When You Have Cancer, But You're Fine: Cancer Overdiagnosis

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  • čas přidán 13. 11. 2019
  • Studies suggest that if you made full-body scans part of your regular routine, you’d find a bunch of cancers over the years, but it wouldn't change your odds of having a life-threatening cancer. This is mostly because our definition of cancer is a little too broad.
    Hosted by: Hank Green
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    Sources:
    academic.oup.com/jnci/article...
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    ascopubs.org/doi/full/10.1200...
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1...
    www.cancer.org/cancer/cancer-...
    jamanetwork.com/journals/jama...
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2...
    seer.cancer.gov/csr/1975_2016/
    publichealthreviews.biomedcen...
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Komentáře • 637

  • @CujoHyer
    @CujoHyer Před 4 lety +617

    I was born with Cancer in my eyes. 5 years, 73 surgeries, two times the amount of radiation that a human being is supposed to endure in life, having my eyes frozen solid twice, then having my left eye removed entirely while my right remains in the form of a small ball of scar tissue with only a miniscule amount of vision left within it and my physical facial appearance negatively altered to the point where I've continuously experienced terrible interactions with an uncountable number of "cruel people" in this world... and...
    30-some years later I was told 'Its possible the cancer would've gone away if they'd just left it alone because you had no family history of that type of cancer which means it may have been the kind that goes away after a year or so."
    Me: I'm not a real big fan of life.

    • @chrisdooley6468
      @chrisdooley6468 Před 4 lety +113

      Cujo as a quadriplegic for the last 33 years since I was 15 and a sophomore in high school, I wholeheartedly support this message. Life sucks ass sometimes Cujo

    • @mariapaz6379
      @mariapaz6379 Před 4 lety +94

      Well... That sucks. Because i dont know what to say to make you feel better, im gonna ask how was your day...
      How was your day?

    • @CujoHyer
      @CujoHyer Před 4 lety +132

      @@mariapaz6379 Its fine. I had an ice cream snickers bar.

    • @mariapaz6379
      @mariapaz6379 Před 4 lety +50

      @@CujoHyer hope it was as good as it sounds because i have no idea how that tastes, they dont sell it in my country

    • @rin_okami
      @rin_okami Před 4 lety +46

      @@mariapaz6379 Snickers ice cream bars are absolutely delicious

  • @BSAnime
    @BSAnime Před 4 lety +607

    "Hey google.. I have "
    Google: You have cancer.

    • @aleka..
      @aleka.. Před 4 lety +5

      joke on the joke, it turns out

  • @ghillieguy52
    @ghillieguy52 Před 4 lety +622

    plot twist: web md was right the whole time

    • @SkarlettesMomma
      @SkarlettesMomma Před 4 lety +16

      Web MD: I came out to have a good time and I'm honestly feeling praised right now

    • @twigwick
      @twigwick Před 4 lety +4

      oh god best comment XD

    • @Sean-ll5cm
      @Sean-ll5cm Před 4 lety +2

      😂

    • @bubbag8895
      @bubbag8895 Před 4 lety +1

      I don't get it

    • @jinagibson6818
      @jinagibson6818 Před 4 lety +1

      ghillieguy52 just the ignored alarm but when you're terminal your insurance gets to play Satan. Fun for them huh?

  • @lpburdek
    @lpburdek Před 4 lety +34

    Thank you so much for this video. I was diagnosed with myxoinflammatory fibroblastic sarcoma on my ear. The recommendation from the specialists was to remove my whole ear. My doctor told everyone to chill out. He said it was a low level cancer with a low malignancy rate sitting on ear cartilage. The specialists are just being over cautious. Instead, he numbed my ear with a local, took about 15 minutes to removed it, then burned the remaining tissue under it. After almost two years, still cancer free. But my wife still says I don't listen to her........or something like that.

  • @riftlee
    @riftlee Před 4 lety +239

    For anyone watching, please do not let this discourage you from having suspicious lumps or growths checked by a doctor.
    Better to spend an hour in a waiting room to have a doctor confirm your wierd mole is just wierd, than find out it was basal cell carcinoma and it's progressed to stage 4.
    A doctor can help you decide if something should be a wait-and-watch situation. But these statistics should not make you feel that you, at home, can decide a possible cancer symptom is harmless.

    • @moondust2365
      @moondust2365 Před 4 lety +9

      True. Basically, if there's a symptom, have it checked. It's the doctor's fault if they both overdiagnose and over treat it.

    • @Call-me-Al
      @Call-me-Al Před 4 lety +6

      @DT Undercover please reread what you just wrote. I think you made some huge typo.

    • @Call-me-Al
      @Call-me-Al Před 4 lety +1

      @DT Undercover Thanks! As I suspected, I wouldn't have called it an allergy but I definitely see why you do. Really sorry you suffer from it

    • @coppersandsprite
      @coppersandsprite Před 4 lety +2

      Better to be carcinoma than melanoma at any stage.

    • @brokentombot
      @brokentombot Před 4 lety

      @@Call-me-Al I before E accept after W? Is it that she spelled weird "wierd"? Not a huge typo, just a wierd typo.

  • @elizaalmabuena
    @elizaalmabuena Před 4 lety +542

    Me. Chondrosarcoma, fairly slow growing and often harmless cancer. In my case it was growing within the skull and while symptoms were almost non existent it was putting pressure on the brain stem, eye nerve, and pituitary so it was removed.... mostly. Some was calcified and couldn’t be removed so it is still in there..... I named the tumor Dave.... Dave and I get along pretty well now.

    • @brooketracy1735
      @brooketracy1735 Před 4 lety +43

      Me. Schwannoma, very slow growing nerve tumor that is 99% benign. But it does have to be removed

    • @firstnamelastname6520
      @firstnamelastname6520 Před 4 lety +18

      Did you get to take dave home?

    • @ironsnowflake1076
      @ironsnowflake1076 Před 4 lety +35

      I hope you & Dave have an extremely long & happy life together 💓

    • @elizaalmabuena
      @elizaalmabuena Před 4 lety +13

      First Name Last Name only the calcified bit that is still inside my skull

    • @neiana
      @neiana Před 4 lety +20

      @@elizaalmabuena So you're telling me that this Dave fella is literally inside your brain.
      I bet he still forgets to take out the trash in the morning.

  • @The_Badger-dl7gg
    @The_Badger-dl7gg Před 4 lety +297

    Why Dr. House hated full body scans!

