Archive for February, 2010

when do symptoms of terminal cancer start to show?

My friend is a 27 yr old single parent who was diagnosed with stage IV ovarian cancer. She was given a year about 5-6 months ago but is showing no sign of illness. She has maintained her weight, if not gained. Her skin and eyes are still bright and energetic. She seems happy and healthy by all accounts. What type of symptoms should we expect to see as her illness progresses and when should we expect to start seeing them?

"global trotter" has a good answer except we would not expect night sweats with this type of malignancy – assuming this really is an ovarian carcinoma.

Your friend is extremely young for an ovarian carcinoma.
How sure are you of the diagnosis?

Has she been on combination chemotherapy for these last 5-6 months?
I can’t believe they would give up on a 27 year old woman without trying all of the different chemotherapy regimens we have for ovarian carcinomas.

Where is the metastatic disease?
Liver? Lungs? Intraperitonal? Retroperitoneal lymph nodes?
If she does not have liver involvement, we would not expect to see the jaundice and liver failure that "globe trotter" describes.

What you describe is a person still in good health without weight loss and not appearing sick. It sure would help if we knew where her metastatic (stage IV) ovarian cancer is located. She must have had CT scans of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis.

And it would help to know what treatment she has received.
Did she have optimal debulking surgery? What chemotherapy has been tried?

By the way, doctors do not "give" people set amounts of time to live.
I know what you mean, but that phrase always bothers me – as if doctors decided the fates of patients. When doctors are pushed to make predictions, we are usually wrong. No one knows the future for any one person. We only provided statistics based on many other people who have had similar situations. Yet each patient is different.

It does not sound like she is within 6 months of death from the description you provide.

If she allows it, you might go with her when she sees her medical oncologist. That way you can hear what is really going on from a medical professional who knows all the details of her case details we do not have here.

From http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/255771-overview
Ovarian carcinomas are uncommon in patients younger than 40 years.
Most cases are diagnosed in the 60 to 70 age group.


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How is Squamous cell carcinoma lung cancer cause?


Usually through constant irritation of the lining of the lungs ie through smoking, exposure to asbestos, history of copd etc.

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Learn more at http://www.mdanderson.org/departments/ibcprogram/dIndex.cfm?pn=80B5670B-7F3D-11D4-AEC800508BDCCE3A

Inflammatory Breast Cancer is a rare type of breast cancer. Unlike more common breast cancer types, Inflammatory Breast Cancer appears as a rash or infection instead of a lump in the breast. M. D. Anderson is home to a clinic for women with inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), believed to be the first such clinic in the world. The Inflammatory Breast Cancer Clinic accepts patients who are newly diagnosed or previously treated, and offers the most innovative treatments currently available.

MD Anderson Cancer Center is currently conducting clinical trials and research in hopes of finding new treatment options for this rapid growing, and difficult to treat disease. For more information contact MD Anderson at 1-877-MDA-6789

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The pleural, peritoneal and pericardial are the 3 sort of mesothelioma cancer, which affects the mesothelium. Over exposure to asbestos for a long period of time is the cause behind this serious form of cancer. Mesothelioma symptom appears and the diagnosis of the infection takes place generally at the advanced stage of cancer. This ends up in many deaths.

Only an experienced medical practitioner can detect the exact type of cancer, since the symptoms for all three types are mostly similar. Wrong diagnosis often proves fatal as it further delays the treatment. Shortness of breath, difficulty in swallowing, hoarseness, building up of extra fluid between the pleura, pain in chest, abdomen, shoulder or arm, tiredness, fever, loss of weight and appetite are the symptoms of pleural mesothelioma.

Depending of the seriousness of the disease, the symptoms may vary from person to person. About 90% of the patients experience chest pain and shortness of breath, 84% suffer pleural effusion and less than 30% bear weight loss. It should also be noted that around 3% of the patients remain without any symptoms.

 Peritoneal mesothelioma patients experience weight loss, pain or swelling in the abdomen, obstruction of bowels, high fever etc. Here also some patients may not experience all these symptoms but some others may witness some additional mesothelioma symptom also. Pericardial mesothelioma symptoms are chest pain of varying degrees, persistent coughing, high fatigue without any physical activity etc.

 Identifying the symptoms and understanding it in the genuine perspective is the primary step for deciding up on an appropriate treatment system. Since mesothelioma symptom usually appears once the person has passed his fresh stage, it can prove a serious hurdle in the way of a cure. The surgeon should identify the type and stage of cancer correctly and the treatment process should be started in earnest. Surgery can be used to get rid of the cancer if it is limited to a selected region. Complicated stages may need chemotherapy and radiation, though results aren’t always positive. If it is located that the patient doesn’t respond to the treatment definitely, then palliative treatment is done. Here the symptoms are treated, not the cause.

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Prostate Cancer Myths and Facts

1. Prostate cancer is the most common cancer, other than skin cancers, in American men. It is the second leading cause of cancer death in American men, behind only lung cancer, and accounts for 9% of cancer-related deaths in men. The American Cancer Society estimates that during 2008, about 186,000 new cases of prostate cancer will be diagnosed in the United States. 30% of prostate cancers occur in men under age 65. About 1 man in 6 will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during his lifetime, but only 1 man in 35 will die of it. More than 2 million men in the United States who have been diagnosed with prostate cancer at some point are still alive today.

2. Different prostate problems sometimes have similar symptoms. For example, one man with prostatitis and another with BPH may both have a frequent, urgent need to urinate. A man with BPH may have trouble beginning a stream of urine; another may have to urinate frequently at night. Or, a man in the early stages of prostate cancer may have no symptoms at all.

3. One prostate problem does not lead to another. For example, having prostatitis or an enlarged prostate does not increase the chance for prostate cancer. It is true that some men with prostate cancer also have BPH, but the two conditions are not automatically linked. Most men with BPH do not develop prostate cancer. But because the early symptoms for both conditions could be the same, a doctor would need to evaluate them. It is also possible to have more than one condition at a time. This confusing array of potential scenarios makes a case for all men, especially after age 45, to have a thorough medical exam that includes the PSA test and DRE every year.

4. The PSA blood test determines whether you have cancer of the prostate. The test measures how much of a protein essential to human reproduction, PSA (prostate-specific antigen), is in your blood. PSA turns your gelatinous pre-semen into a liquid, thus supporting ejaculation. If your PSA is below 4, most doctors agree that you needn’t be tested again for a year. During annual tests, remember that it is normal for your reading to go up by a few tenths of a point every year. In general, only a drastic increase in PSA (an increase of at least 0.75 points or 20 percent) is considered a reason to worry. This test is recommended on an annual basis for all men over 50 (and for men above 45 if there is a family history of prostate problems)

5. Over 100 million men in the world suffer from symptoms of BPH (Prostate Enlargement). By the time you are 60, there is a 50% chance that you’ll have BPH. By the time you are 85, there is a 90% probability that you’ll have BPH.

6. Prostate Cancer is the second most common cancer in men and the second leading cause of cancer death in men. 1 in 6 men will be diagnosed with Prostate Cancer during their lifetime

To check your International Prostate Symptom SCore Visit

www.india-herbs.com/aff/securepage/ayurstate

jim
http://www.articlesbase.com/cancer-articles/prostate-cancer-myths-and-facts-737677.html

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