Central Nervous System Tumors (Brain and Spinal Cord) - Childhood: Latest Research | The Cancer Disappeared

Central Nervous System Tumors (Brain and Spinal Cord) - Childhood: Latest Research | The Cancer Disappeared

Best adjuvant (assist) for chemotherapy | 1+1>487% |

Effectively improve chemotherapy effect, treatment, immunity. 

Reduce side effects and recurrence.  

Overview / Relation / Abstract / Role / Principle / Action / Mechanism / Function / Work | 

Central Nervous System Tumors (Brain and Spinal Cord) - Childhood: Latest Research

Abstract / Summary / Overview of Apoptosis.

Why do cells undergo apoptosis?

The relationship between cancer cells and apoptosis.

Where are the weaknesses and symptoms of cancer cells?

Are cancer cells aggressive?

Extraordinary Solamargine (Role, Principle, Action, Mechanism, Function, Work)

Solamargine's major function mechanism:

Solamargine vs cancer

Best Chemotherapy Adjuvant.  (1+1>478%) 

Effectively improve chemotherapy effect and cure.

When cancer cells are less resistant to drugs, chemotherapy becomes more effective. 



Extract : https://www.cancer.net/cancer-types/

Central Nervous System Tumors (Brain and Spinal Cord) - Childhood: Latest Research

Approved by the Cancer.Net Editorial Board, 06/2022

You will read about the scientific research being done to learn more about central nervous system (CNS) tumors diagnosed in children and how to treat them.

Doctors are working to learn more about CNS tumors, ways to prevent them, how to best treat them, and how to provide the best care to children diagnosed with a tumor in the brain or spinal cord. The following areas of research may include new options for patients through clinical trials. Always talk with your child’s doctor about the best diagnostic and treatment options for your child.

  • New medications. Doctors are examining new types of drugs that may better control tumor growth. These include:

    • Targeted therapy. As outlined in Types of Treatment, recent research has found specific genes, proteins, and other factors unique to different types of CNS tumors. Treatments aimed at these factors, called targeted therapy, continue to be studied. Targeted therapy is a treatment that targets the tumor’s specific genes, proteins, or the tissue environment that contributes to the tumor's growth and survival. This type of treatment blocks the growth and spread of tumor cells while limiting damage to healthy cells.

    • Immunotherapy. Also called biologic therapy, immunotherapy uses the body's natural defenses to fight a tumor by improving the immune system’s ability to attack tumor cells. Researchers are studying how well these drugs work and how safe they are for children with CNS tumors.

  • Improved imaging techniques. Imaging techniques are being developed and refined that help surgeons pinpoint the tumor’s location. This may help reduce or prevent tissue damage to the healthy parts of the brain during treatment.

    • Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is an imaging technique that identifies the parts of the brain that control speech, hearing, vision, touch, and movement. The specific locations of these functions are slightly different in every person, so fMRI allows surgeons to plan surgery around these areas.

    • Image-guided stereotaxis allows surgeons to visualize and operate on the brain using 3-dimensional outlines of the brain and the tumor. Along with specialized software, these images help guide the surgeon to the tumor. Many tumors that were once considered inoperable can now be removed with this technique.

    • Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) and positron emission tomography (PET) scans are also being used to examine tumor metabolic activity. Whether these techniques will improve a doctor’s ability to predict how a tumor will grow and spread is still being researched.

  • Improved methods of delivering radiation therapy. Doctors are experimenting with new techniques for delivering radiation therapy to certain types of tumors. These methods make detailed, 3-dimensional maps of the brain and the tumor so doctors can focus the radiation therapy on the tumor and avoid damage to the nearby healthy tissue. This can reduce a child’s exposure to radiation and lessen the long-term side effects.

  • Palliative care/supportive care. Clinical trials are underway to find better ways of reducing symptoms and side effects of current CNS tumor treatments to improve comfort and quality of life for patients.


Abstract / Summary / Overview of Apoptosis. 

Apoptosis.jpg

Overview of apoptosis

•Programmed cell death

•Apoptosis is a form of programmed cell death, or “cellular suicide.”

•Apoptosis is different from necrosis, in which cells die due to injury.

•Apoptosis removes cells during development, eliminates potentially cancerous and virus-infected cells, and maintains balance in the body.


Why do cells undergo apoptosis?

  • Basically, apoptosis is a general and convenient way to remove cells that should no longer be part of the organism.
  • Some cells are abnormal and could hurt the rest of the organism if they survive, such as cells with viral infections or DNA damage.
  • Apoptosis is part of development
  • In many organisms, programmed cell death is a normal part of development.


