Every DANGEROUS Cancer Explained in 14 Minutes
Вставка
- Опубліковано 4 чер 2024
- More Videos - • More Videos
00:00 - Brain Cancer
1:38 - Breast Cancer
3:11 - Lung Cancer
5:08 - Prostate Cancer
6:25 - Leukemia
8:26 - Skin Cancer
10:13 - Pancreatic Cancer
11:56 - Thyroid Cancer
13:16 - Ovarian Cancer
We cover interesting topics that you might not know about!
Join us discord.gg/53msuc757H
You forgot Salivary Gland cancer.
absolutely horrifying information, thanks
My health anxiety after watching this:📈📈📈📈📈📈
Exactly
@@ivymyrtz Based on your reply, do you also have hypochondria?
@@-_.-.Unknown.-._-367 most likely not…but I’m usually anxious when I notice a tiny symptom of some diseases
@@ivymyrtz it's normal to feel anxious from time to time but if this anxious feeling interferes with your daily life and last more than 4 weeks, it may be likely that you have health Anxiety, if that's the case I would go to a professional mental health specialist to get a proper diagnosis.
Sorry if I yap too much
Lung cancer got my step father, he was a heavy smoker. We never knew he had it and he also was afraid of testing because of his thyroid problem. When we found out it was too late, the cancer was present in every major organ above his waist. From diagnosis to death it only took 7 days.
People please stop smoking, just don't do it even vapes or blunts. This will kill you quick.
That's ok brother. Nothing to stay for in the long run
"Diagnosis to Death in 7 days" that hit hard
I've been around people smoking for most of my life but I somehow haven't gotten cancer yet
@@Cr3Ek_l0v3R Better avoid direct contact with those people. The lung cancer can take several decades to form depending on your environment and personal health. But being close to smokers can accelerate formation by a lot and you may have a few years before it starts to form.
@@GoldMoonGuy kinda hard to when they live in the same house as me .-.
My mother was taken by brain cancer almost 20 years ago. The first thing I noticed is she started having strange moments. Like one day I came home from school and my mother was folding laundry. Out of nowhere she started throwing the clean clothes at my face, laughing maniacally. I left the room and later she acted as if nothing happened. Two months later she fell and got a concussion at night and when she was taken to the hospital for that, is when we found the cancer. We did try radiation and chemotherapy but it was a fruitless battle. The cancer was too aggressive and targeting areas that we couldn’t operate on. I watched my mother slowly become a vegetable. I can’t even remember the last thing she said to me, but I remember the last things I said to her, because she was too far gone by the time us kids were told what was to come. The silver lining is I know there has been a lot of development in targeting the kind of brain cancer my mom had, so hopefully no one else has to go through what we did.
I’m so sorry for your loss, always terrible to hear kids losing their parents❤
Bro, she is in good hands now!!
Mines too. Three years ago she passed from a glioblastoma. I noticed that she had a hard time speaking and would often get headaches. Few months later, she has a hard time moving and becomes weak. That’s when we found out she had a tumour. She had tried chemotherapy, radiation, surgery and other medications to kill the tumour. Glioblastomas are very aggressive. She fought hard for 18 months. I saw how this cancer transformed her. She was more aggressive and would say things that hurt me. I know that was the cancer talking but it hurt. During her last month, she was bed bound. I cried next to her and she would say “No.” to me as a way to stop me from crying. It wasn’t in an aggressive tone but rather her way of trying to comfort me and say “You will be alright when I’m gone.” I was only 15 when she passed. I currently 18, turning 19 in a few months. Feels like she’s been gone forever
my mum had a simuilar situation with her mother and glioblastoma in the early 90's when they didnt know much about it. At first, she had what my mum called "stroke like symptoms" and saw the doctor about it. The doctor was very dismissive and said she 'just had a stroke' get on with it blah blah. She unfortunately did not get any treatment of any kind other than a diagnostic surgery which resulted in the whole right side of her body becoming paralysed for the last 6 months of her life before the brain tumor took her away. The doctors knew that the diagnostic surgery for the glioblastoma would paralyse her but my family were not given informed consent about this and my mum feels forever guilty about this as my nan could have had a better quality of life better for last 5 months of her life. Its so sad to think what healthcare outcomes were like back then but as you said hopefully noone else has had to through similar in recent years.
