Yeah but what if you do get cancer
Well then it’s an option of course. But that’s not what they’re proposing itt lmao
Well then it’s an option of course. But that’s not what they’re proposing itt lmao
So pre-emotive chemo would be a kind of insurance
This why I smoke cigs
Basically building up my immune system against cancer (never mind freeing up more testosterone, preventing Alzheimer’s, obesity, and increasing my cognitive function)
that's not how that works at all
So pre-emotive chemo would be a kind of insurance
That’s not how it works tho. Chemo wouldn’t do anything* before you have cancer
*except f*** your body up
When a cell mutates into a cancerous cell, it’s structure gets all f***ed up and it becomes pretty weak.That’s how chemo works. It attacks ALL your cells, and hopefully gets the cancerous ones first because they’re weaker. But before the cells are cancerous, they’re just normal cells lmao. So you would just be nuking your body for nothing
ok but maybe you could like break the normal cells in half (assumption) to lower the chance for them to become malignant, let's think outside of the occidental scientical box for a second.
What if I told you this OP?
Some types of chemotherapy (chemo) d**** have been linked with different kinds of second cancers. The cancers most often linked to chemo are myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). Sometimes, MDS occurs first, then turns into AML. Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) has also been linked to chemo. Chemo is known to be a greater risk factor than radiation therapy in causing leukemia.
The risk gets higher with higher d*** doses, longer treatment time, and higher dose-intensity
that's not how that works at all
Have fun with a limp d*** and Mickey Mouse voice while you slowly stop recognizing your relatives by age 45
ok but maybe you could like break the normal cells in half (assumption) to lower the chance for them to become malignant, let's think outside of the occidental scientical box for a second.
Played your hand my friend
What if I told you this OP?

Some types of chemotherapy (chemo) d**** have been linked with different kinds of second cancers. The cancers most often linked to chemo are myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). Sometimes, MDS occurs first, then turns into AML. Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) has also been linked to chemo. Chemo is known to be a greater risk factor than radiation therapy in causing leukemia.
The risk gets higher with higher d*** doses, longer treatment time, and higher dose-intensity
Orrrrr
Past radiation exposure is one risk factor for most kinds of leukemia, including acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), a bone marrow cancer that can turn into acute leukemia, has also been linked to past radiation exposure. The risk of these diseases after radiation treatment for cancer depends on a number of factors, such as:

f*** thsi
no it isnt
My thoughts to get chemotherapy have been provoked
Orrrrr
Past radiation exposure is one risk factor for most kinds of leukemia, including acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), a bone marrow cancer that can turn into acute leukemia, has also been linked to past radiation exposure. The risk of these diseases after radiation treatment for cancer depends on a number of factors, such as:
such as what
USA mfs will get pre-emotive chemotherapy vs just living a healthy lifestyle im crine
My thoughts to get chemotherapy have been provoked
Lmao this a a troll thread
In what sense
I’m calling my doctor to put me on chemotherapy
it's so crazy to me that we're literally doing the scientists' jobs on a f***ing thursday night rn
Lmao this a a troll thread
Can’t be true…
such as what
How much of the bone marrow was exposed to radiation
The amount of radiation that reached the bone marrow
The radiation dose rate (how much was given in each dose, how long it took to give the dose, and how often it was given)
Most often, these cancers develop within several years of a person's radiation treatment. Then the chance of developing a new cancer slowly declines over the following years.
and how come some patients don't respond to a certain treatment well or as expected
you know they had to invent luminotherapy and other left field treatments for those? I don't quite get it.
Because all this s*** is happening on the cellular level, it is extremely difficult to completely eradicate every single cancer cell. And once it has spread to other parts of the body it is impossible