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Archive for the ‘Kidney Cancer’ Category

Detecting Kidney Cancer

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Kidney cancer is a very dangerous and painful disease in severe cases. However, you should also remember that everyone has two kidneys in the body and if one becomes damaged or can no longer function properly, there is still no immediate problem to be worried about because one kidney can be sufficient for the body’s needs and survival. Kidney cancer also constitutes around four percent of all cancers and it affects more males that females. So males should be on the lookout for possible signs of kidney problems.

Some symptoms for kidney cancer include having blood in your urine but it may also be invisible. Another symptom is the chronic pain in the back and side of your abdominal region. Or signs of kidney cancers may be felt in the upper abdomen when you feel lumps or fullness in this area. On the other hand, there may actually be no symptoms of kidney cancer in some cases although you already have this disease. For this reason, it is essential that you try to live a healthy lifestyle that ensures you have a disease free existence.

Meanwhile, around fifteen to twenty percent of people who have present tumors removed confirm that the symptoms of having blood in the urine, pain in the abdominal region and the sensation of fullness and having lumps in the upper abdomen all disappear upon the surgical removal of the tumors. Still other symptoms of kidney cancer you should watch out for include having constipation, fever and the loss of appetite. You may also experience feeling nauseous and vomit in some cases. Anemia or low red blood cell count and polycythemia, which are high blood cell count, may also be experienced when you have kidney cancer.

Because the symptoms present in kidney cancer are not as extreme as other cancers and some of the conditions you may experience are quite common, it is rarely that people can detect kidney cancer at its early stages. But you should be particularly careful when you are in the age of 30 to 70 because most cases of kidney cancer occur at this stage. Overall, you should remember that preventing cancer is always the best possible option because cancer whether it is kidney, lung, or breast cancer, is difficult to cure once it is already present in your body.

Things You Need To Know About Kidney Cancer

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Kidney cancer is a type of cancer that effects your kidneys, which are located behind your stomach, in your lower back just below your ribs. There are two common types of kidney cancer. One is the renal cell carcinoma and the other is the renal pelvis carcinoma. Most cancers that originate in the renal tubule are renal cell carcinoma and cell adenocarcinoma while those that originate from the renal pelvis are transitional cell carcinoma. Other less common types include squamous cell carcinoma, renal oncocytoma and mesoblastic nephroma.

One common symptom of kidney cancer is palpable mass in the abdomen, hematuria and hydronephrosis. The mass is first felt in the anterior lumbar region, between the margins of the ribs and then grows to the umbilicus and then up to the hypochondrium. Where the cases are extreme, the mass fills the entire belly. The location of the colon furnishes an important diagnostic mark of all types of kidney cancers.

Sometimes cancer in the kidney may be secondary, the result of metastasis. This is spreading from a primary cancer source elsewhere in the body to the kidney. There are certain types of kidney cancer that have a known hereditary risk. Worldwide, North America leads in the number of people diagnosed with kidney cancer every year.

Fewer cases have been reported in Asia and Africa. In the United Kingdom, cancer of the kidney is the eighth most common cancer in men. In Europe, kidney cancer accounts for nearly 3% of all cancer cases. It is the fourteenth most common cancer in women worldwide. Wilms’ tumors are most kidney cancers reported in children followed by congenital mesoblastic nephroma. Surgery is a standard treatment for kidney cancer. It’s aim is to surgically remove the tumour, usually along with the kidney and lymph nodes containing the tumour, and, if possible, surgically remove single metastases if they occur.