Had a very similar experience bless you💋
my ex high school classmate and friend lost her life to brain cancer. she was just 19. her birthday would be next month. and cancer took her life in less than 6 months. please, don't take your health for granted just because you're "too young" for developing these illnesses. take care of yourselves and each other, people.
Happy early birthday to her!
dang you got lucky, one of my friends also had brain cancer he died in 5th grade
🎀
@@thebestgamereverlmao sorry wdym with i "got lucky"? 🧐
@@agrisweet6961 i mean i dont know how long you were friends with your classmate but i was only friends with mine for 2 years and the last year i barely got to see him at school
My grandmother survived through three cancers through her life; lung, skin, and breast. After surviving through all three after 15 years, she was then diagnosed with a pituitary adenoma, along with cancer cells throughout her body. She was the toughest woman ive ever known.
Wow what a soldier! May God bless her!
giggity
@@nothingnesslol9538ur a weirdo
Grandma giving her cells taxation without representation the way they rebelled.
@@nothingnesslol9538where’s the giggity? breast?
I got diagnosed with brainstem tumor (ependymona, stage 2nd) at the age of 15. It thankfully got removed by an amazing doctor. (The hospital I got diagnosed at had to call for a doctor but they weren't sure if I could have a surgery, and if - not everyone wanted to do it) Now I'm almost 4 years cancer free.
Awesome bro! I'm so incredibly happy to hear your doing well now.
Super brave bro
@@connorc9537 thank you!!
@@supakook thanks :)
What kind of symptoms did you have?
I suffered severe trauma several years ago, I was diagnosed with cptsd cancer. Spent my whole life fighting cptsd. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until my husband recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 6 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.
Congrats on your recovery. Most persons never realizes psilocybin can be used as a miracle medication to save lives. Years back i wrote an entire essay about psychedelics. they saved you from death bud, lets be honest here.
Can you help me with the reliable source A. I'm 56 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in Australia. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them.
YES very sure of Dr.benfungi. I have the
same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
Ive done shrooms last month in my house. It taught me how severely traumatized I was from alcohol. I healed from many mental traumas from my past and was able to forgive, let go. Shrooms to me is a remedy not a vice. I even felt more refreshed the
morning after. So no hangovers. No
depression mood for days. No anxiety.I now
have a more calm mind
How can i find him? Is he on Instagram
my mom has one of these cancers and im happy shes still alive
Which one?
Im so glad that she is still alive today, i hope shes doing alright right now.❤
Same here
Good job 👍
which
I'm a few weeks away from my 10 year anniversary from beating brain cancer. (madulablastoma) I was part of a research protocol that now makes similar pediatric brain cancers considerably more survivable. I'm so proud that I was able to be part of that.
I lost my mom to breast cancer last year.
The worst part about it is that despite all the treatments, she slowly withered away until the day she passed.
Always value the people you love, you never know when they might start withering away.
I'm. So sorry for your loss
I'm a childhood leukemia survivor. It's great to see all these cancers explained in such a thorough and simple way. It's been almost 16 years since I was diagnosed, and 14 years since I finished chemo.
You should be proud of youself bro and know thay ur rlly brave
I'm also surviving leukemia right now maintenance treatment is going on it was diagnosed at age 12 and I'm 13 now
@@op_kireety keep fighting for your life. We believe in you!
@@op_kireetyI’m cheering you on my boy😀 you got this
@@calux.1016 😊 thx
Thyroid cancer nearly got my mother - but she was also extremely lucky because also she has some sort of autoimmune disease (yet to be determined, other than it not being lupus), and it overreacted and completely encapsulated the tumour before it could metastasize. Everyone thought it was just a goiter, and even the biopsies confirmed it was "just" a goiter. She had it for more than a decade before it started affecting her breathing.
It wasn't until she went into surgery to have the goiter removed that they found out "oops! You had undiagnosed cancer for the last ten years" - it was so completely encapsulated that it wasn't even affecting her too negatively.
They still had to completely remove her thyroid, though.
You single?? 👀👣👣
@@TsaritsaMain oh hell no bro is down bad 💀
@@TsaritsaMainyou ok
Fight poison with poison.
