rach2bach

rach2bach t1_j1cmqbj wrote

All of which we find examples of extremeophiles surviving here on earth. The one that surprises .e the most are the organisms that survivehigh radiation environments, but when you think about it, they survived and thrived in early earth atmosphere. So I think it's VERY possible for organisms to exist on Mars even currently. Could be in it's crust, hell, we have organisms here that live in crystals ffs. It's definitely possible.

2

rach2bach t1_it8j86a wrote

I don't really agree with one thing here: it's difficulty to diagnose. Most Interventional radiologists or endo docs are able to hit pancreatic lesions with ease, even sub-centimeter in size. Getting diagnostic tissue/cells isn't "difficult" in the sense that they can't do it, it's more that catching it early is the difficult part of the lesion is really small i.e. early stage typically.

Source: I worked as a cytotech for years dx these tumors. Sure there's differentials in cytology and histology, but any pathologist worth their weight will order special stains to confirm/rule out things that may be "trickier" to look at.

11