    • @andresacosta5318
      @andresacosta5318 Před 4 lety +32

      Thank you. Someone who is cultured

    • @ashkara8652
      @ashkara8652 Před 4 lety +7

      up you go

    • @VioletDeathRei
      @VioletDeathRei Před 4 lety +33

      Great now I have to watch the entire show again, thank you.

    • @Verlarn
      @Verlarn Před 4 lety +10

      @@VioletDeathRei have fun.

    • @procrastinator99
      @procrastinator99 Před 4 lety +9

      YES! Was hoping someone would mention this..... (or I would.)

  • @nice2care
    @nice2care Před 4 lety +184

    The word "cancer" should only be used for malignant tumors. Benign growth is not cancer. You are right, it is hard to differentiate between benign and malignant tumors based on imaging especially when the tumor is small.

    • @bs8716
      @bs8716 Před 4 lety +8

      nice2care I think you’re confused about the current use of benign vs malignant.

    • @someoldguy383
      @someoldguy383 Před 4 lety +17

      Which is not to say that "benign" always means "non-lethal." Benign brain tumors, if they're not treated, can continue to grow until they put enough pressure on the brain to cause problems up to and including death.

    • @AdamSmith-gs2dv
      @AdamSmith-gs2dv Před 4 lety +9

      Maybe we should come up with a pre cancer category in which treatment is regular checkups to see how or if the cancer is progressing.

    • @hamsterama
      @hamsterama Před 4 lety +1

      @@someoldguy383 I agree, benign tumors can still cause problems. I had to get a benign ovarian tumor removed. The thing was the size of a grapefruit, and was causing pain. It was also causing me to run to the bathroom all the time, because it was pressing on my bladder. The surgery to get rid of it was totally worth it.

    • @ashleyashleym2969
      @ashleyashleym2969 Před 4 lety +6

      begnin growths are tumors, cancers by definition are malignant. But tumors too can cause problems.

  • @user-jn3gz6bo2y
    @user-jn3gz6bo2y Před 4 lety +334

    " sorry I've got weird cells ..gotta go home"

  • @Bulbonius
    @Bulbonius Před 4 lety +82

    They found a tumor in my cousins thryoid last month and they were freaking out but then when he went back they couldn't find it. Dad's also had a couple non malignant tumors in his lungs clear up. I should send them this.

    • @limiv5272
      @limiv5272 Před 4 lety +2

      I had a strange lump under my skin on my lower back many years ago. The day I had an ultrasound to check it out I suddenly discovered it wasn't there anymore. Such a waste of time

    • @jaguarsky55
      @jaguarsky55 Před 4 lety +11

      Very many years ago I had a rather large mass on my left breast. The Dr I went to see seemed pretty damn concerned about it and scheduled me for a biopsy. The soonest opening available was two months later. I was understandably terrified. The weeks went by and a strange thing happened. A few days before my biopsy I noticed the lump was gone. Just gone.
      I called the doc and he had me come in. He couldn't find it either. "Well, we will just keep an eye on things in case anything comes back," he told me.
      When mammograms became a thing I was one of the first to sign up. Seven mammo's later and all is still well.

    • @ashleyashleym2969
      @ashleyashleym2969 Před 4 lety

      yep I was always under the impression we always have some type of cancer in our body but our immune system stops it so fast it's never big enough to see, but to know they can be big enough to see sometimes is what I find a bit surprising, it definitely shakes my assumption and know I grew a lil bit smarter.

    • @chironOwlglass
      @chironOwlglass Před 4 lety

      When your cancer goes away, you can thank your innate immune system, THE most overlooked organ in the history of medicine.

  • @jjaj1243
    @jjaj1243 Před 4 lety +18

    They also need to work on adding some nuance to the staging guidelines. Our whole family was put through so much unnecessary stress and grief earlier this year when my dad was diagnosed with throat cancer. Preliminary results were that he had ACC, which has a bittersweet prognosis of approx 80% 10-yr survival rate that plummets to about 30% for the 15-yr survival rate. Then our oncologist took another look and determined it was just regular throat cancer, but it had metastasized and was either stage 4a or 4b, which was absolutely devastating. Finally we got an appointment with Moffit for our final opinion and they told us that, while technically it would be classified as stage 4, we had no reason to worry bc the tumors had HPV virus in them, which makes it ridiculously easy to treat and the survival rate is 85-95%. While I’m extremely thankful that his cancer turned out to be pretty much a nonissue, it pisses me off beyond belief that our family had to endure weeks of the most intense sadness all bc our first oncologists couldn’t explain to us the significance of that one aspect of his biopsy.

    • @chironOwlglass
      @chironOwlglass Před 4 lety +1

      The medical industry is allergic to nuance.

  • @LEDewey_MD
    @LEDewey_MD Před 4 lety +11

    Our immune system, in addition to fighting and preventing infections, also detect and destroy abnormal cells - it's called "Immune Surveillance". Our bodies may be constantly killing off malignant and premalignant cells all of the time without any symptoms. Great episode for pointing out this side of "cancer"! 👍

  • @purplealice
    @purplealice Před 4 lety +76

    Yeah, a couple of years ago I was diagnosed with DCIS (the very earliest stage of breast cancer), and I had surgery and radiation. But just recently they changed the guidelines, and the treatment for DCIS is now "watchful waiting".

    • @rockie8254
      @rockie8254 Před 4 lety

      Like Angelina Julie

    • @applejackzo
      @applejackzo Před 4 lety +1

      My mom had that diagnosis a couple of years ago and had surgery and took pills. I was always like "eh you'll be fine" because on this paper her doctor gave her it described the stages and that stage (to me) looked like not worth the term cancer being used - but I'm not a doctor so I thought eh maybe I'm just dumb lol hope you're doing okay though

    • @purplealice
      @purplealice Před 4 lety

      @@applejackzo I'm cancer-free. I did have congestive heart failure and a small stroke last year, but they aren't related to any of the cancer treatments I had.

    • @jaredkennedy6576
      @jaredkennedy6576 Před 4 lety +2

      DCIS now is held in check pretty well with Tamoxifen and more targeted treatment. Unfortunately mine wasn't caught until it was IDC, so despite being a guy I had a mastectomy, then chemo and radiation.
      If I had dealt with it when I just had an itchy nipple, it probably would have made a lot smaller of an impact on my life.

    • @purplealice
      @purplealice Před 4 lety

      @@jaredkennedy6576 I couldn't have Tamoxifen, because I'd just been operated on for uterine cancer before they discovered the DCIS. I probably would have declined it because of the potential side effects anyway.

