More than 100,000 cases of colon cancer occur in the United States each year. About 5 percent of these are linked to hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer syndrome, or HNPCC, also called Lynch syndrome. The term "nonpolyposis" simply differentiates...
The growth and death of cells in the colon usually is carefully regulated by the body. Colon tumors, the Mayo Clinic explains, is the result of changes in cells in the colon that causes them to grow in an unregulated way. Sporadic genetic...
The International RadioSurgery Association says that brain cancer makes up 2 percent of cancers in the United States. One type of brain cancer is glioblastoma multiforme, a grade IV astroyctoma. Glioblastoma multiforme accounts for 50 percent of...
DNA testing "can provide information for diagnosing, treating and preventing illness," according to the Mayo Clinic. Screenings can help find genetic disorders before the symptoms of the disorder occur, in adults and fetuses. A blood sample is...
The American Cancer Society (ACS) estimates that there will be 106,100 new cases of colon cancer in the United States in 2009. Information about colon cancer is often grouped with information about rectal cancer. The colon and the rectum are...
Colon cancer is the result of small growths in the colon developing the ability to spread throughout other tissues in the body. Some patients have a genetic predisposition to developing colon cancer, which can result from certain hereditary...
According to the Mayo Clinic, colon cancer is a cancer of the large intestines, which is the lower part of the digestive system. Many cases of colon cancer start out as small noncancerous clusters of cells, which are termed adenomatous polyps....