@@TsaritsaMain💀🙏
I lost my dad to pancreatic cancer 2 months back. He was in excruciating pain, it hurt so much to see him hurting. It was so bad he opted to sit on the rug and not the couch, with the heater on him at all times. Id never wish his fate on my worst enemy. Im graduating this weekend, he wont be there to see me. I miss him a lot. His final weeks still haunt me.
now we've got cancer balls before GTA 6
Bro that’s so similar to my comment
@@Fbi0839 You thought that in a comment section where everyone uses the same joke your joke wouldn’t be stolen?
We got gullible fbi balls before GTA 6. 💀
lol
We're gonna get ball cancer 2 before gta 6
🤖🤖
My sister got leukemia but she’s good now
nice
W
That is a weird twist but okay
@@_ScRAp_BoNEz_haha yeah. But I mean, there’s only really 2 potential outcomes.
So glad! I got diagnosed at 7 with it as well, finished treatment 5 years later and now live to enter my 20's!
My dad has lympfathic cancer, he and my mom told me that there were only other 5 people doing the treatment he was getting and that it was fairly new, hes had it for quite a while but he is almost cancer free! :DD (Now we just gotta wait on the kidney test stuffs)
Thats nice to hear , I hope your father is ok!! :)
Beautiful mate 😢❤
I’ve sadly lost my aunt to breast cancer in 2019. It was an 8.5 year long battle.
8.5 YEARS LONG !?! Wow
She was a tough soldier wow im sorry for your loss
I saw brain cancer was at the end of the thumbnail, and when I clicked out of morbid curiosity, I got jumpscared by it being talked about FIRST after the start of video ads. Like, actually felt a bit of pain. I don’t know why my morbid curiosity wanted me to click this video seeing that in the thumbnail… the reason why it was brain cancer specifically that made my heart ache is because a family member of mine is dealing with it right now. Has been for almost 3 years, double the initial prognosis of 1 and a half. That sadly means that they’re likely almost out of time, and I’ve been so scared… okay, yeah, that’s probably enough venting in a random comments section. Tell those close to you that you love them, and hopefully in the future, no one will have to go through this awful shit ever again. 👍
I’m so sorry ♥️ these strangers love you.
Brain cancer got my dad so I completely understand you.
Hold on tight
I'm sorry you're going through this and I'm sending hugs
It's normal to be afraid even terrified of cancer. It's the same for me. My mother died of cancer (and stupid medical errors...) in 2009 (leukaemia) after just 8 months...she was just 41. She had a kind of leukaemia that usually occurs on 65 yo+
A dad's friend of mine died of brain cancer at 60 yo after 10 years of having the dieses.
Just tell yourself that medicine is progressing* + you can avoid a huge % of cancers with a good lifestyle (between 40 to 70% depending on studies and especially with a good diet)
* For example what my mother had at the time (just 15 years ago) the 5-year survival rate was 49% now around 64% and it will probably rise more and more (I hope 🤞).
@@2killnspray9 you dads friend was a true solider to be honest
Who types like this
8:59 one small thing it’s called ultraviolet, it’s called that because the guy who discovered it said it was above violet on a rainbow when he was doing an experiment with a prism
Leukaemia is common in childhood but adults can still be at risk
Common Symptoms
*fatigue
*fever and night sweats
*easy bruising or bleeding
*aching in joints or bones
*frequent infections
*unexplained weight loss
*shortness of breath
True. I was 24 when I was first diagnosed with ALL. It was aggressive af, it came back three times after being mrd negative, even after a stem cell transplant.
Anyway I'm about seven months out from from a second transplant and I'm doing ok so far.
@@vulkendov5210 I’m so glad to hear things are going well. ❤️
@@vulkendov5210you will be fine :D
Leukemia cancer was the thing that took my childhood best friend. She was 22 with ALL. Her body wasn't strong enough to handle the bone marrow transplant. Its almost been a month now and I miss her so much. I wish she was part of that 90%.
Sorry to hear that 🙂 may her soul rest in peace
Sorry to hear that 🙂 may her soul rest in peace
Also, cervical cancer is one of dangerous cancer in a human body. My aunt had cervical cancer and unfortunately she died from it. She was a strong woman and she was always motivating us if we feel unmotivated in life. I miss her so much 🥺
🥺 sorry to hear that
me too!
My grandad passed away from pancreatic cancer a few years ago. He was in agonising pain for months, but we never got to visit him in hospital as he lived abroad and everyone was in lockdown 😔
My Grandpa Died of Liver cancer it was sad, but he was like 80 so it wasn't surprising RIP Grandpa.
