The Four Stages of Prostate Cancer
There are four stages of prostate cancer, and doctors have to conduct investigations and tests on their patients to assess which stage their cancer is at. This is important because it is dependent at what the stage is as to what treatment is given to combat the disease.
To arrive at how the measure of staging the size of the tumor is assessed, and whether the lymph glands, or nodes are affected and also whether or not the cancer has spread to other parts of the body the following staging is used.
Stage 1
The cancer is very small and completely within the prostate gland. When a rectal examination is carried out the doctor cannot feel anything. Further tests would need to be completed to ascertain that a tumor was present. This is the very early stages where treatment will have the very best outcome.
Stage 2
The cancer is still confined within the prostate gland, but it has become larger, and a distinct hard lump can be felt when a rectal examination is carried out. The doctor will now have his suspicions about what the problem is, the blood work and tests he orders will just be to confirm hi suspicions.
Stage 3
The cancer has broken through the covering of the prostate and may have grown into the surrounding tissue including the neck of the bladder or the seminal vesicle. The man who has the tumor probably be experiencing quite a lot of discomfort and distress when trying to pass urine. He may well be feeling quite ill at this time with various aches and pains, he may also start to lose weight.
Stage 4
The cancer has spread to other parts of the body, either the bones or the lymph glands. Usually prostate cancer is more likely to spread to the bones, and this can occur when the cancer is very small. When this occurs the stage of the cancer is determined by its presence in the bone; in other words it is a cancer within stage 4.
The prognosis for prostate cancer depends not only on your age and the stage of your cancer it depends very much on your mental attitude. This is the case with cancer in general, not just of the prostate.
Many people automatically assume that a diagnosis of cancer is a life sentence. This is just not the case. Many more people defeat cancer than those who die of it. Unfortunately it is those people who refuse to accept their illness that put their lives most at risk.
Most doctors' agree that patients who maintain the most positive attitude to their cancer manage much better than those patients who get depressed. Some doctors go even further by stating an optimistic approach helps strengthen the bodies' natural protective mechanisms. This means remaining positive improves your immune responses and you have a much better chance of defeating your illness.
In essence, the chances are that most sufferers of prostate cancer will live a long and healthy life as long as they remain proactive and optimistic.
Prostate cancer news on the Web
Prostate Cancer: The Disease’s ‘Cell of Origin’ Found Prostate cancer affects hundreds of thousands of men in the US every year, causing tens of thousands of deaths. A recent finding by researchers at the University of California Los Angeles may have made a discovery that will change that. The Prostate Cancer Foundation reports that the scientists at the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center have found the ‘cell of origin’, which is the type of ... |
Prostate Cancer: A New Ground Zero A type of prostate cell that has been largely ignored by cancer researchers can, in fact, trigger malignant prostate cancer, according to new studies by Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) scientists and their colleagues. HHMI researcher Owen N. Witte and his colleagues at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) found that the somewhat overlooked prostate basal cell can spawn tumors ... |
Prostate Cancer 'Cell of Origin' Identified For researchers, a key to studying any cancer is finding its "cell of origin." Now scientists at the University of California at Los Angeles say they've found just that -- a specific type of cell that gives rise to prostate cancer. |
Prostate cancer 'cell' identified A cell that could be the "mother" of all prostate tumours has been identified by scientists. Samples of the "basal" cells taken from healthy human prostate tissue triggered cancer in mice with suppressed immune systems. |
Canines Used To Sniff Out Prostate Cancer Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men, with about 1 in 6 affected. Like so many other cancers, catching it early is the key. Now, doctors have discovered a new means of early detection using dogs. |
Cancer Vaccine: 4 Months of Life Worth $100K? Prostate cancer vaccine, Provenge, adds 4 months to life, at a pricetag of 100K. The first-ever approved cancer vaccine, Provenge offers hope to men with advanced prostate cancer, but the high cost of this new treatment raises healthcare policy questions. Prostate cancer - Sipuleucel-T - Cancer - Cancer vaccine - Health |
Aggressive prostate cancer tend to retain denser bones Men who develop prostate cancer, especially the more aggressive and dangerous forms that spread throughout the body, tend to retain denser bones as they age than men who stay free of the disease, suggests new research from Johns Hopkins and the National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National Institutes of Health. |
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