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Showing posts with label Cancer prevention. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cancer prevention. Show all posts

Sunday, February 8, 2015

Cancer prevention - ENDOCRINE GLAND SURGERY- symptoms signs - treatment

ENDOCRINE GLAND SURGERY FOR SECONDARY PREVENTION

 The growth of some cancers is influenced by certain of the endocrine glands. For example, in the spread of prostate cancer, hormones of the testicles play a role. It has been found that the painful metastases of prostate cancer to bone can be relieved for long periods by removal of the testicles. This is not as drastic as it sounds, since prostate cancer patients have reached an age when the eunuchizing effects of testicle removal will be minimal.

When breast cancer gets out of control and spreads to bones and other parts of the body, an endocrine gland operation may help to extend life for months and even years. The operation may be on the ovaries, adrenal glands, or pituitary gland in the brain. The age of the patient, the duration of the cancer, and the location of the metastases will be considered before the decision as to which operation to use is made. 

Tertiary Prevention Perhaps not too far distant is the day when organ transplantation be- comes fully practical. Then cancers that are destroying such vital organs as the liver and the pancreas may be removed entirely, and the missing organ will be replaced by a transplant from a cadaver. Cancer Phobia Cancer is such a dreaded disease that, understandably, many people have an irrational fear of it. 

The realistic fear that everyone has of this disease should be allayed by the sensible, scientific approach to prevention presented in this book. If strong fear of cancer persists, the phobia should be discussed with your doctor.


He can help you overcome it. If not, then he may wish you to have a talk with a psychotherapist.  

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Cancer - Causes- symptoms- treatment -Tips to Prevent it

 Chemicals can cause cancer, and workers handling them should learn the safety rules as a means of primary prevention. Historically, it is interesting that one of the first chemically induced cancers to be noticed by doctors was in chimney sweeps whose contact with the tarry material in the chimneys led to cancers of the scrotum. 

Chromate chemicals today can cause lung cancer; aniline dyes can cause bladder cancer; asbestos can lead to cancers of the outer lining of the lungs or the intestinal cavity. Some 500 chemicals have been found to cause cancers in experimental animals. One of these, which were widely used as an artificial sweetener, cyclamate, was restricted after animal experiments produced cancers and led to fear that humans using it in large quantities over long periods might develop cancer. 

An additional reason for prevention of chronic liverdisease (page 611) is the tendency of this disease to allow cancer to be superimposed. Patients with ulcerative colitis need careful scrutiny because of their higher risk of developing cancer of the diseased colon. Secondary Prevention Once cancer is found, much can be done to prevent it from becoming a fatal illness. As we have indicated, cancer can be a curable disease. When the doctor discovers a lump in a breast or sees a suspicious sore on a lip, he must make a definitive diagnosis.

Usually this is possible only through removal of part or all of the suspicious area-biopsy- so a pathologist can examine it microscopically as well as grossly. If the diagnosis is cancer, then the physician considers the outlook for the patient in terms of localization versus metastasis or spread. If there has been spreading, the outlook is much less hopeful than if the cancer is still confined to the area of origin. For example, a breastcancer which has not spread to lymph nodes in the arm- pit offers a 70 percent or better chance for cure. 

If there has been a single metastasis, the chance for cure may drop to 50 percent. If there have been several metastases, the likelihood of living five years may drop to about 25 percent. Similarly, for example, a kidney cancer that has spread to a bone has a much more ominous outlook than one that is still confined to the kidney.


With metastasis, treatment usually depends upon radiation and chemicals, often less likely to provide permanent cure than when a surgeon can remove an entire intact growth at its primary site. Thus, early detection is the key to effective secondary prevention in cancer. Cancer in early stages rarely makes its presence known by such general symptoms as fever or loss of weight. It does, however, often provide local signals such as a painless lump in the breast or bleeding in stomach or rectum. 

Cardinal signs of cancer are lumps or sores that do not heal; bleeding from any part of the body when there is no obvious explanation for the bleeding; chronic hoarseness; chronic cough; unexplained stomach or intestinal symptoms such as constipation, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, "indigestion"; unexplained pain; jaundice; impaired vision; convulsions; possibly headache.