoking, diet, and pollution still succumb to some form of cancer later in life. Does this mean that there is an element of blind chance in the underlying mechanisms of human carcinogenesis? To what extent do genetic influences play a role in determining the cancer risk of individuals? A number of `cancer families', in which several closely related individuals have suffered from various specific forms of cancer, have been studied by genetic epidemiologists. However, for the majority of cancer cases, little or no discernible genetic influence or family history is found. Recent research has discovered that for many of these `sporadic' (non-familial) cancer cases, defects or aberrations in certain metabolic genes not previously associated with genetic cancer risk may contribute to either causing the disease or at least increasing the chances of developing cancer. It is therefore possible that much of what has previously passed for `bad luck' may turn out to be a new type of `bad genes'. Genetic Susceptibility to Cancer explains that this new idea of `bad genes' may contain an unexpected positive side. The carcinogenic effects of these metabolic genes, unlike those of the oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes that are responsible for the inherited cancer syndromes, can potentially be overcome or nullified. Genetic Susceptibility to Cancer will provide a valuable reference for health professionals, researchers, clinicians and biomedical scientists who are interested in the current thinking in this critically important area of cancer management.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
The Cosmos - A Historical Perspective
Craig G. Fraser Hardcover R2,174 Discovery Miles 21 740
Twenty - three ways to embrace the light…
Lizzy Adams Hardcover R616 Discovery Miles 6 160
Dala Tissue Paper - Peach (50 x 65cm)(10…
R28 Discovery Miles 280
Arcana of Spiritualism - a Manual of…
Hudson Tuttle Paperback R639 Discovery Miles 6 390
Dala Crepe Paper - Yellow (50 x 200cm)
R18 Discovery Miles 180
Brutal Aesthetics - Dubuffet, Bataille…
Hal Foster Hardcover R1,068 Discovery Miles 10 680
Seal Mother - A Selkie Tale in Verse
Rose English Hardcover R376 Discovery Miles 3 760
George Gross - Covered
George Gross Hardcover R1,020 Discovery Miles 10 200
Birds of a Feather Rhyme Together
Renee Machen Hardcover R454 Discovery Miles 4 540
Dala Tissue Paper - Yellow (50 x…
R28 Discovery Miles 280

 

Partners