Is Cancer Contagious?
Is Cancer Contagious?
Cancer does not spread from person to person and is not contagious. It cannot be contracted by touching, kissing, or sharing the same air with a cancer patient. However, there are a few uncommon situations in which cancer genes might be transferred from a parent to a kid or from a donor to a recipient of an organ. Additionally, it is possible to contract a contagious virus like the human papillomavirus that increases your risk of developing cancer.
Cancer epidemics would occur if cancer were communicable, just like flu outbreaks do. We would anticipate a high cancer rate among the loved ones and acquaintances of cancer patients as well as among the medical personnel who treat them. That is not the situation. Cancer may occur more frequently in some families, but this does not necessarily suggest that the family members have contracted the disease from one another. Reasons for this include
- Genes are shared among family members.
- Families could all lead the same unhealthy habits.
- The same cancer-causing chemical may be exposed to the entire family
Even if a mother develops cancer while she is pregnant, the baby is rarely harmed by the malignancy. Most malignancies cannot affect the baby directly, but some can move from the mother to the placenta (the organ that connects the mother to the baby).
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