  • @christophermckeever4760
    @christophermckeever4760 Před 4 lety +72

    Doctors: “early detection is key when treating cancers”
    Also doctors: “no not that early”

  • @marihawley
    @marihawley Před 4 lety +51

    As someone who was diagnosed with papillary thyroid "cancer", this is great to hear. If I had been given a better explanation of this type of info and all my options I might not have rushed into surgery to have a total thyroidectomy. It led to severe nerve damage and hypoparathyroidism. At the time the doctor seemed more concerned with assuring me I wouldn't lose my voice, a pretty low ranking risk. Since then I learned that my type of thyroid cancer is now going through the process of potentially being reclassified and treatment options reevaluated by. Mine was very fast growing and I was starting to experience hypothyroid symptoms and I think I might have reached the same conclusion to have a total thyroidectomy but I wouldn't have felt the pressure to jump to surgery so quickly, especially with an ENT surgeon who was so inexperienced that me basically butchered me and I now have life long consequences.

    • @hamsterama
      @hamsterama Před 4 lety +5

      My supervisor at work got her thyroid removed, because it was enlarged. And the crappy surgeon removed her parathyroids, which he wasn't supposed to. My supervisor then had all sorts of nervous system problems, because, among other things, her body could no longer properly regulate calcium. Basically it ruined her life, and she was forced into early retirement. I hope a lot of people read your post and find it helpful, because getting the thyroid removed can destroy one's life.

    • @bobbobber4810
      @bobbobber4810 Před 4 lety +6

      If this is growing fast, that's actually a REALLY bad sign.
      Those "fake" cancer are not dangerous BECAUSE they didn't grow a lot.
      Take to your DOCTOR before taking any decision based one a VIDEO.
      SCISHOW IS NOT A DOCTOR WHO KNOW YOUR CASE AND WHICH CAN DECIDE THE treatment NEEDED!!!!!!!!!

    • @MeanBeanComedy
      @MeanBeanComedy Před 4 lety +4

      My father had the same cancer. He had the same done. Partial vocal chords paralysis, like David Archuleta. It's still a pretty good idea to get it removed. Plus, like you said, you'd be on T4 (and hopefully T3 also) anyhow.

    • @MeanBeanComedy
      @MeanBeanComedy Před 4 lety +1

      Why doesn't she just take parathyroid hormone?

    • @marihawley
      @marihawley Před 4 lety +1

      @@MeanBeanComedy PTH replacement therapy isn't widespread, in fact, the only people I know currently getting PTH are in a medical study. The only treatment for hypoparathyroidism is taking calcium and vitamin d multiple times a day.... which sounds like no big deal but I have to start at 5am and start a pill regimen taking my pills on a tight schedule until 11pm.... it's very disruptive and still leaves me with hypocalcemia symptoms.

  • @MissRiny
    @MissRiny Před 4 lety +51

    To be honest I thought we would already call only the bad ones cancer and everything else would be labeled as a tumor. There may be differences in language though since English is not my native language.

    • @CookieR3aver
      @CookieR3aver Před 4 lety +4

      Cancer is the disorder, the tumor is the actual physical mass; cancer causes the tumor to grow. At least I'm pretty sure that's right, someone correct me if I'm wrong.

    • @pedroff_1
      @pedroff_1 Před 4 lety +6

      @@CookieR3aver Well, actually, while just a detail, tumour is any "bloating" of a place, including the ones caused by cell masses, but, colloquially, it is generally used to describe the ones caused by cells. (for example, an inflamation can cause a tumour; the cell mass itself, regardless of being cancerous, can also be called a "neoplasia", although most people will think you either want to show off of are making up this word if you use it on your daily life)

    • @Rhaifha
      @Rhaifha Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah, in Dutch there is definitely that distinction too. I know a guy who has an inoperable tumor that will probably kill him some day (the growth is pressing on some pretty essential nerves and blood vessels), but it can't be called "cancer" here because it's not malignant.

    • @AuntieWelly
      @AuntieWelly Před 4 lety +5

      I thought so too, there is a benign tumour and there is a malignant tumour and I always thought it was only called cancer if it was malignant. In screening, cervical screening anyway, there are "cell abnormalities" which can be "pre-cancerous" or not. People just freak out at the word cancer even though there are some much more unpleasant and much more debilitating or terminal diseases out there, but nobody cares about those.

    • @virglibrsaglove
      @virglibrsaglove Před 3 lety +2

      That is how it was explained to me, too. And your English is excellent. Much better than most people who I know who are native English speakers. Nicely written.

  • @boringneet
    @boringneet Před 4 lety +34

    I imagine this wouldn't be an issue if we had better less invasive cancer treatments available.

    • @chironOwlglass
      @chironOwlglass Před 4 lety

      Better, less invasive cancer treatments....you mean like actually bothering to study the innate immune system, the organ whose job it is to stop cancer? The most ignored organ in the history of medicine? The body can heal itself. But big pharma does all it can to hide that fact.

  • @missydarnell3933
    @missydarnell3933 Před 2 lety +2

    I absolutely agree with the “cancer” word being more problematic than anything. When they told me I had cervical cancer (it’s gone now)… I completely freaked out and started doing heavy amounts of drugs. I was too scared to go back to the clinic for months cuz I thought the next thing they’d tell me is how many days left I had to live.
    Turns out I really over reacted. 🤗
    I’m in recovery now. 💫

  • @Lukesab3r
    @Lukesab3r Před 4 lety +25

    Hank, you are my hero.
    I stumbled on your crash course chemistry series years ago and I've been a fan of your personality and content ever since.
    Keep on delivering your excellence my good man!!

  • @Jemini4228
    @Jemini4228 Před 4 lety +31

    "And their wallets"
    Gods I'm glad I live in the UK...

    • @kahazaba
      @kahazaba Před 4 lety +2

      Yeah, it was such a US comment

    • @llamallama1509
      @llamallama1509 Před 4 lety +6

      Rest assured, the way the NHS is being gutted for funding, we could be joining our US friends in paying, any time soon.

    • @llamallama1509
      @llamallama1509 Před 4 lety +1

      @Berzerk Paid for doesn't always equal good either.

  • @grandmaster1004
    @grandmaster1004 Před 4 lety +6

    My surgeon pretty much said what was explained here, scans can lead to unnecessary worry, and it can be difficult to determine when action is necessary. 2 years since my diagnosis...

    • @WestCoastAce27
      @WestCoastAce27 Před 4 lety

      JHMBB2 I remember when the full body scans came into vogue - rich people ran out en mass to get them. Doctors hated it - needless drama over every little non-conforming speck.

