Showing posts with label oncology cancers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oncology cancers. Show all posts

How Can Cancer Be Diagnosed?


Cancer diagnosis can be done by the following methods such as laboratory diagnosis and clinical diagnosis such as the features or pictures of the cancers such as it is symptoms which means what the patient complaining and by it is signs which means what the doctor see or notice in the patient by the general and local examination of the whole body of the patient
what are the symptoms and signs of malignancy
Malignancy or cancer it is a neoplasm or tumor which can be represented by the following criteria
Local features of the tumours
Distant clinical features
Systemic or general clinical features
Local features of the neoplasm or tumours
This cancer can be present either in the form of mass the patient complaining from abnormal something in his body like mass he felt it by his hand or the patient may complaining from pain which it is very rare in case of malignancy in the site of the tumor or the patient may complaining from change in the function of the organ which have the malignancy such as cancer intestine the patient may come with obstructive manifestations such as inability to pass stool,abdominal distension,bleeding from rectum and may be vomiting
So that the local features of the cancer can be divided as follow
mass, pain,changes in organ function obstruction in a hollow viscus,bleeding or infarction
Mass
• Mass may be palpable
• Mass may be a primary tumour or lymph nodes enlarged or secondary lymphadenopathy
• Mass may be painful or more commonly, painless (eg breast lump, testicular lump cancer most commonly come without pain and very rare to become painful such as in some certain conditions
• May cause a mass effect
Compression of surrounding structures such as cancer thyroid may compress on the trachea and esophagus o Raised ICP in intracranial lesions
Pain
What are the causes of pain in cancer
The pain in case of cancer may be a feature of
• Local mass compression on other structures or nerves
• Capsular stretch eg hepatic, renal carcinoma may stretch the capsule overlying these organs producing pain
• Infiltration of regional nerves by the tumou or cancer cells which produce neurological pain
• Obstruction of a hollow lumen any structures have a lumen such as intestine,colon,rectum,esophagus,larynx and pharynx the cancer can causes obstruction of the lumen of these structures because the tumor occupying the lumen by itself may causes pain
• Metastasis cancer spread to other organs such as the bone can produce bone pain which may be severe boring pain and may not respond to usual analgesia and may need for narcotic to relieve it
Changes in organ function
The cancer can produce changes in the function of that organ have a cancer such as when cancer spread or metastasis to the liver produce jaundice which mean yellowish discolouration of the sclera of the eye and skin of the patient and ascitis which mean accumluation of the fluid inside the abdominal cavity and the patient may complaining from abdominal distension or the cancer spread to the lungs and the patient complaining from shortening of breathing and pleural effusion which mean accumulation of malignant fluid in the pleural cavity or the cancer spread to the brain and the patient may complaining from headache blurring of vision and neurological deficits or to the bone and the patient may complaining from bone pain as above or from repeated bone fractures or pathological fractures
Obstruction in a hollow viscus
• The cancer may arising from inside the lumen of the structures( intraluminally) (eg embolism of tumour invading large vessel
• The cancer may arising from the vessel or lumen wall (eg annular circumferential rectal tumour
• The cancer may arising extraluminally (eg peritoneal deposits obstructing ureters
Bleeding
The cancer may causes bleeding which may be due to
May be effect of local tumour ulceration eg rectal carcinoma
May be result of erosion into large vessel eg gastric cancer
Acute bleed into tumour mass may provoke pain eg hepatoma
Infarction torsion and infarction of ovarian masses
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What cancer means and its aetiology

What cancer means and its aetiology


There are many known substances or agents that play an important role in cancer formation these agents are called carcinogenesis which may be either viral carcinogens, physical carcinogens, genetic carcinogens and chemical carcinogens

How cancer formed or what is cancer 

The body is the basic unite of the life, so question how normal cells become cancer cells as we know the body contains millions of cells these normal cells undergo the process of growth ,division  in controlled manner to produce more cells as they need to keep the body healthy when these normal cells become old or damaged they die which called programmed cell death and are replaced by new normal cells but sometimes this normal orderly process goes wrong
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How we can diagnosed the cancer

How we can diagnosed the cancer

Cancer diagnosis can be done by the following methods such as laboratory diagnosis and clinical diagnosis such as the features or pictures of the cancers such as it is symptoms which means what the patient complaining and by it is signs which means what the doctor see or notice in the patient by the general and local examination of the whole body of the patient
 
what are the symptoms and signs of malignancy

Malignancy or cancer it is a neoplasm or tumor which can be represented by the following criteria

 Local features of the tumours
 Distant clinical features
 Systemic or general clinical features

