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Перевод: cancerous
[прилагательное] раковый; карциноматозный; злокачественный
Тезаурус:
- The researchers do not yet know whether the abnormal cells detected by this technique always become cancerous, but long-term clinical trials should give the answer.
- This is just as well because trichomonal infection causes changes in the cells of the cervix which mimic those that precede cancerous changes.
- Nor did I know that, in the normal human body, up to 100,000 cells can become cancerous every single day.
- The plant pathogen Agrobacterium , for example, carries a plasmid which makes plant cells cancerous.
- For instance, witness Steven Wells fulminating in the NME : "Pop can be treated as the vile pus that drips from sores of a cancerous body politic."
- Scientists are extremely interested in the integrative path of viral infection because all of the viruses that have been found to cause tumours (either cancerous or benign) appear to integrate their genetic material into the infected cell's chromosomes.
- Hormones modify the cells which may become cancerous, rendering them less, or more, likely to do so, but the hormones do not act primarily on the processes which turn any quiescent cell into one that divides without control.
- One of the immediate consequences is for cells t become cancerous.
- Some of the mouse cells became cancerous in consequence, and the human DNA retrieved from them turned out to contain a mutant version of a normal cellular gene.
- Later, and also accidentally, they were found to damage and destroy living tissues, so they were applied as a kind of cautery to ulcerating cancerous growths as well as to other conditions such as inflammations and tuberculosis.
- "Some warts are cancerous," Arty said, laying the mirror aside and getting out of bed.
- It was now seventeen years since the Countryside in 1970 Conference, when he had talked about "the horrifying effects of pollution in all its cancerous forms".
- It has been shown that inactivated herpes virus is more capable of inducing cancerous change in certain cells than the normal virus, and the possible risks attached to such vaccines vastly outweigh any dubious advantages.
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