I’m sorry for your loss
My mother's best friend and my father's brother both died of pancreatic cancer.
It is one of the most brutal and aggressive cancers of all.
I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia in 2012 and stopped treatment in 2017. It was hell but I’m just happy it was caught in time 🙏🏼 I make sure to cherish life after that experience
my grandmother who is in her 80's had lung cancer not too long ago, it was in a spot where she would cough up blood so she caught it early before it caused significant damage. she's still alive and she survived a fall afterwards which broke her hip, she has recovered well from her fall and can walk around on her own again. she's a really really tough lady.
My grandma was diagnosed with stage 4 ovarian cancer. It spread from her ovaries up her left lymph node system and nowhere else so it made surgery a possibility. Its crazy that thats what it decided to do and we got to share time with her for another 16 years.
Became one of very few survivors of stage 4 ovarian, its no joke why they call it the silent killer she didnt notice or bother to go to the doctor until it was stage 4
Honestly this channel is amazing i hope more people see it
You should make a “every vitamin explained” video
yes i agree
My pawpaw died of lung cancer when I was 9 and he never smoked a cigarette in his life, such a great man I miss him so much
so sorry for your loss, God be with you
Keep the med videos coming man 🔥
I was thinking of thsi video yesterday and bam it comes out in my sleep
My uncle passed away last week from lung cancer he was coughing so hard he ruptured something and coughed up blood and choked on the blood until most of it was gone.
my high school chemistry teacher got lung cancer, he had never never smoked any in his life he said. He was unable to pay the medical bills for his treatment and ended up resorting to a life of crime to pay the bills, was the greatest meth cook to ever live. W.W
I'm currently getting ready to go to a TYA cancer event. I like to watch youtube videos whilst doing my makeup and this was in my recommended... no mention of lymphoma here and it's similar to leukaemia in that lymphoma is also common in children and young people. Watch out for these symptoms:
Night sweats
Fever
Unexplained weight loss
Itchy skin
Fatigue
Shortness of breath
Painless swellings in the neck, armpits, or groin
I had chest pain, itchy skin and pain when drinking alcohol for months. It wasn't until a 2.5cm lump in my neck appeared that I decided to go to my GP. Five weeks later: cancer.
Unfortunately, less than a year before I was diagnosed with a blood cancer, my mum was diagnosed with stage 4 breast cancer. It's so important to know your body and to seek medical help if experiencing any symptoms.
Growing up I hated wearing sunscreen, and I worked outside a lot mowing with my dad. I’m quite pale and don’t really tan at all, it usually goes from fish belly white to lobster red in an hour.
Then I read an article about a girl who died of skin cancer in her early twenties, and I didn’t want that to be me. Now I bring the 80+ SPF with me everywhere. And not the spray but the lotion since it covers better and lasts longer.
The sun you obviously don’t want to be out in for too long but I think a lot of people get skin cancer because of sun beds. Still try to get around 20 minutes of sun without sunscreen
My dad was diagnosed with brain cancer about 6 years ago. He’s still walking the earth currently and I hope it stays that way.
I sadly lost my dad due to lung cancer when I was 4
my homie got leukemia, and responded so well to treatment he went into remission like 2 weeks after he started treatment
My lovely grandmother passed away February of this year from pancreatic cancer, near the end it spread to her stomach and bowels. She’s a woman with a heart of gold, and didn’t like telling others she’s in pain because she thought she would be bothering them.
But at least she’s no longer in pain and can rest easy. I love you grandma Doris ❤️
My aunt survived ovarial cancer and thank god she’s still kicking today
As someone who was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia at age 22 I feel as if it can happen at any age and there is a huge lack of awareness!
I’ve been diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer at 29. I smoked for 11 years and quit two years ago. This happened despite me knowing 60 year olds who smoked all their life and got other forms of cancer, but never lung cancer. Go figure
I lost my grandma to cancer in 2020. It spread really quickly to all of her organs, I don't even know where the cancer started. I got to spend a week in Florida with her and my cousin in summer 2019 and it went downhill aggressively from there. She didn't want to have any of the young kids see her sick, so we didn't get to spend much time together after that. After she passed my parents bought her house, and I think just the good memories made me develop a passion for baking like she had. ❤
my grandfather passed away a few years ago from pancreatic cancer. he was diabetic and most of the symptoms went unnoticed or simply attributed to his diabetes, so when he was diagnosed it was already too late. he drove himself to the hospital, and barely three months later he passed away.
one of the things he enjoyed the most was eating, but because of the pressure on his stomach caused by the tumor he could barely keep anything down. his other passion was singing, but he was too weak to even speak.
whenever i think about it i get extremely sad. he went from enjoying his life to dying a few weeks later without being able to do what he loved. it truly is one of the worst kinds of cancer.
