Friday, March 28, 2008

What are the recovery rates of lung surgery for stage IV lung cancer

What are the recovery rates of lung surgery for stage IV lung cancer?
I have battled lung cancer for 2 years and have the opportunity to have a portion of my right lung removed. What are the typical outcomes and after affects of such surgery?
Cancer - 3 Answers
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1 :
I see few complications from this surgery, but it can be pretty painful to recover from. It can be much easier if it is done laparoscopicly, but there are not many surgeons in the county that are trained to do them this way. Please talk to your surgeon and ask them the entire question you have.
2 :
I agree with Denisedd. If you are planning surgery, your surgeon should be carefully explaining the expected benefits verses the risks of the operation. Your surgeon and medical oncologist and perhaps the radiation oncologist should be discussing your situation as a group to provide all points of view regarding surgery. If you have correctly listed your lung carcinoma as stage IV - widespread disease - the doctors must consider where else you have disease and how much benefit you might gain from a partial lung resection. Your doctors know the details of your case which you do not provide for us. What was the initial stage? What was the histopathology - the type of lung cancer? Where has it spread? What treatments have already been tried? What is the tumor volume - roughly estimated? We should not be offering advice at this distance with so little information. We don't even know your age?
3 :
http://cnx.org/content/m19143/1.6/ACR-Resveratrol.pdf try this



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Monday, March 24, 2008

How long do people wit lung cancer usually live

How long do people wit lung cancer usually live?
Do they live like years or just months? And how long can a person live with lung cancer? Also can it cause fainting? *I don't have lung cancer, nor do I know anyone who does.
Cancer - 6 Answers
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1 :
from the time they get it to the time they die, call me a lire.
2 :
A person can live for years with lung cancer, however they usually don't know they have lung cancer until it reaches a critical stage where they are coughing up blood and have severe chest pain. By then, the cancer had probably been growing for several years but at the stage it was detected they usually only live a few months. Most types of cancers can grow for years without any warning signs. By the time a person starts feeling bad or hurting, the cancer has usually grown to the point that it is critical. That's why cancer is called "the silent killer".
3 :
I have stage iv non operable lung cancer. I was diagnosed in May of 2006, nearly three years ago now. Fewer than 5 out of every 100 people (less than 5%) diagnosed with stage 4 non small cell lung cancer will live for at least 5 years. My prognosis was perhaps only one year with palliative chemo treatments. Chemo treatments haven't ridden me of any tumors and they have grown some, but with lifestyle, and diet change along with a huge positive attitude, I am still surviving. I just don't know when it will all blow up in my face, but for now I'm living with it. I suppose fainting could be caused by lung cancer. Fainting could be brought on by a very harsh cough, or perhaps low blood counts due to chemo.
4 :
I think it has to do with positive thinking. My mom was diagnosed in Feb. with 4th stage small cell lung cancer. She is going through the treatment, so time will tell. She is very positive. It just kills me when doctors give a time limit. They told her with treatment the average is 18 months. She is 75 years old, and has always told us she will live to be 100. On Dr. Phil, his mom had cancer and only gave her 3-6 months to live, and he said that she has been cancer free for 7 years!
5 :
People with lung cancer can live anywhere from a few months to many years, since it depends on the type of cancer, where it is, and how old the person is (also if there are any other medical conditions present.) If it is a small cancerous localized lesion, with no metastasis (no spread to other organs), with surgery & chemo for follow up, there can be a cure. If the tumor is involving one whole lung, part of another, and spreading to the brain, you will be lucky (or unlucky) if you make 3 months. If it's real aggressive, make that 3 WEEKS. Since the lung is where you pick up the oxygen for the brain, fainting is very common since the O2 level drops. It's like all cancers- get them early & the outcome can be good. Put it off & you know what will happen. Sorry.
6 :
its nt any specific tym!.it depends from person to person.. god bless you
7 :
It depends heavily on the treatment. Surgery has a high success rate, but leaves the patient permanently crippled. Chemotherapy and radiation have a success rate of less than 10% over ten years, so if you go that route, odds are you'll be dead in under ten. But don't let anyone tell you there's no cure for it. There are many treatments, and information is available all over the internet. Some of them have greater than 80% success rates, have been in existence (in some cases) for thousands of years, and almost all of them are more effective at treating cancer than marrow transplants, chemo and radiation. Patients undergoing such treatments often have full remission of their cancer. The reason these treatments are suppressed is because there's not nearly as much money in curing cancer as in perpetuating it, but awareness is growing slowly, and great advances have been made away from American soil, where inventive doctors are safe from persecution by the ACS. Advanced stages of lung cancer can cause loss of consciousness and heart failure due to low blood oxygen volume.



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Thursday, March 20, 2008

What is the percentage of lung cancer patients that are smokers

What is the percentage of lung cancer patients that are smokers?
I would like to know the ratio of smoker vs non smoker in people diagnosed with lung cancer. Please provide a link. I'm not looking for "caused by smoking" , those stats can be spun. I'm looking for smokers vs non smokers strictly. What percentage?
Cancer - 3 Answers
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1 :
According to the National Institutes Of Health, "Thun noted that 85 percent to 90 percent of lung cancer cases are caused by smoking, which translates into roughly 1.4 million lung cancer deaths across the globe each year." The articles are cited below with related information.
2 :
Here's a Canadian study you should find interesting. Male smokers - lifetime risk of lung cancer is 1 in 6 Female smokers รข€“ the risk of lung cancer is 1 in 9 Risk of lung cancer in non-smokers is 1 in 77 Can J Public Health. 1994 Nov-Dec;85(6):385-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7895211 Another interesting site for you http://www.inforesearchlab.com/smokingdeaths.chtml
3 :
as you know smoking is currently a department concerned of the world because of smoking will lead to cancer, a lot of most developing countries. You want to know the rate of percentage I can not tell you is because I also can not dare chat is the number of how many



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