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Bladder Cancer Center
According to the National Cancer Institute, bladder cancer
is diagnosed in 38,000 men and 15,000 women, primarily affecting
men and women over the age of 40, each year in the U.S.
This is the fourth most common type of cancer in men, and
the eighth most common in women. Studies have found the
following risk factors for bladder cancer:
Use of tobacco is a major risk factor. Cigarette smokers
are two to three times more likely than nonsmokers to get
bladder cancer. Pipe and cigar smokers are also at increased
risk.
Carcinogens in the workplace. Workers in the rubber, chemical,
and leather industries are at risk, as are hairdressers,
machinists, metal workers, printers, painters, textile workers,
and truck drivers.
Being infected with certain parasites.
Being infected with certain parasites also increases the
risk of bladder cancer. These parasites are common in tropical
areas but not in the United States.
Caucasians get bladder cancer twice as often as African
Americans and Hispanics. The lowest rates are among Asians.
People with family members who have bladder cancer are more
likely to get the disease. Researchers are studying changes
in certain genes that may increase the risk of bladder cancer.
Also, people who have had bladder cancer have an increased
chance of getting the disease again.
Researchers have been studying chlorine by-products found
in water for more than 25 years. So far, there is no proof
that chlorinated water causes bladder cancer in people.
Studies continue to look at this question. Some studies
have found that saccharin, an artificial sweetener, causes
bladder cancer in animals. However, research does not show
that saccharin causes cancer in people.
The wall of the bladder is lined with cells called transitional
cells (these are cells that vary in shape depending on whether
the tissue is being stretched--they may be stretched without
breaking apart) and squamous cells, which are flat cells
that look like fish scales under a microscope. More than
ninety percent of bladder cancers begin in the transitional
cells. This type of bladder cancer is called transitional
cell carcinoma. About eight percent of bladder cancer patients
have squamous cell carcinomas.
Cancer that is only in cells in the lining of the bladder
is called superficial bladder cancer. The doctor might call
it carcinoma in situ, which is cancer that involves only
the cells in which it began--and that has not spread to
neighboring tissues. This type of bladder cancer often comes
back after treatment. If this happens, the disease most
often recurs as another superficial cancer in the bladder.
Cancer that begins as a superficial tumor may grow through
the lining and into the muscular wall of the bladder. This
is known as invasive cancer. Invasive cancer may extend
through the bladder wall. It may grow into a nearby organ
such as the uterus or vagina (in women) or the prostate
gland (in men). It also may invade the wall of the abdomen.
When bladder cancer spreads outside the bladder, cancer
cells are often found in nearby lymph nodes. If the cancer
has reached these nodes, cancer cells may have spread to
other lymph nodes or other organs, such as the lungs, liver,
or bones.
When cancer spreads or metastasizes from its original place
to another part of the body, the new tumor has the same
kind of abnormal cells and the same name as the primary
tumor. For example, if bladder cancer spreads to the lungs,
the cancer cells in the lungs are actually bladder cancer
cells. The disease is metastatic bladder cancer, not lung
cancer. It is treated as bladder cancer, not as lung cancer.
Doctors sometimes call the new tumor "distant"
disease.
At Cancer Treatment Centers of America, we use many tools
to help you fight bladder cancer on all fronts. A powerful
combination of traditional and new, innovative therapies
are provided by cancer experts who work with you to determine
the appropriate combination of therapies, which may include:
Surgery is often performed to remove tumors of the bladder
whenever practical. There are several types of surgery used
for bladder cancer, some involve removing the entire bladder
and some do not. Surgery may help prevent future complications,
such as blockage or bleeding.
Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT) for the most
advanced form of conformal radiotherapy. IMRT employs a
powerful, advanced computer program that plans a precise
dose of radiation in three dimensions based on individual
tumor size, shape and location. Remarkably, it allows for
higher radiation doses than traditional radiotherapy methods,
while sparing more of the surrounding healthy tissue.
Fractionated Dose Chemotherapy divides a powerful dose of
drugs into smaller doses, given over several days. This
approach exposes cancer cells to the drugs for a longer
period of time, while also seeking to reduce the unpleasant
side effects often experienced with larger doses.
Biotherapy / Immunotherapy is a treatment that is sometimes
used for bladder cancer. Immunotherapy causes the body's
own natural defenses (immune system) to attack the cancer.
In addition the therapies described above, CTCA enriches
your treatment by offering complementary and alternative
therapies such as naturopathic medicine, nutritional therapy,
mind-body medicine, image enhancement and spiritual support.
CTCA is with you every step of the way in what truly is
the fight of your life.
http://www.cancercenter.com/
bladder-cancer.cfm
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