EARLY DETECTION OF CANCER CAN SAVE LIFE
In many cases, the sooner cancer is diagnosed and treated, the better a
person's chance for a full recovery. If you develop, cancer you can improve the chance that it will be
detected early if you have regular medical checkups and do certain self-exams.
Often a doctor can find early cancer during a physical exam or with routine
tests, even if a person has no symptoms. Some important medical exams, tests,
and self-exams are discussed on the next pages. The doctor may suggest other
exams for people who are at increased risk for cancer.
Ask your doctor about
your cancer risk, problems to watch for, and a schedule of regular checkups.
The doctor's advice will be based on your age, medical history, family history,
and other risk factors. The doctor also can help you learn about self-exams.
(More information and free booklets about self-exams are available from the
National Cancer Institute's Cancer Information Service).
Many local health
departments have information about cancer screening or early detection
programs. The Cancer Information Service also can tell you about such programs.
Exams For Both Men And
Women
Skin - The doctor
should examine your skin during regular checkups for signs of skin cancer. You should also check regularly
for new growths, sores that do not heal, changes in the size, shape, or color
of any moles or any other
changes on the skin. Warning signs like these should be reported to the doctor
right away.
Colon and Rectum - Beginning at age 50, you should have a
yearly fecal occult blood test. This test is a check for hidden (occult) blood in the
stool. A small amount of stool is placed on a plastic slide or on special paper. It may be tested in
the doctor's office or sent to a lab. This test is done because cancer of colon
and rectum can cause bleeding. However,
noncancerous conditions can also cause bleeding, so having blood in the stool
does not necessarily mean a person has cancer. If blood is found, the doctor
orders more tests to help make a diagnosis.
To check for cancer of
the rectum, the doctor inserts a gloved finger into the rectum and feels for
any bumps
or abnormal areas. A
digital rectal exam should be done during regular checkups.
After age 50, you
should have either a flexible sigmoidoscopy every five years, or a colonoscopy every 10 years. In this exam, the
doctor uses a thin, flexible tube with a light to look inside the rectum and
colon for abnormal areas.
Mouth - Your doctor and dentist should examine your
mouth at regular visits. Also, by looking in a mirror, you can check inside
your mouth for changes in the color of the lips, gums, tongue, or inner cheeks,
and for scabs, cracks, sores, white patches, swelling, or bleeding. It is often
possible to see or feel changes in the mouth that might be cancer or a
condition that might lead to cancer. Any symptoms in your mouth should be
checked by a doctor or dentist. Oral exams are especially important for people
who use alcohol Or Tobacco products and for anyone over age 50.
Exams For Men
Prostate - Men over
age 40 should have a yearly digital rectal exam to check the prostate gland for hard or lumpy areas. The doctor feels the prostate through
the wall of the rectum.
Testicles – Testicular cancer occurs most often between ages 15 and 34. Most of these cancers
are found by men themselves, often by doing a testicular self-exam. If you find
a lump or notice another change, such as heaviness, swelling, unusual
tenderness, or pain, you should see
your doctor. Also, the doctor should examine the testicles as part of regular
medical checkups.
Exams For Women
Breast – When breast cancer is found early, a woman has more treatment
choices and a good chance of complete recovery. It is, therefore, important
that breast
cancer be detected as early
as possible. The National Cancer Institute encourages women to take an active
part in early detection. They should talk to their doctor about this disease,
the symptoms to watch for, and an appropriate schedule of checkups. Women
should ask their doctor about:
·
Mammograms (x-rays of
the breast);
·
Breast exams by a
doctor or nurse; and
·
Breast
self-examination (BSE)
A mammogram can often show tumors or changes in the breast before they can
be felt or cause symptoms. However, we know mammograms cannot find every abnormal
area in the breast. This is especially true in the breasts of young women.
Another important step in early detection is for women to have their breasts
examined regularly by a doctor or a nurse.
Between visits to the
doctor, women should examine their breasts every month. By doing BSE, women
learn what looks and feels normal for their breasts, and they are more likely
to find a change. Any changes should be reported to the doctor. Most breast lumps are not cancer, but only a doctor can make a
diagnosis.
Cervix - Regular
pelvic exams and Pap tests are important to detect early cancer of cervix. In a pelvic exam the doctor feels the uterus, vagina, ovaries,
fallopian tubes, bladder, and rectum for any change in size or shape.
For the pap test a sample of cells is collected from the upper
vagina and cervix with a small brush or a flat wooden stick. The sample is
placed in a glass slide and checked under a microscope for cancer or other
abnormal cells.
Women should start
having a Pap test every year after they turn 18 or become sexually active. If
the results are normal for 3 or more years in a row, a woman may have this test
less often, based on her doctor's advice.
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