I Can Survive Breast Cancer
Posted: Wednesday, October 01, 2008
by Tony James
Undergroundresearchnetwork.com
Breast cancer usually shows as a lump or thickening in the breast tissue, although most breast lumps are not cancerous. Breast cancer (BC) is the most frequent malignant disease among women. According to American reports every third cancer is diagnosed as BC. Breast cancer is also far more common in post-menopausal women, and the risk continues to increase with rising age.
Screening in the United States is usually initiated in response to a physician's recommendation (known as "opportunistic screening"), and women are advised to have annual screening mammograms. By contrast, breast cancer screening programs in Norway and in some other European countries regularly send letters to all women in a specific age range inviting them to have a screening mammogram. Breast cancer screening is an important part of preventive care. A mammogram helps detect early breast cancer. Breast cancer screening means checking a woman's breasts for cancer before there are signs or symptoms of the disease.
Mammograms can miss some cancers. But despite their limitations, they remain a very effective and valuable tool for decreasing suffering and death from breast cancer. Mammogram is the most widely used screening test for cancer of the breast. Breast lumps found on mammography are benign 90% of the time.
Mammograms, self-exams and clinical breast exams do not always detect breast cancer causing false negative In day-to-day practice, mammograms can miss more than a quarter of all tumors.
Women may receive chemotherapy before or after breast surgery. The doctor can also use chemotherapy to treat cancer that has come back. Women who have an altered gene related to breast cancer and who have had breast cancer in one breast have an increased risk of developing breast cancer in the other breast.
These women also have an increased risk of developing ovarian cancer, and may have an increased risk of developing other cancers. Women also completed a 15-item questionnaire to evaluate their levels of anxiety, depression and happiness and optimism.
Increasing age is the biggest single risk factor for breast cancer. For those women who do have a family history of breast cancer, your risk may be elevated a little, a lot, or not at all. Increasingly chemotherapy (drug treatment) and hormone therapy may be given before operations and/or radiotherapy. Both have generally been shown to have a positive effect on survival.
Stay Informed Tony James http://www.icansurvivebreastcancer.com
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