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Tumor markers for cancer detection

Tumor markers for cancer detection

Definition:Tumour markers are substances that can be detected in higher than normal amounts in the blood or serum ,urine, nipple ,aspirate fluid or stool and tissues of patients with certain types of cancer

How tumor markers produced

Tumors markers are produced either by the cancer cells themselves or by the body as a response to the cancer which can be detect by immunohistochemistery

 These tumor markers can be present also in some benign diseases

What are the aim of tumour markers
tumour markers are useful in diagnosis, staging ,treatment and detection of recurrence of cancers
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Explaining cancer prevention

Explaining cancer prevention

Is there any methods to prevent cancer formation

Cancer can be prevent to be formed by many methods which if done well can give good results these methods can be divided into three main types such as prevention of the cancer formation from the starts by primary cancer prevention or prevention cancer formation in people have high risk of cancer formation by secondary cancer prevention or prevention of cancer formation after cancer removal from primary site known by tertiary cancer prevention such as
   
 Cancer prevention can be divided into three stages

primary cancer prevention (i.e., pre­venting initial cancers in healthy individuals by means prevention cancer formation from the start in normal healthy people
 
  secondary cancer pre­vention (i.e., preventing cancer in individuals with premalignant conditions
by means prevention cancer formation in people have a premalignant diseases such as familial polpyposis or leukoplakia familial breast cancer
 tertiary cancer prevention (i.e., preventing second pri­mary cancers in patients cured of their initial disease by means prevention of recurrent cancer formation in people have previously cancer
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CANCER PREVENTION


CANCER PREVENTION

The old axiom "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" is being increasingly recognized in oncology. Cancer prevention can be divided into three categories: (I) primary prevention (i.e., pre­venting initial cancers in healthy individuals); (2) secondary pre­vention (i.e., preventing cancer in individuals with premalignant conditions); and (3) tertiary prevention (i.e., preventing second pri­mary cancers in patients cured of their initial disease

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Gene therapy of cancer


Gene therapy of cancer

Gene therapy is being pursued as a possible approach to modifying­
 the genetic program of cancer cells as well as for treatment of
metabolic diseases. The field of cancer gene therapy utilizes a variety of strategies, ranging from replacement of mutated or deleted tumor suppressor genes to enhancement of immune responses to cancer cells  Indeed. in preclinical models. approaches such

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Immunotherapy of cancer


Immunotherapy of cancer

The aim of immunotherapy is to induce or potentiate inherent anti­ tumor immunity that can destroy cancer cells. Central to the process of antitumor immunity is the ability of the immune system to rec­ognize tumor-associated antigens present on human cancers and to direct cytotoxic responses through humoral or T-cell-mediated immunity. Overall, T-cell-mediated immunity appears to have the greater potential of the two for eradicating tumor cells. T cells rec­ognize antigens on the surfaces of target cells as small peptides presented by class I and class 11major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules

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Biologic therapy or management of cancer



Biologic  therapy or management of cancer

Over the past decade, increasing understanding of cancer biology has fostered the emerging field of 
molecular therapeutics. The basic principle of molecular therapeutics is to exploit the molecular dif­ferences 
between normal cells and cancer cells to develop targeted therapies. The ideal molecular target would be
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Hormonal therapy or management of cancer


Hormonal therapy or  management of cancer

HORMONAL THERAPY
it has been found that up to 15%of tumors may have responsive elements

Some tumors, most notably breast and prostate cancers. originate from tissues whose growth is under hormonal control. The first at­tempts at hormonal therapy were through surgical ablation of the organ producing the hormones of interest, such as oophorectomy for breast cancer. Currently, hormonal manipulation is accomplished by several different modes .

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Cancer management by Radiotherapy

Cancer management by Radiotherapy or Radiation therapy

Radiotherapy


Radiation may be particulate or electromagnetic
Radiotherapy kills tumour cells by generating high energy molecular movement Tumour susceptibility is related to tumour oxygenation and radiosensitivity of the individual cells
Radiotherapy may be used as a primary, neoadjuvant, adjuvant or palliative therapy to causes damage to normal as well as tumour cells resulting in local and systemic complications
.This is the therapeutic use of ionising radiation for the treatment of malignant conditions

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CANCER MANAGEMENT BY CHEMOTHERAPY