Love this channel
Pls keep it up bro
My grandpa passed away from pancreatic cancer, I was just 9 when he passed. He would drive himself to the hospital for his treatment, I never knew and can’t imagine how painful it was for him.
I lost my father about 3 weeks ago to pancreatic cancer. It’s a terrible cancer :(
My great-grandma got brain cancer and died when my mom was 15. According to my family, she had the voice of an angel and loved to sing, which is probably why I love music as well. She smoked medical marijuana just so the pain would stop.
Lost my grandmother to cancer when I was 5. It was my first experience with death and I was devastated that I couldn't be with her when it happened.
Since then, my grandfather, her husband, has survived cancer twice within a few years, one of which was lung cancer.
To my knowledge, he was a smoker until being diagnosed with lung cancer and may still smoke even now, but I'm not sure as I don't see him much anymore.
No one in my family has been safe from cancer at all. My grandma died to lung cancer, grandfather died from lung cancer too (Neither can go to bed without a cig in their hands)
I had skin cancer when I was 11 for a while, my uncle just died of bone cancer, my other uncle is probably gonna die to bone and brain cancer, it's just pure hell how heavily cancer wants to end a family line
I’m baffled by the fact that i got ovarian cancer, what they say is a lot more common in older woman, at 18. I think what saved me was having a very small body. When that tumor got a certain size I KNEW something was wrong because it hurt like crazy from I assume pushing against other organs. And because i spoke up about it, it was caught early at stage 1. It really teaches you to listen to your body.
Thanks for making this, Im going to be a oologist so this is really nice
The pancreas cancer has took my mom last year, she was having all these sympthoms and we didnt knew it was it, it was discovered later when it was too late, omg its to eye Opening 😮
i think he gave up and just wrote X minutes lmao
What are you talking about?
@@2killnspray9the title was changed, it used to be "X minutes"
Lmao yeah Every DANGEROUS Cancer Explained In… however long it takes.
I hope you don't wake up tomorrow
@@adonisgod-ts6ty tf
Brain cancer sounds the scariest but pragmatically, i would choose brain cancer over any other if I had too. It seems fast and if you are lucky you will be too far gone before you can comprehend whats happening. One of the most painful is esophageal cancer. My dad died from it which lastly metastasized to his brain. He suffered to an extent not humanly possible. Couldn’t eat or drink, constantly coughing up pus like fluid. Crying almost always because morphine wouldn’t touch the pain. He was lucid till 15 mins before he died. He smoked his last cigarette and 20 mins later he was gone. I wouldn’t wish it on anyone.
My best friend's Dad just died from Glioblastoma, a type of brain cancer where only 5% of people make it to 5 years of survival post diagnosis. His dad had the cancer for 6 years, and I can't tell if he's lucky for living so long with it or unlucky for getting such a rare cancer.
As someone who casually researches this stuff, your biggest worry is skin cancer.
It's best to come to terms with cancer early on. You may get lucky and not get it, but you also might not be lucky.
I have probably a 1 in 3 chance with as much as a 1 in 2 chance. Honestly, I've stopped being afraid of it. Knowledge keeps me strong.
I have stage 4 Hodgkin's lymphoma would've been nice to see something about that on here !
My twin brother had leukemia and he still has his port scar. We forget that he had cancer sometimes because it was over twenty years ago now.
My Uncle had cancer. I am so lucky he survived.
What kind of cancer was it??
@@aidagoncalves7544 I was two years old when it happened and I never really asked what he had.
Great vid bro, next do Gemini please.❤
my mom and aunt found out that they had thyroid cancer very early and removed one of thyroid
they both are very sleepy and exhausted most of the day
Almost a year before my stepfather was diagnosed with stage 4 prostate cancer, he had his annual physical. His doctor told him that his Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA) Test numbers were above average, but that was common for a man his age and wasn’t anything to worry about. If a doctor ever tells you that, get a new doctor and a second opinion.
what a lovely video
My cat died of feline leukemia, may 9th, 2024, it was a while ago, I still miss them.
may 9th 2024 huh you in the future
are you scheduling the cats death??
my uncle got pancreas cancer sadly he got pass away after few years after the diagnosis. he is quite young
Normally wouldn't have watched this, but since I have leukemia myself I was kinda interested.
(And it is going great btw. Honestly not sure if there even are cancer cells left)
Cancer is very common in my family. Nobody survives either, except maybe one.
Sounds like you'll have to live life cautiously
@@troy3423 I'm a mechanic, so it isn't looking good
Great video
My dad had thyroid cancer but he’s chill now
Everyone should watch this
I love the design
I literally got a cancer awareness ad the minute I clicked this video.
@TheEvaluat0r what app do you use to edit your videos where do you get these stickman figures?
My maternal grandfather died of prostate cancer, my godmother died of liver cancer, and my dad died of esophageal cancer!
I lost my grandma to metastatic breast cancer. It spread to her liver and that’s what killed her. So sad
blood cancer is also deadly, a family member of mine who was only 16 died, he spent approximately 3 years fighting for it. his last words were "i need my mom to be here with me before i die"
My grandmother died from breast cancer, and now my grandfather has lung cancer from smoking. :(
My aunt has Breast Cancer.
😢
make a video about every STD
Somehow my Little sister got Thyroid Cancer in her neck and she was only 3 she stayed in the hospital for 2 gears while she got treatment it was a terrying time because we didnt know that when we wake up she could be gone but thankfully the chemo worked and they were able to remove it now she has a Lazy eye because the tumor messed with one of her nerves, but shes been doing great now its been 5 years since that happened.
My grandfather died of skin cancer before i was born and i was told that side of the family born after would have a higher chance of having it. My brother had a dark spot on his back but it was just a spot and not cancer .
My late fiance beat non-Hogkins lymphoma through chemotherapy and a stem cell transplant. Unfortunately, all the treatment he received lowered his immune system to fight other cancers. He had a family history of colon cancer, and even though he had a clean colonoscopy a year and a half before it was discovered, he developed an aggressive form known as a Braf mutation. He was among the unlucky 10% where colonoscopy did not detect it early.
Left out chronic lymphocyte leukemia
NICE CONTENT
Why didn't you cover osteosarcoma? Bone cancer, im in remission and fighting. Its painful and ive had multiple surgeries and radiation
My left leg bone has a bump and it sometimes feel painful, now I'm extremely concerned
Get it checked out immediately. I just got my leg amputated due to osteosarcoma in my left tibia, and although bone cancer is rare it can happen and you don't want it to get to the point where it's too large. I don't mean to scare you, just get it checked out and you'll be fine. 🙂
My dad used to have cancer (he didn’t die and also he’s taking meds) and he has brain cancer. Before the surgery he had this bubbly nice not forgetful etc personality but after it he’s not the same anymore
Would have never thought that sun exposure would do me so bad,i always wear long sleeves anyway,but i guess using sunblock underneath that wouldn't be so bad,i'm a gardener so i work outside all day,and intense sunlight and uv rays exposure won't do me good
My mother had a lemon sized tumor in her brain affecting her speech❤️
8:54 did we get a Lana del Rey reference? 😂
I believe what was said at 11:35 is incorrect. First, the stomach has no ducts, nor does it have anything to do with the metabolism of bilirubin, the compound that leads to jaundice if it accumulates in the skin and eyes.
In healthy humans, bilirubin is formed in the liver by metabolizing heme, which comes from the breakdown of red blood cells. This bilirubin is then passed along to the intestines where it gets converted into other molecules that get excreted through the feces and urine, giving them their color. In order for bilirubin to go from the liver to the intestines, it has to travel through the bile ducts, which connect the liver and gall bladder with the duodenum.
When the bile ducts are obstructed by pancreatic tumor cells, the bilirubin cannot get to the intestines and thus leeches into the circulatory system, through which it gets distributed to the skin and eyes
New fear unlocked: getting pancreatic cancer for using my phone
Would be great if you could show us your references and literature for legitimacy.
I been had thyroid since i was in 5th or 6th grade no treatment cus my family poor. Im 19 now so im i nearing death its been like 8 or 9 years 🤧. But I dont feel no pain, no trouble swallowing or breathing
My mom, my grandma, my grandma's sister and her daughter all get ovarian cancer
I hate pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis or lung cancer