Posted on 04/07/2008 1:55:35 PM PDT by Pharmboy
Some are known to be transferred from one animal to another. Two I've read about are a certain venereal cancer in dogs and a mouth cancer in Tasmanian Wolves which can be transferred through contact. It's not "contagious" the way the flu is contagious. The cells of the cancerous animal find a home in the recipient animal and continue to multiply. I think such transfers are extremely rare in humans.
For your reading pleasure, courtesy of Google Scholar:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/307/5712/1035
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=pubmed&uid=3887857&cmd=showdetailview&indexed=google
Yeah, tell me about it. I’m on a transplant list for a kidney. Yikes.
Wow...that’s weird. And it’s from yesterday.
What is cancer? Is it caused by a germ, or a virus or a fungus? What is it?
Thank you - I forgot the recipients are receiving infection fighting agents.
The state of organ transplant needs updating in that they wait until a patient is at death’s door before they can become a candidate.
A donation stands a better chance of success if they do the donation as soon as it is decided that would be the only
option for life saving left.
As it is if recipients die from wasting away, the organ is wasted anyway.
The immune rsponse to cancer cells in the body is complex, and not just a case of our immune systems getting rid of the cancer cells when they arise; for example, people with immune disorders/deficiencies do not necessarily get more cancers than normals.
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