  • @RavenIsAnArtist
    @RavenIsAnArtist Před 4 lety +4

    Before I turned one I had astrocytoma stage 2 which was removed. It was so large that it nearly killed me. Since it's a alow growing cancer usually found in older people, it must have been growing when I was in the womb. It took the feeling in my legs and they said I would never walk. (I can)
    Edit: The tissue was discolored so they were able to remove it via surgery.

  • @dominic.h.3363
    @dominic.h.3363 Před 4 lety +78

    A hypochondriac might freak out watching this video.

    • @CORNlFER
      @CORNlFER Před 4 lety +19

      Dominic H. i have hypochondria and to be honest this is comforting lmfao

    • @dominic.h.3363
      @dominic.h.3363 Před 4 lety +5

      Comforting to know your undiagnosed and thus untreated cancer might not kill you after all? I'm absolutely horrified by the idea that I could have tumors in me that may or may not end up killing me in the future...

    • @ashleyashleym2969
      @ashleyashleym2969 Před 4 lety +15

      Nope, I'm a hypochondriac and this is the type of news I like to hear, it makes cancer a lot less scary. And it's good news because it means even if you are diagnosed with cancer there's a possibility that it's not lethal but they have no way of knowing. A little bit of uncertainty in the right situations is actually quite comforting.

    • @ashleyashleym2969
      @ashleyashleym2969 Před 4 lety

      It's especially good news to me because it further confirms what ive learned about abnormal pap smears (I have one).

    • @CORNlFER
      @CORNlFER Před 4 lety +7

      its just nice to be reminded that not every tiny abnormality is a death sentence, especially when human bodies have a habit of developing abnormalities

  • @TheGurumash
    @TheGurumash Před 4 lety +53

    "I've got weird cells... I've got to go home" reminds me of when Obesity got added to the WHO's list of diseases.
    My friend suggested I call out of work because I got a bad case of the Fats.

  • @corditewolf8916
    @corditewolf8916 Před 4 lety +58

    Cancer biologist here
    While there are points that this video gets correct, a large percentage of this video is misleading or flat out wrong.
    First, the definition of cancer. There is no dispute regarding the definition of cancer amongst professionals. If it is cancer, then it is malignant. The technical term you are looking for is “neoplasm,” which includes cancer as well as non-cancerous lesions and hyperplastic (abnormal) cells. Doctors may refer to a neoplasm as “cancer” just to simplify medical lingo for lay people, but the difference is well understood; your statement of finding a bunch of cancers over the years is completely incorrect.
    Second, your video purports that the reason why everyone isn’t getting cancer is because all the “harmless cancers” found from overdiagnosis would just go away on their own. This is a flat out lie. There are (very few) papers that HYPOTHESIZE the regression of certain tumors as a reason for overdiagnosis, but to suggest that this is a commonplace occurrence is incredibly harmful and misleading. While spontaneous tumor regression is a documented phenomenon, it is INCREDIBLY rare (as in 1 in 100,000 cases). This is possibly caused by immune surveillance (your immune system recognizing the cancer and destroying it). When it comes to immune surveillance, it does indeed play a significant part in preventing cancer; this is a widely accepted fact, but the immune system’s function in cancer prevention happens on the level of single cells, not on the level of tumors that are already detectable by imaging.
    Finally, you discuss indolent cancers as if they were harmless cancers. This is also incorrect. Indolent just means that the cancer spreads slowly - that’s it. It does not mean that they don’t cause symptoms, and it does not mean that they will go away by themselves. Indolent cancers do kill, and they must be treated depending on the patient. If the patient is very old and is unlikely to live 10 years, for example, then it would be pointless to treat the patient because the cancer is indolent. However, if you were 45 and diagnosed with an indolent cancer - say prostate cancer or thymoma (note: not all cases of these cancers are indolent) - we would definitely want to treat you.

    • @AlthenaLuna
      @AlthenaLuna Před 4 lety

      +

    • @twigwick
      @twigwick Před 4 lety

      +

    • @corditewolf8916
      @corditewolf8916 Před 4 lety +3

      @blackened 1 Your physician was the best person to determine the best course of action. There are a lot of individual factors that go into determining which treatment option (or no treatment) is best. But in general, if the patient is expected to live 10+ years, then the recommendation is radical prostatectomy.

    • @LeftShark_Vevo
      @LeftShark_Vevo Před 4 lety +4

      Thank you! It felt so belittling to hear this ridiculous video, but the consoling factor was immediately seeing that this man had no medical background, just by the way he talked about it. Every point he made seemed absolutely ridiculous, down to the nonsensical ways he used the term "cancer". This kind of misinformation is harmful - people really do infer medical advice from the internet and use it to inform their decision making, and he should be ashamed to be spreading it.

    • @AuntieWelly
      @AuntieWelly Před 4 lety +9

      My dad was the 1 in 100,000. He was given months to live in January 2000 with a "massive inoperable and fatal" tumour in his bowel pressing on his spine making his legs give way, and that was after surgery and chemo. Two years later it was gone without treatment. They messed up his colostomy reversal and he died in 2011 of the ongoing complications of that mess-up - cancer free.

  • @32fps
    @32fps Před 4 lety +2

    I always found it amusing to tell people I have a tumor in my leg. It's fairly big, you can feel it easily and even see it if my leg is in a certain position, and people always get all wide-eyed and fearful when I tell/show them. I always take a beat before I say it's benign for my own amusement; I've had it since like 12 or 14 and since it's on my bone the doctors were like 'yeah it'll stop growing when you stop growing; if you wanna take it out we can but it'd be major surgery for something that's not causing you pain or impairment' so we opted to leave it. Been my buddy ever since.

  • @marianpizeno8511
    @marianpizeno8511 Před 4 lety +5

    As someone battling malignant breast cancer, I would have given anything for my biopsy results to be normal.

  • @katherinepagan4860
    @katherinepagan4860 Před 4 lety

    My mom's friend was diagnosed with breast cancer today, and I come on CZcams and see this. I'm hoping it's a sign and her breast cancer isn't malignant and she will be fine 🤞

  • @sebastianelytron8450
    @sebastianelytron8450 Před 4 lety +146

    I don't know what's so hard about cancer?? I'm already on stage 4

    • @alexwang982
      @alexwang982 Před 4 lety +19

      What's the cheat code?

    • @jellyacc
      @jellyacc Před 4 lety +9

      You used a cheat code prob

    • @dexis9412
      @dexis9412 Před 4 lety +25

      The cheat code is
      Smile, smile, frown, frown, left eye wink, right eye wink, left eye wink, right eye wink, left nipple, right nipple, belly button.
      Increases your regen by 300%, making it so much harder to lose

    • @congaspy2058
      @congaspy2058 Před 4 lety +5

      This is a comment that you do a frowny-smile at.

