Guest guest Posted August 28, 2002 Report Share Posted August 28, 2002 Terry, My specialty in school was Microbiology not Human Cell Biology (how the heck did I ever get to spend nearly 30 years selling computers?). What we looked at in Micro was that mutations usually occurred in the repair/reproduction of damaged or weak/weakened organisms. The stronger and undamaged cells usually reproduced faithfully. I would imagine that human cells are not much different that bacterium. My best guess is that the damaged pancreatic cells are much more likely to reproduce into cancer cells than undamaged healthy cells. It's been way too long of a time since I looked into a microscope but to the best of my recollection that's the way it works. Chuck At 12:22 PM 8/28/2002 -0400, you wrote: >Chuck, > >Extremely simple, thank you very, very much. My only question would be: if >the cells are being replaced constantly, as they are throughout the rest of >the body, why on earth would there be any greater chance of these cells being >cancerous than those cells being replaced throughout the rest of the body?? > >Thank you, >Terry Chuck Sullivan chuck@... " When in command, Take charge. When faced with a decision, do what is right. Nothing else matters. " - Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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