The relationship between cancer cells and apoptosis

Apoptosis can eliminate infected or cancerous cells.

When a cell’s DNA is damaged, it will typically detect the damage and try to repair it. 

If the damage is beyond repair, the cell will normally send itself into apoptosis, ensuring that it will not pass on its damaged DNA. 

When cells have DNA damage but fail to undergo apoptosis, they may be on the road to cancer.

However, “successful” cancer cells successfully evade the process of apoptosis.

This allows them to divide out of control and accumulate mutations (changes in their DNA).

Apoptosis is key to immune function

Apoptosis also plays an essential role in the development and maintenance of a healthy immune system. 


Where are the weaknesses and symptoms of cancer cells?

The symptoms of cancer cells are in the nucleus.

The nucleus controls the outer cytoplasm, cell composition, cell viability, etc.

DNA mutations also mutate in the nucleus.

Therefore, to treat cancer cells, we must first enter the nucleus.

Let the “regulatory cell gene” mechanism enter the nucleus to regulate


Are cancer cells aggressive?

After the action of Solamargine, the aggressiveness of cancer cells is alleviated.

So after using Solamargine, many patients feel that I am half better.

Although the tumor does not disappear quickly, patients feel that the degree of aggressiveness is reduced.



Extraordinary Solamargine (Role, Principle, Action, Mechanism, Function, Work). 

sr-t100_apoptosis_mechanism005.jpg


Solamargine's major function mechanism:

When Solamargine enter,

Solamargine activates receptors that are turned off by cancer cells, allowing cancer cells to modulate again.

Solamargine modulates the anti-modulates genes of cancer cells, making cancer cells less resistant.

Reduced drug resistance

When cancer cells are less resistant to drugs, chemotherapy becomes more effective.

Solamargine modulates the mutated genes in cancer cells and then initiates cancer cell apoptosis to achieve anti-cancer effects.


Solamargine combined with which chemotherapy drugs are more effective in treating cancer cells?

Chemotherapy_01.jpg



Solamargine vs cancer

cell apoptosis.jpg

Solamargine vs cancer

The picture shows the death of cancer cells.

The black and black parts are cancer cell nuclei.

Even if the nucleus ruptures, the cancer cells will die.

The figure shows that cancer cells can cause death. 

cancer cell apoptosis_01_800.jpg

The figure shows that cancer cells can cause death.

The figure shows that the death of lung cancer cells is relatively slow, and it will not be obvious until eight hours later.

The figure shows that the death of liver cancer cells is very obvious, even more obvious in eight hours.

The graph shows that breast cancer cells die faster. It was obvious from the beginning that breast cancer is easy to treat, and patients with breast cancer need not worry.



Best Chemotherapy Adjuvant. (1+1>487%) 

Effectively improve chemotherapy effect and treatment.solamargine vs cancer_lung cancer cell.jpg

ANTI-CANCER 

Patent protection in 32 nations. 

A comparison study showing Solamargine vs. other therapeutic drugs with respect to lung cancer cells.

solamargine vs cancer_breast cancer cell_01_800.jpgA comparison study showing Solamargine vs. other chemotherapeutic drugs with respect to breast cancer cells.

solamargine combined treatment therapy_01_800.jpg

SR-T100 combination therapy with effective result against breast cancer cells.


solamargine combined treatment therapy_03R12_800.jpg

Combination Therapy   |   Research results for lung cancer cells. 

A. Chemotherapy    (100μM), 16% of cancer cell apoptosis. 

B. Alone SM (4.8μM), 28% of cancer cell apoptosis. 

C. SM (4.80μM) + Chemotherapy (40μM), 66% of cancer cells apoptosis.  

D. SM (4.80μM) + Chemotherapy (100μM), 78% of cancer cell apoptosis.  

SM has a clearing effect better than Chemotherapy. 

The combined treatment of Solamargine and Chemotherapy significantly increased the apoptosis of lung cancer cells.  

SM (4.8μM) + Chemotherapy (40μM), increased from 16% to 66% (up to 4.125 times).  

SM (4.8μM) + Chemotherapy (100μM), increased from 16% to 78% (up to 4.875 times).  

Reorganized from: BBRC. Action of Solamargine on TNFs and drug-resistant human lung cancer cells 2004.


justnow_02.jpg

The best solution for cancer cells.

Solamargine Q&A (English)





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