    • @millionairetobe
      @millionairetobe Před 4 lety

      Words have power Sebastian.

  • @crabscrustacean1087
    @crabscrustacean1087 Před 4 lety +3

    I had a Yolk Sac tumor, which is a highly aggressive one. I don't know how it works for other malignant tumors, but for the one I got, the blood tests (LDH, AFP, HCG) and clinical conditions (eg. pain) were what truly mattered. They usually ask for image scans to check whether you got any suspicious mass on key spots, like abdominal lymph nodes; it's more for confirmation purposes though.
    After chemo, they ask for the same scans, but that's to check if the tumor has completely disappeared. This one seems to be important to check.

  • @vampireprincess7934
    @vampireprincess7934 Před 4 lety +2

    I had thyroid cancer when i was 18... i never felt sick before, only the treatment made me feel sick.. and for the whole time doctors weren't sure if the cancer was malignant or not, but they treated it just in case.... now i have to eat thyroid medicine for the rest of my life because the removed my thyroid Dx

  • @ayame316
    @ayame316 Před 4 lety +1

    Honestly, I never thought this was a problem because I was taught that for both human and veterinary medicine, “cancer” means malignant, and tumor means benign. Now that’s not what each means literally but you don’t say someone has “cancer” if they have a benign fatty tumor. You take a biopsy and find out! Now if it’s melanoma, I don’t know of any melanomas that are benign, but maybe they can figure out better when something is malignant melanoma or not.

  • @borkborkfoxxo279
    @borkborkfoxxo279 Před 4 lety +1

    I think it's important to say that yes, there are ways of describing growths precisely. Tumor staging and grading is one example.

  • @lullustration5775
    @lullustration5775 Před 4 lety +4

    Our own immune system is very good at getting rid of some cancers as well. I've had several cancerous moles just fall off a few days after I noticed they looked different. I still got them checked out, you can never be too careful with moles.

    • @chironOwlglass
      @chironOwlglass Před 4 lety

      Unfortunately, the innate immune system (the one that stops cancer) is ENTIRELY overlooked by the medical industry, since the point of medicine is to generate revenue, not help people. The innate immune system literally isn't studied at all, ever, when it plays a role in like, half of all health conditions. It's also literally the cause of almost ALL mental illness. Big Pharma doesn't want people to know that, because if people were ACTUALLY cured, they'd stop making money hand over first.

    • @lullustration5775
      @lullustration5775 Před 4 lety +1

      @@chironOwlglass there are studies being done on creating antigens that bind to the cancer cells to flag the immune system to target these cells.
      The immune system is incredibly complex and different in everyone so it's hard to get conclusive results.
      Creating new medicine is very time and money intensive and yes that needs to be funded but I think you're a bit too far into the big pharma conspiracy rabbit hole.

  • @koushikthakur239
    @koushikthakur239 Před 3 lety +2

    It all points back to The prime rule of health: too much or too little is always dangerous

  • @abigailsmith6000
    @abigailsmith6000 Před 9 měsíci +4

    This video kind of hits different now that Hank has cancer :'(

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache Před 4 lety +97

    Cancer: (Sees the title)
    Cancer: *Am I a joke to you?*

    • @MrCjlauer49338
      @MrCjlauer49338 Před 4 lety +7

      Cancer: I am I joke to you?
      Benign Tumors: Shut up jerry.

    • @chironOwlglass
      @chironOwlglass Před 4 lety

      Lmao cancer is the only condition you can actually get treatment for in this big pharma nightmare

  • @bread9173
    @bread9173 Před 4 lety +2

    I think what would also be a good narrative to add to this is that people get overprescribed meds a lot that are unnecessary most of the time. Opioids, antidepressant, etc. Sadly, we learn that overprescribing can be a bad thing the more we learn about medical science.

  • @MrsRemi
    @MrsRemi Před 4 lety

    Been a while since I watched scishow videos (I used to bingewatch so much), still as informative in an interesting way as ever! Thanks for keeping up with the good content

  • @JungleMan777
    @JungleMan777 Před 4 lety

    I was just trying to explain this to someone and this video does it better. Thank you.

  • @deniseglines1705
    @deniseglines1705 Před 4 lety

    excellent content as always Sci Show team, thanks.

  • @Xiliaace
    @Xiliaace Před 4 lety +10

    As someone who just beat Hodgkin's lymphoma, I find this video very interesting

    • @renae2954
      @renae2954 Před 4 lety +1

      Congratulations!! Good health to you!

  • @comradegarrett1202
    @comradegarrett1202 Před 4 lety +73

    "harmless cancer" sounds like such an oxymoron

    • @TONOCLAY
      @TONOCLAY Před 4 lety +9

      That's why they want to change the name but like basil cell is an example of mostly harmless cancer

  • @cloudwyrms9752
    @cloudwyrms9752 Před 4 lety +21

    “Sorry, I got weird cells, gotta go home.”

  • @jessethomas7949
    @jessethomas7949 Před 4 lety +2

    My Dad was diagnosed with non small cell lung cancer. 6 months and 2 weeks later we buried him.
    It’s a brutal death.

  • @foodaddict17
    @foodaddict17 Před 4 lety

    The videos are actually good, honestly

  • @Rodoadrenalina
    @Rodoadrenalina Před 4 lety +1

    Even in the series House md, they said the doc didn't liked full body scans cause you could find at least 3 things wrong that are not the problem when people get sick.

  • @dshe8637
    @dshe8637 Před 4 lety +1

    So many previously dangerous cancers are now treatable and survivable, but only IF you have a properly resourced National Health Service.
    Overdiagnosis is less of an issue if you properly fund options to monitor and regularly scan for changes.
    If you live in a country like US where ordinary people can't afford cancer treatment, it must be terrifying.

  • @aaminahasan6270
    @aaminahasan6270 Před 4 lety

    This was really beneficial
    Thank you!

  • @southpawshane7652
    @southpawshane7652 Před 4 lety +4

    I freeking love SciShow. I can't wait until i get my finances together so i can support you guys. Let's see that six Million subscribers!

