Find clinic locations for Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics and services in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
Find services offered by Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
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Normal, healthy cells divide to replace those lost or damaged and then stop dividing. Cells normally divide and increase in number in a process called mitosis.
Cancer is a condition where cells multiply. But this multiplying is out of control and crowds out normal cells. It makes it hard for your body to function well. The cells may grow into nearby tissue or spread to distant parts of the body. Over time, the mass of cancer cells can get big enough to make lumps (also called masses or tumors) that can be felt or seen. But not all tumors are cancer. Tumors can be benign or malignant:
There are general categories of cancer based on the type of cell the cancer starts in. Carcinomas and, more specifically, adenocarcinomas are the most common type:
Brain cancers, nerve cancers, melanomas, and certain testicular and ovarian cancers are other types of cancer categories. They start in different kinds of cells in the body.
Cancers start in a single cell that has been damaged (mutated). That cell is the source of the primary cancer. The cancer is always named for the primary site where the original or first tumor started, such as skin, colon, or breast.
Cancer can spread from where it started (the primary site) to other parts of the body.
A cancer cell can travel through these systems. With time, the cancer cell can grow and form a new tumor that may not be near the primary site. When cancer spreads to another part of the body, it is called metastatic cancer.
Metastatic cancer is still named for the primary site. For example:
If cancer cells are taken out from the metastatic tumor, they will look like the primary cancer cells. These metastatic tumors are also treated like the primary tumors. So colon cancer that has spread or metastasized to the liver is still treated like colon cancer is treated. The cells in the metastatic liver tumor look like the primary cancer cells in the colon. It's not liver cancer; it didn't start in liver cells. It's metastatic colon cancer.
Cancer can metastasize to any part of the body, but the most common sites are: