Colon cancer .. early injuries can be associated with childhood bacteria

A new study indicated that exposure to bacterial toxins in the colon in childhood may be a reason for increasing cases of colon and rectal cancer in younger patients. After colon and rectal cancer was a disease that affects the elderly, cases of infection among young people in at least 27 countries have increased. The infection rate has doubled at adults under the age of fifty, every decade over the past twenty years. In an effort to discover the cause, the researchers analyzed 981 genes in the colon and rectal in patients who were sick or late in 11 countries, and their risk of risk differed. DNA mutations in colon cells known to be caused by a poison produced by the Coli’s Acevonoma, Colipackin ‘, were more frequent in adults who had colon cancer before the age of forty compared to those who were diagnosed with the disease after the age of seventies. Researchers in “Nature” magazine said that the patterns of mutations believe that children are exposed to “Colipakin” before the age of ten. The patterns of mutations were especially common in countries that have an increase in early injuries. “If someone has one of these mutations before he is ten years old, he can accelerate the decades of the potential life of colon and rectal cancer, as he becomes at the age of forty instead of sixty,” Ludmil Alexandrov, the lead researcher of the University of California in San Diego, said in a statement. He added: “Every factor or environmental behavior is left that we have an effect on our genetic formation. But we have found that Kolippien is one of the factors that can. In this case, it seems that his genetic impression is now related to colon and rectal cancer of the young men.” The researchers found other fingerprints in colon and rectal cancers from specific countries, especially Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Russia and Thailand. They say this indicates that exposure to environmental factors for the place can also contribute to the risk of cancer. “It is possible that every country has different unknown causes … It can open the door for specific preventative strategies for each region,” said Marcus Diaz-Jai, co-author of the study of the Spanish National Cancer Research Center in Madrid.