  • @lizslilcorneroftheinstitution

    I hear these discussions and while I understand and agree with 99%, the common sense side of my brain is just waiting for the train wreck that will inevitably follow by all those who take these discussions out of context!
    It can be difficult for many people to grasp the biochemical puzzle that is the human body, even when it’s working precisely as it should!
    To a certain extent I think the medical industry as a whole would benefit in the long run if there was a way to increase both empathy and honesty across medicine as a whole but especially when it comes to terminal illnesses and cancers.
    Many times patients are put through treatments and trials even though the doctors know that logically this treatment will not make a difference. The doctors are simply unprepared to give up and have that very frank, honest discussion with patients. Too many doctors get so focused on extending the time the patient had left that they totally ignore the quality of life. Too often, families and patients don’t realize until it’s too late that instead of grasping at more time, they should have focused on using the time they did have to enjoy one another. It’s heart breaking to watch.
    These are issues that you will find regardless of how prestigious the doctor or how many experts are in a hospital!
    My mother was found to have primary brain cancer, with dual pathology (two separate forms of cancer), Glioblastoma Multiforme and Oligodendroglioma. My dad, myself and my two daughters rallied to take care of her. My dad was the one working to pay for everything. I was my mom’s ‘Primary Care Giver’ and my girls were the distraction and reminder of joy for my mom. Dad & I took her to every appointment, therapy session, surgery, radiation treatment. We were a team on that front.
    I’m the one dad calls ‘Nurse Ratched’ because I quickly become an expert on every condition, pro/con, side effect, medication, treatment, therapy, medication, etc. I have no problem being the confrontational one... whether it’s with a doctor, nurse, tech, pharmacist or the patient themselves, I make sure to arch mistakes (because there are always many), I’m the cheerleader on hard days, I’m the feisty one on days of selfpity, I’m the sounding board on the days of anger.... but most of all, I’m the one who takes the info from every direction to ensure we all stay grounded in reality.
    If you have a patient, her spouse of 40 years, you tell them the patient has the most aggressive form of cancer a person can have, you have to be extremely careful with comments that can give false hope. My mom was being seen at Emory University’s Winship cancer center, one of the best in the country. But to tell that patient and her spouse things like “well we do have patients who have lived for 20 years after GBM/ODG” without qualifying that comment can cause utter hell. I knew what the numbers were. I knew what her underlying issues were. I knew she was not going to be a 20 year survivor. I let my dad and mom leave the exam room and cornered the doctor to ask if he really thought there was any chance for my mom, and automatically he looked at the ground and couldn’t speak. My comment was simple, do not give them false hope. My parents had been together since school. Do not tell my dad that if he plays his cards right he could have his wife for another 20 years if it’s not true!
    Honesty and empathy are two things that are greatly needed!

  • @ameliadegroot
    @ameliadegroot Před 4 lety

    love the title! great video, very interesting topic

  • @fcm101284
    @fcm101284 Před 4 lety +1

    Can't say I completely agree. My mom was suffering from headaches and all the doctors told her was that it was allergies. Only because we knew she wasn't acting normal we kept pushing it. We got an MRI done and the doctor said there was a mass but it wasn't anything to worry about. If we didn't keep pushing we wouldn't have gotten her lymphoma in her brain diagnosed after 2 months from her initial symptoms. If they had taken her seriously she could've had an earlier treatment and possible recovery. Sadly she has passed away after battling for 5 months. 2 months extra could've made a huge difference...........

  • @Netsuko
    @Netsuko Před 4 lety +5

    My friend is fighting stage4 cancer. She’s definitely not fine. :(

  • @cajintexas7751
    @cajintexas7751 Před 4 lety +13

    Video: some cancers are harmless, so we need to develop better tests for when we should treat cancers.
    Inevitable popular media stories: Should we not bother treating cancer any more?

  • @fumpledump
    @fumpledump Před 4 lety +23

    Doctor: You have diagnosed with cancer
    Me: *OR HAVE I!*
    Doctor: ....yes

    • @3800S1
      @3800S1 Před 4 lety +2

      plays vsauce theme.

  • @rudra62
    @rudra62 Před 4 lety

    Good episode. It has been said before that there are no healthy people, just under-screened people.
    Another thing about screening and early diagnosis are the concepts of lead time bias and length bias. Both of these will cause a higher number of the screened population to be alive in 5 years from diagnosis, while not changing the date of death - but it will increase the time of morbidity - when they know they are "cancer patients" and receiving treatment for it that has serious side effects.

  • @Oscar-----
    @Oscar----- Před 4 lety +2

    Yeah I've had tiny tumors in the joints of my fingers that went away in 3 - 5 days, and that's common for this sort of benign "cancer"

  • @Sylkis89
    @Sylkis89 Před 4 lety +1

    I thought we already have the distinction like that - tumor (used in reference to harmless types, theoretically cancers are tumors but pragmatically nobody will call a cancer a tumor, and effectively that word is used only for the harmless ones) and cancer (harmful type of tumor that can spread)... at least that's how it functions in Polish - nowotrów (literally "newgrowth", tumor), and rak (crayfish/cancer).

  • @ThousandTimesBefore
    @ThousandTimesBefore Před 4 lety +4

    I used to think cancer was easily treatable and rarely deadly.
    Then it killed my Dad when he was 55.
    Now it's ALWAYS a death sentence for me, even though I know that's not true.

  • @UltraHuman
    @UltraHuman Před 4 lety

    THANK. YOU.

  • @BeCurieUs
    @BeCurieUs Před 4 lety +1

    Similar studies misrepresented by news outfits came out in Fukushima awhile back. Not accounting for overdetection along with not accounting for how treatable thyroid cancer is ended up causing some pretty predictable errors in attributable excess mortality.

  • @felipeoyarzun5424
    @felipeoyarzun5424 Před 4 lety

    This video is so important

  • @markschwartz1565
    @markschwartz1565 Před 4 lety +74

    Pretty sure I have some weird cells. As a matter of fact, I think they're all weird.

  • @MrSurferDoug
    @MrSurferDoug Před 4 lety +3

    definition of a healthy person - someone who has not been tested enough.

  • @nicholaicorbie
    @nicholaicorbie Před 4 lety +5

    I swear Hank has to be the best educational host on CZcams

    • @twigwick
      @twigwick Před 4 lety

      Michael Stevens would like a word with you.

