Cancer-prone oxyradical overload disease.

Oxyradical overload disease develops in conditions involving chronic inflammation and may be of inherited etiology, e.g. haemochromatosis and Wilson disease, be acquired, e.g. infection with hepatitis B or C virus or Helicobactor pylori, or be chemically induced, e.g. acid reflux in Barrett oesophagus. Susceptibility to cancer is frequently a pathological consequence of extensive oxyradical damage that leads to a cycle of cell death and regeneration and causes mutations in cancer-related genes. In this brief review, we focus on the possible interactive effects of nitric oxide and the p53 tumour suppressor gene in human carcinogenesis.