Cancer management by chemotherapy

Definition


Chemotherpeutics are drugs that are used to treat cancer that inhibit the mechanisms of cell proliferation. They are therefore toxic to normally proliferating cells (ie bone marrow gastro intestinal eipithelium hair follicles

they may be used as primary neoadjuvant or adjuvant therapies

They can be

Cycle-specific: effective throughout the cell cycle

Phase-specific: effective during part of the cell cycle

, tumors susceptibility depends on the concentration of drug delivered, on cell sensitivity, cycling of tumour. Drugs are less effective in large solid tumours because of

• Fall in the growth fraction

• Poor drug penetrance into the centre


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Surgical management of cancer distant metastasis

Surgical management of cancer distant metastasis

as mentioned before surgical management of cancer included three groups 
1
 surgical management of primary tumour
2
surgical management of Regional lymph nodes basin
3
  Surgical management of Distant metastasis which will be discussed here

The treatment of a patient with distant metastases depends on the number and sites of metastases, the cancer type, the rate of tumor growth, the previous treatments delivered and the responses to these treatments, and the patient's age, physical condition. under desires.

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SURGICAL MANAGEMENT OF CANCER LYMPH NODES


Surgical management or treatment of cancer

as mentioned before it divided into three groups

1- surgical management of the primary tumor

2- surgical management of the regional lymph nodes basin

3- surgical management of distant metastasis

2- Surgical management of the Regional lymph nodes basin which will be discuss

Most neoplasms metastasize via the lymphatics


 Therefore, most onocologic operations have been designed to remove the primary tumor and drainage  lymphatic en bloc

 This type of operative ap­proach is usually undertaken when the lymph nodes draining the primary tumor lie adjacent to the tumor bed, as is the case for colorectal cancer and gastric cancers

For tumors where the regional lymph node basin is not immediately adjacent to the tumor eg,melanomas  lymph node surgery can be performed through 
 separate incision

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SURGICAL MANAGEMENT OF CANCER


SURGICAL MANAGEMENT OF CANCER

Can be divided into
  
surgical  treatment of primary tumour

surgical treatment of the regional lymph node basin

  surgical treatment of distant metastasis

Although surgery is the most effective therapy for most solid tumors most patients die of metastatic diseases

Therefore to improve patient survival rates a multimodality approach with systemic therapy­
and radiation therapy is key for most tumors. It is important

that surgeons involved in cancer care know not only how to perform a cancer operation but also the alternatives to surgery and he well versed in reconstructive options
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CANCER RISK ASSESSMENT


CANCER RISK ASSESSMENT
 .cancer risk assessment is an important part of the initial evaluation of
a patient .A patient's cancer risk is not only an important determinant­
of cancer screening recommendations but also may alter how
.aggressively an in determinant finding will be pursued for diagnosis.
;a probably benign mammographic lesion. for example. defined as with less than a 2% probability of malignancy ­•  is usually managed with a 6-month
 follow up mammogram in a patient at baseline cancer risk.but
obtaining a tissue diagnosis may be preferable in a patient at high
risk for breast cancer

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Tumour markers


Tumour markers

Definition:Tumour markers are substances that can be detected in higher than normal amounts in the blood or serum urine nipple aspirate fluid or stool tissues of patients with certain types of cancer


How it is produced

Tumors markers are produced either by the cancer cells themselves or by the body as a response to the cancer
What are the aim of tumour markers
tumour markers are useful in diagnosis staging treatment and detection of recurrence of cancers

Over the past decade, there has been an especially large

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Tumour Typing Grading and Staging


Tumour typing grading and staging


 What these are mean and what the benefits from its

Typing, grading and staging are important for

Planning of treatment

Type and degree of surgical excision

Consideration of pre-operative radiotherapy or chemotherapy to downsize

To provide accurate prognostic information

For the patient

For the physician

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CLINICAL CANCER DIAGNOSIS

 
 CLINICAL CANCER DIAGNOSIS
 

Cancer diagnosis as mentioned before cancer diagnosis can be done by laboratory and clinical features or pictures of the cancers now
 
what are the clinical features of malignancy
It can be divided into three groups as

 Local features of the tumours
 Distant clinical features
 Systemic or general clinical features

Local features of the neoplasm or tumours

Including either mass, pain ,changes in organ function obstruction in a hollow viscus ,bleeding or infarction
 

Mass

• May be palpable

• May be a primary tumour or secondary lymphadenopathy

• May be painful or more commonly, painless (eg breast lump, testicular lump

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Cancer Diagnosis


Cancer diagnosis

Can be divided into laboratory diagnosis and clinical features of the neoplasm or by it is clinically important effects into

 
Local clinical features
Distant clinical features
Systemic features of the tumour

 Laboratory diagnosis

The definitive diagnosis of solid tumors is usually obtained with a biopsy of the lesion


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