  • @florkiler6242
    @florkiler6242 Před 4 lety

    I like this new sound terrifying dance you did in 0:57

  • @applebottomjeans333
    @applebottomjeans333 Před 4 lety +1

    My aunt was diagnosed with “stage 0” cancer. She had a quick precautionary procedure and she was fine. But since then she posts all the time about being a *CANCER SURVIVOR* and how people don’t understand what it’s like to have cancer. Tbh it’s insensitive to people who actually go through chemo and actually suffer from their disease

  • @Leeqzombie
    @Leeqzombie Před 4 lety +1

    Honestly, I think this is what's happened with my cat. When he got old, somewhere between 20 and 23(?) (we can't know for sure because he was already an adult when the shelter found him, and all evidence pointed to him having been born a stray), he was found to have lung cancer. It hadn't spread yet, and it wasn't negatively affecting his quality of life yet, and at his age, him going through treatment wouldn't be worth it. We were told to bring him back for check ups to see how it progresses, and that if anything had to be done, it would just be to keep him comfortable until his time came. It's hard to tell with cats, but we were told we had maybe three months left with him. That was in January of this year. It hasn't spread, it hasn't gotten worse, and it hasn't actually caused any problems for him. He's got some unrelated arthritis that he has some pain killers for, but other than that he's his usual self. If he hadn't come down with a chest infection (which quickly cleared up with medication) that lead to the tests and scans, we'd never even have known he had cancer.

  • @virglibrsaglove
    @virglibrsaglove Před 3 lety

    They are good. And I am subscribed. To the channel, not to cancer.

  • @patrickkidd2949
    @patrickkidd2949 Před 4 lety +1

    It would be great if you had a numerical legend attached to your quotes to sources in the description to make it easy for us to double check what you mean. You mentioned that “the number of deaths for those cancers stayed pretty much the same” but I want to easily be able to see which study your referring to so I can see if the study accounted for population growth.

  • @caterscarrots3407
    @caterscarrots3407 Před 3 lety +1

    I had a contrast abdominal CT done when I had appendicitis several years back. I was well enough to walk over to radiology for the CT. 2 bright spots showed up on the CT. One was the tip of my mildly inflamed appendix and the other was a "small abdominal mass". When I had my appendectomy done, the surgeon said that there were cysts on my right ovary. She didn’t do anything about the cysts though, they were simple cysts filled with clear fluid. The only things that the cysts cause for me are pain, slight irregularity in my cycle, and the very occasional missed period(I have like 1 or 2 every few years at the most). The cysts must have been the "small abdominal mass" that showed up on CT because nothing else was found that might suggest a tumor or other mass.

  • @maximosh
    @maximosh Před 4 lety

    Good episode. I'd like to see an episode of known cancer triggers.. Like that fungus found in peanuts that causes Liver cancer in children to 20% of HPV viral causation. As there are probably many things that are known to lead to these abnormal cell growths. Gladly the body often takes care of them before they become a problem.

  • @lavaunjohns7796
    @lavaunjohns7796 Před 4 lety +1

    When I was 29, after a multitude of tests I was told I had terminal colon cancer that has gone through the colon walls and I was given 8-12 months without treatment, possibly longer with treatment. I left and never went back, did some minor holistic stuff and prepared to die. That meant trying to cram as much as I could do into that time frame. I'm 58 now. When I finally allowed a simple colonoscopy at age 48 they found no abnormalities. Had they not done so many types of tests to confirm cancer I would say it was a misdiagnosis. I just call it a miracle now.

    • @twigwick
      @twigwick Před 4 lety +1

      Horrible way to start but I'm glad you found meaning in your life from it!

    • @lavaunjohns7796
      @lavaunjohns7796 Před 4 lety

      Every human body takes care of itself differently and it’s amazing what our bodies can do. Many defy the odds as I did. It is the practice of medicine for a reason. But I’ve learned cancer is not always a death sentence. My husband had chemo and a neobladder in March of 2018 and is cancer free. All of us are dying the moment we’re born; when that occurs is the mystery.

    • @ideoformsun5806
      @ideoformsun5806 Před 4 lety

      I'm glad you had a miracle! If you don't mind my asking; I'm curious what minor holistic things you did at the time?

  • @aguven
    @aguven Před 4 lety

    The major thing that will help with these screening overdiagnosis will be molecular biomarkers of the cancers. We are working on that in my company. If we can identify the markers for so called "malignancy", we can screen people with cheap molecular tests before they are screened and send them to biopsies if only they meet the malignancy criteria + abnormality in screening. Also further markers can help us after this stage as well. We can identify other markers to categorize patients to see which kind of treatments are more likely to help their malignant cancer. It is a growing industry as well. Hopefully, relatively soon we will have these

  • @helRAEzzzer
    @helRAEzzzer Před 2 lety

    My dad passed away from lymphoma in 2011. He was diagnosed with both non-hodgkins and Hodgkins lymphoma (stage 4 - idk if both were stage 4) but was only treated for one of them because on spreads quickly and one would've taken 40 years before becoming a problem. That was the first time I've heard of slow spreading cancers, super interesting.

  • @RBickersjr
    @RBickersjr Před 3 lety

    This is why I fully believe that some kind of regular full body scan should be part of regular preventative medical treatment.

  • @evilsharkey8954
    @evilsharkey8954 Před 4 lety +2

    I always thought if they were benign they were just called tumors, and they weren’t called cancer unless they were malignant.

  • @ambermanning2200
    @ambermanning2200 Před 4 lety

    I've just been diagnosed with : Cervical dysplasia, Brain tumour, I'm also undergoing investigations for endometrial cancer & Bowel cancer. It's not really a joke, but I was miss diagnosed for 8 years. With still not justice, the I'm sorry but the system does need to change. 👍

  • @kewlbuttons1824
    @kewlbuttons1824 Před 4 lety +1

    Makes me wonder if my Thyroid cancer was one of those. It was super small, and they ended up removing my whole thyroid. But I feel much better now, so either way it was a good thing.

  • @Lil-Dragon
    @Lil-Dragon Před 4 lety

    Lumps depend on what they are and growth rate is how my doctor dealt with my thyroid lump because it grew so quickly and was better to get it done early, while I'm young, than to wait.

  • @delphinidin
    @delphinidin Před 3 lety

    I recently read an article on this subject that said a number of doctors are beginning to argue against the use of regular mammograms because they so often lead to overdiagnosis and unnecessary stress and surgical procedures. They argue that regular breast self-exams are more likely to find growths that are actually problematic (mammograms find smaller growths that are less likely to be a problem).

  • @Master_Therion
    @Master_Therion Před 4 lety +23

    5:23 Naming it "IDLE disorder" might cause some confusion.
    Doctor: There's no need to worry, but I did find that you have an IDLE disorder.
    Patient: No, I took your advice and have been getting regular exercise.

    • @limiv5272
      @limiv5272 Před 4 lety +5

      If it makes people exercise more it's a win, I don't see the problem

    • @natanoj16
      @natanoj16 Před 4 lety

      If I had one I would call it Eric.

