No matter how healthy you are cancer can strike anyone. Approximately half of all men and a third of all women, in the United States, will receive a cancer diagnosis in their lifetime. Being the recipient of a cancer diagnosis can be one of the most difficult moments in your life. If you find yourself, or a loved one, facing a new cancer diagnosis, there are a few things you can do that will make you feel in control of your situation.
If you have been diagnosed with liver cancer with metastatic lesions, you have advanced liver cancer. A cure is unlikely, but treatments are available.
The American Cancer Society estimates 2,350 new cases of eye cancer in the United States in 2009. Eye cancer starts in the middle layers of the eye. Patients with eye cancer may or may not experience certain symptoms.
Stomach cancer usually affects cells of the stomach's interior lining. This type of stomach cancer, adenocarcinoma, is by far the most common, although it has become infrequent in the United States.
While gastric cancers are on the decline, there are still thousands of deaths each year. Males are seven times more likely to contract gastric cancer than women. Diagnosis is most common between the ages of 40-70. While it is very hard to diagnose gastric cancers by a physical examination, vigilance and awareness of your body certainly aid in early detection and can make treatment more successful.
Pancreatic cancer is also called exocrine cancer. The National Cancer Institute estimates that more than 42,000 new cases of pancreatic cancer will be diagnosed in the United States, and over 35,000 people will die from this disease annually, making it the fourth most common cause of cancer death. Early pancreatic cancer does not have symptoms, so it is usually diagnosed at a later stage, which makes it harder to control and treat.
Each year in the U.S., about 140,000 people are diagnosed with some type of blood cancer. About 53,000 die from it. Blood cancer occurs when blood cells multiply uncontrollably and do not function properly. Expert lab personnel diagnose blood cancer.
Cancer is a frightening group of diseases that occurs when cells in a person's body mutate and begin to divide and duplicate uncontrollably. Many cancers spread to nearby cells and/or organs unless they are eliminated through surgery, radiation and/or chemotherapy. While cancer is one of the main causes of death in America and the world, advanced screening and diagnosis methods have helped reduce cancer fatalities. In order to protect yourself and your family, it is important to know what diagnosis methods exist and the advantages and disadvantages of each method for cancer diagnosis.
Stomach cancer, the growth of cancerous cells in the stomach, often proves to be fatal. A diagnosis of terminal stomach cancer has severe emotional implications for you, the patient, as well as your family and loved ones. Learning to cope with this diagnosis is the first step towards making the most of the rest of your life. Regardless of the stage of your cancer, you have options.
Unlike many cancers, liver cancer may not be discovered as a result of distinctive symptoms. This is because liver cancer does not typically originate in the liver itself, but often spreads there from other areas of the body that have developed cancer. Since the symptoms are sometimes hard to detect, it is imperative that those who are most at risk for this type of cancer are proactive in the screening process.