Study: Brain tumor kills men more often than females

According to a new study, males are more likely than women to die from brain cancer because of fundamental differences in the way the disease develops. A brain tumor is a mass of abnormal (normal) cells that grow and spread to the brain. There are different types of tumor, some [...]
According to a new study, males are more likely than women to die from brain cancer because of fundamental differences in the way the disease develops. A brain tumor is a mass of abnormal (normal) cells that grow and spread to the brain.
There are different types of tumors, some of them are doers, and some of them are maizes. Tumor can begin developing into the brain or spread from the brain to other parts of the body (mysterase of the brain). Each tumor develops in a different way, and symptoms that manifest themselves depend on the pressure caused by their growth, or the country in which they grow.
The most common symptoms of brain tumors because patients are presented to the doctor are headaches and crises that may end with a loss of consciousness. But you shouldn't panic, or immediately suspect that you have a tumor if you feel a headache. These symptoms are shared with other diseases. If you have constant headaches, it is important to report to your doctor to determine the cause of the pain.
Meanwhile, according to the study, males diagnosed with cancer have proved to die more and faster than women, according to research conducted by University of Washington researchers in St. Louis. They concluded that they are different processes that affect brain cancer, causing development of the disease to depend on the gender of the host. While focusing on glioblastoma, they believe that other types of cancer function the same way.
The study, titled “Brain tumors) batle of the sexes was published on Wednesday in Science Translation Medicine. The study shows that the role of gender in developing and treating this type of cancer goes beyond hormones or lifestyles that vary according to the age of a person and the region. Jingcin “Rose” Luo, one of the research researchers, suggested that cancer cells not only develop differently in men and women, but that this fact is likely to be the root of final results.










