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Male Breast Cancer Signs

Does cancer run in families?

I am a man of 30 years and my mother died when she was 62 breast cancer, her mother died when she was 80 ovarian cancer and my uncle is the fight against breast cancer is 70 years, and now my 34 year old sister have been diagnosed with cancer colon a year ago,,,, my doctor suggested a colonoscopy to me and I did everything goes well, I want to know is can we say the word cancer in my family, although most members of my family has different types of cancer? Or the cancer can occur in a random order? What are the signs of cancer related to the family? Thanks

Hereditary cancer is rare – less than 10% of cases. You do not inherit a tendency to cancer, and a number of members family that there were different types of cancer is not hereditary. A sign that cancer may be hereditary in a family where several members of the same side of the family had the same type of cancer (eg breast cancer had cancer, colon or whole), especially if greater security was developed lower than usual. And the cancers diagnosed after the age of 50 years is even less likely to be hereditary. breast ovarian cancer are related, and it seems that there are many cases in his family. All these cases occurred in people over 60 years, but less likely to herditary. Only 5-10% of cancer cases breast cancer are hereditary. I'm with a link to breastcancer.org 's pages about hereditary breast cancer and genetic testing may be useful and http://www.breastcancer.org/risk/genetic/testing/index.jsp UK Research page on the risk of default http://www.cancerhelp.org.uk/help/ cancer colon cancer. asp? page = 3748 as you see, with a parent DGRE first developed colon cancer before age 45, the risk may be increased. With at least one in three cancer at some point in their lives, is not uncommon for several members of the extended family have the same inheritance cancers do not. Often people think that cancer means "go on your family, but this is rarely the case. In my own family, two of my grandparents died of cancer. My both parents had cancer and my mother died. The same happens with my aunt, my uncle and cousin. None their cancers were hereditary, and no member of my immediate or extended family, who have already been considered at increased risk of cancer they had. My parents' "6 children, now aged in their forties to sixties, I am the one who developed cancer (breast), and mine is too non-hereditary and without relationship with them. * Edit: Someone said that as a man who is not likely to have inherited one of the breast cancer genes. In fact, if one parent carries the BRCA genes a few each of their children, male or female, has a 50% chance of inheriting the gene. Women who inherit a much higher risk (50-80%) of developing cancer breast if they have inherited a gene that men inherit a gene do – even carrying a BRCA gene, the chances of male breast cancer are low. But if a man inherits BRCA gene, your children have a 50% to inherit, as well as children of a woman with a BRCA gene does not

Breast cancer,I thought that was only for Women.

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