yes
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Not just yes, it will burn you from the inside and cause a variety of health conditions, as well chemo, will only shrink the cancer cells for a short period , making you believe you beat it, but it will agitate the cells, and run more rapid after 30-60 days....
Yes, some cancer patients do survive a long time after chemotherapy. There are many alternative treatments and some patients have strong constitutions.
my grandad in his 70's has been told he has c.cancer ,he has loat alot of weight and is diabetic,i dont think he will have chemo ,how long will he have if no treatment is used
chemotherapy drugs can affect one's lifespan if it is not given in recommended dose.
of Course..... I'm a Survivor and I didn't loose my hair either.... you need to eat extremely healthy foods and take a lot of vitamins though but it was worth it!
live every day to the max......
It's possible
Chemotherapy results in anemia due to the biological wasteland the chemotherapy causes. After chemotherapy, all things bad and good will die, and the body will have to replenish those things. Anemia is almost always temporary after such a process.
no its not safe your child could die!!!
yes
It is advantageous to give chemotherapy during interphase mitosis. By administering chemo, it will encourage the cells to fail and eventually die off.
Some people think it is, but it's very strong medication.
because the drugs change the body and it's functions
Accepting or refusing cancer chemotherapy is a personal choice. Most people accept chemotherapy when the odds are well in their favor (e.g. 85-90% remission rate five years after chemotherapy), whereas many people refuse chemotherapy in the advanced stages of cancer, especially lung, ovarian and pancreatic cancers - and when the odds are not in their favor (e.g. 1-5% chance of remission five years after chemotherapy, or 10-15% chance of remission one year after chemotherapy).
My brother has chemotherapy.
my brother has chemotherapy
Chemotherapy is not a diagnosis. Chemotherapy is a treatment
Cats carry the parasite toxoplasma gondii. In immunocompromised patients (people with AIDS, on steroids) in can cause a fatal infection. In individuals with immunocompromising cancers (eg leukemias) who are receiving chemotherapy, this infection may also occur. I have not heard of a situation where chemotherapy itself lead to this infection, though.
Chemotherapy given by intramuscular injection is absorbed into the blood more slowly than IV chemotherapy. Because of this, the effects of IM chemotherapy may last longer than chemotherapy given intravenously.