Cancer Treatment Options Forum - April 12th, 2011 - 6 Comments

I am looking for some proof that ionized radiation no matter the dose amount can and will cause bladder cancer

Low dose radiation causing cancer.

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There are 6 comments for this post.

  1. Francis D on April 12, 2011 12:30 am

    you dont need proof…the doctors will tell you right off the bat…..Geez..i wonder whats that lead vest used for? Could it be to keep your body from getting radiation? I wonder what too much radiation might do? Cause cancer? I dont know….

  2. Question The System on April 12, 2011 12:30 am

    My advice to you is to go to your local ER and hang out in their XRay suite.

    Do that day after day after day for several years – maybe even decades.

    Then see if you develop cancer or not.

    If so – then you were correct. If not – well, then stand there some more.

  3. Panda on April 12, 2011 12:30 am

    You can look to see what research has been done in this particular area by checking the following site. You might be able to contact someone from these offices to guide you.

    Department of Energy: Low Dose Radiation Research Project
    http://www.lowdose.energy.gov/about_main.htm

  4. Loving_Heart on April 12, 2011 12:30 am

    Normal dosage of diagnostic Xray does not causes cancer, Higher doses are required to cure.
    Hey!are you in some law business?

  5. Thin Kaboudit on April 12, 2011 12:30 am

    If they do then someone need to sue the Sun, since it has been firing ionized radiation at us for thousands of years!

    There is no such proof, you sound like an ambulance-chaser to me!

  6. oncogenomics on April 12, 2011 12:30 am

    You cannot get definitive proof. Ionization is the process where the charge is changed in an atom. This may or may not change the properties of the gene effected.

    How do you prove genetic mutation was from artifical radiation, background radiation, free radicals in the air or food, etc? Having said that it is highly suspect that exposure to ionizing radiation may cause cancer.

    This is true with all cancers. You cannot definitively prove that something will cause cancer. Like smoking, the mutation introduced may not initiate cancer. However, more exposure may cause that unlucky mutation that starts the process.

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