  • @TacComControl
    @TacComControl Před 4 lety

    Regarding Abnormal Findings, the trouble is that word is... loaded.
    I went in for a kidney stone at one point, and came back with a major abnormal finding after I was put through an abdominal CT. Turns out, I have a fused kidney. Right-side cross-fused ectopia, specifically. Which is to say, my kidneys aren't where they're supposed to be, and they're stuck together. Which, again, is an abnormal finding. It's also relatively harmless, so there's really no major worry there.

  • @KX36
    @KX36 Před 4 lety +1

    Incidentalomas. One of my favourite medical terms.

  • @riggs20
    @riggs20 Před 4 lety

    I know it's overused, but I'm gonna say it anyway:
    Mind. Blown. 🤯

  • @3800S1
    @3800S1 Před 4 lety

    I watched a catalyst episode about this very subject when it came to prostate cancers, They showed that in most older men they were those super slow growing ones and removing them often did more harm than good as these the men were most likely going to die of old age before it caused issues. As far as I remember only monitoring them was the only way they could tell if it was a dangerous one or harmless slow growing type.

  • @valornthered
    @valornthered Před 4 lety +1

    I know two people who were diagnosed with early stage cancers, one thyroid and one prostate. Both ultimately had them removed (the whole thing, not just the cancer), and after watching this, I'm wondering if it was actually necessary, especially with the thyroid cancer.

  • @karlbergen6826
    @karlbergen6826 Před 3 lety

    This is both worry some and helpful. What we are being told it seems is not always best for us. Besides being worrisome it appears that many are over diagnosed and the treatments could turn Indolent cancers to malignant one.

  • @kliudrsfhlih
    @kliudrsfhlih Před 4 lety

    super interesting

  • @gamesturbator
    @gamesturbator Před 4 lety +1

    My urologist told me my bladder cells looked like cancer. So I had to give up a month of donating plasma (was making more than your average bear), pay a guy $40 to transfer me to the hospital a month later to get a biopsy to see how bad it was. NO cancer! I needed that money I lost as I'm losing my place to live in Dec. What a wonderful world!

    • @bobbobber4810
      @bobbobber4810 Před 4 lety

      You could also make the risk of not use the money, have symptoms start to appear and then die as it had progress too much.
      You couldn't know.
      The doctor didn't wanted to take a chance...
      too bad you lose money because of that :(

    • @gamesturbator
      @gamesturbator Před 4 lety

      @@herrschmidt5477 No, I lost $600 plus the $40 because of lost income from donating plasma in Nov. :)

  • @alyxwithay6516
    @alyxwithay6516 Před 4 lety

    I was told I had a tiny itty bitty tumor somewhere but it isnt growing. Always in the back of my mind (not literally) but I guess it’s part of life.

  • @zerocalvin
    @zerocalvin Před 4 lety +2

    "full body scan are useless, give me full body scan and i can point out over a dozen things wrong with you":- House MD.

  • @kennethirgendwas4616
    @kennethirgendwas4616 Před 4 lety +2

    Yesterday i thought what if i have cancer and i don't know?
    I should go get tested even if there will be a false positive just to be sure.
    I think the universe wants to tell me something.

  • @normansmith9110
    @normansmith9110 Před 4 lety

    This is a serious and frightening problem. Being overdiagnosed means expense, anxiety and pain all needless. I don't want to go through all that.

  • @Locut0s
    @Locut0s Před 4 lety +7

    When asking questions like this we need to stop asking if people “live longer” as the result of some intervention or not, and instead ask if they live to a normal life expectancy. IMHO extending someone’s life by a few years may be positive progress in terms of the treatment of cancer in general and yes we should of course collect such stats. But when it comes to whether I want extensive screening done, the only question I care about is if my life will be saved. If I only get a few more years out of the deal on average and have to deal with a lot more false positives, no thank you.

  • @chezshirecat1872
    @chezshirecat1872 Před 4 lety

    I work in pathology and aided in many thyroid biopsies-they just changed the requirements to have a biopsy and has to measure at a certain amount before it can be biopsy. the thyroid biopsy isn’t a fun produce and the lets just wait and see is becoming more popular with this area.

  • @sapphirII
    @sapphirII Před 4 lety +1

    From what I had heard a long time ago, the bumpy moles are a time of bening "cancer". I happen to have quite a few.

    • @AdamSmith-gs2dv
      @AdamSmith-gs2dv Před 4 lety +1

      They can also be melanoma the worst kind of skin cancer. Melanoma and moles form from the same group of cells (Melanocytes) and that's why bening moles look very similar to melanoma.

    • @sapphirII
      @sapphirII Před 4 lety

      @@AdamSmith-gs2dv They are all years old now, but I still do a summary check up to see it there are any changes.

  • @twigwick
    @twigwick Před 4 lety +2

    Hey Vsauce! Michael here. You... have Cancer. *music starts playing*

  • @illiengalene2285
    @illiengalene2285 Před 4 lety +7

    Why is Endometriosis not cancer?
    It's tissue gone rogue, it can grow back really fast if removed, it poses a higher risk of malicious cancer and it is inflaming and scarring the place it's growing on, but does not care.
    I had it removed 3 times, 2 times it came back until they removed the infested organ that had been 90% destroyed. I am really curious, how this is not cancer.

    • @aled35
      @aled35 Před 4 lety +3

      @Trine418 but it can spread to other organs

    • @illiengalene2285
      @illiengalene2285 Před 4 lety +3

      @Trine418 the problem is, it may be rare, but it is possible to get aggressive and it's definitely spreading in some people. Most have it on their uterus, on the bladder, ovaries, in their tubes, all over their intestines, on their spine and in more remote places like the brain, lungs and eyes.

    • @illiengalene2285
      @illiengalene2285 Před 4 lety +3

      @Trine418 it does and with approximately 10-11% of women suffering from this, the youngest starting at the age of 7-8, up until they get menopause... yeah... but hope in on the horizon! We don't have to cut people open in the future for diagnosis! Hurray! A blood test is in development and endometriosis positive women work with the researchers to make the test secure to help young women and girl to stop the suffering and the disease at the first stages.

    • @paphio
      @paphio Před 4 lety +4

      Endometriosis does behave a lot like cancer! However, cancer involves changes to the cells’ genes and gene expression, for example, they can’t die on schedule like normal cells do.

    • @hannahdasilva6410
      @hannahdasilva6410 Před 4 lety +3

      I’m waiting for a video about endo on this channel