Friday, February 26, 2010

A quick guide, what's Lung Cancer

General symptoms of lung cancer

The symptoms of lung cancer may include

  • Having a cough most of the time
  • A change in a cough you have had for a long time
  • Being short of breath
  • Coughing up phlegm (sputum) with signs of blood in it
  • An ache or pain when breathing or coughing
  • Loss of appetite
  • Fatigue
  • Losing weight

Less common symptoms of lung cancer

Other less common symptoms of lung cancer are usually associated with more advanced lung cancer. They include

  • A hoarse voice
  • Difficulty swallowing
  • Changes in the shape of your fingers and nails called finger clubbing
  • Swelling of the face caused by a blockage of a main blood vessel (superior vena cava obstruction)
  • Swelling in the neck caused by enlarged lymph nodes
  • Pain or discomfort under your ribs on your right side (from the liver)
  • Shortness of breath caused by fluid around the lungs (called pleural effusion
Hormone related symptoms

Some types of lung cancer cells produce hormones that get into the bloodstream. These hormones can cause symptoms that do not seem related to the lung cancer. Doctors call them 'paraneoplastic symptoms' or 'paraneoplastic syndrome'. These hormone related symptoms vary from person to person but may include

  • Pins and needles or numbness in fingers or toes
  • Muscle weakness
  • Drowsiness, weakness, dizziness or confusion
  • Breast swelling in men
  • Blood clots (thrombosis)

These symptoms are uncommon with lung cancer but they can happen. So it is important to tell your doctor about any new symptoms you have noticed. If they are caused by the cancer, you can have treatment to help you feel better.

Symptoms of pancoast tumours

Lung cancer growing right at the top of the lung is called a 'pancoast tumour'. These tumours can cause very specific symptoms. The most common is severe shoulder pain. They can also cause a collection of symptoms called 'Horner's syndrome'. These are

  • Drooping or weakness of one eyelid
  • Small pupil in that eye
  • Loss of sweating on that same side of the face

These symptoms of Horner's syndrome are caused by the tumour pressing on or damaging a nerve that runs up from the neck to that side of the face.

- Refered www.cancerhelp.org.uk

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

What a primary cancer is

What cancer is
Your body is made up of billions of cells that can only be seen under a microscope. The cells are grouped together to make up the tissues and organs of our bodies.
Normally cells only divide to replace old and worn out cells. Cancer develops when something inside a single cell goes wrong, causing the cell to carry on dividing until it forms a lump or tumour.
A tumour can be either benign or malignant. A benign tumour does not spread to other parts of the body. But a malignant tumour is a cancer and can spread to other parts of the body.
What a primary cancer is
The place where the cancer starts growing is called the primary site. If the cancer is not treated, cells from this primary site can break away and spread to other parts of the body. These escaped cells can then form other cancers, which are known as secondary cancers or metastases.
Cancers are named and treated according to where they started developing in the body even if they have spread to other parts of the body. For example if you have lung cancer that has spread to the liver, it is a lung cancer with liver metastases or secondaries. It is not called liver cancer. This is because the cells in the liver are actually cancerous lung cells. They are not liver cells that have become cancerous.
Why can't they find the primary cancer?
Normally it is easy to find the primary cancer. Either it will be producing symptoms or it will be seen on a scan. But sometimes secondary cancers are found in one or more parts of the body, but the doctor is unable to find the primary site. This is called cancer of unknown primary (UPC or CUP).
There are a number of reasons why the primary cancer cannot be found. It may be that
  • The secondary cancer has grown very quickly, whilst the primary cancer is still very small - very small primary cancers may not be seen on scans
  • Your immune system has successfully attacked the original primary cancer and it has disappeared altogether, while the secondary cancers are thriving - this is not common, but it can happen
  • The primary cancer may have been ‘sloughed off’. This can happen if it was in the digestive system - a small cancer becomes detached from the wall of the bowel, for instance, and is passed out of the body with the faeces.
How doctors know you have an unknown primary cancer
The different types of cells in your body are named firstly according to the body organ they belong to, and secondly according to the job they do. When a cancer develops, it is named according to the type of cell it starts in.
So the type of cancer depends on what the cells look like under a microscope. The cells may look like breast cells that have become cancerous for instance. But sometimes cancer cells don’t look like any particular type of normal cell. The cells are too primitive. They have not become specialized enough to look like breast cells or lung cells. Cells like this are known as ‘poorly differentiated’. This can make it difficult for the doctor to tell what kind of cell the cancer started from. If this is the case, the cancer will be called a poorly differentiated cancer of unknown primary.
Most cancers are cancers of the epithelial cells. Epithelial cells are found in tissues throughout the body. Cancers that start in epithelial tissue are called carcinomas. More than 85% of all cancers are carcinomas. Other types of cancers develop from different types of body cell. They include
  • Sarcomas, which develop from the cells muscles, fat, nerves or other soft tissues
  • Leukaemias, which are cancers of white blood cells found in the bone marrow and
  • Lymphomas, which are cancers of the cells of the immune system.
- Reference www.cancerhelp.org.uk