1 / 17

Nursing Care of the Child With Cancer

Nursing Care of the Child With Cancer. Neoplasia Cell growth in cancerous tissue proliferates in disorderly and chaotic ways Neoplasm- literally “new growth,” but usually refers to abnormal new growth. ASSESSING CHILDREN WITH CANCERS. History Physical and laboratory examination Biopsy

Download Presentation

Nursing Care of the Child With Cancer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Nursing Care of the Child With Cancer

  2. Neoplasia • Cell growth in cancerous tissue proliferates in disorderly and chaotic ways • Neoplasm- literally “new growth,” but usually refers to abnormal new growth

  3. ASSESSING CHILDREN WITH CANCERS • History • Physical and laboratory examination • Biopsy • Bone marrow aspiration

  4. OVERVIEW OF CANCER TREATMENT MEASURES USED WITH CHILDREN • Radiation therapy • Immediate side effects • Long term side effects

  5. OVERVIEW OF CANCER TREATMENT MEASURES USED WITH CHILDREN • Chemotherapy • Chemotherapy protocols…no ASA, no live viruses, no folic acid • Side effects & toxic reactions • Hair loss and N&V are common • Also malnutrition, stomatitis, constipation, and diarrhea

  6. OVERVIEW OF CANCER TREATMENT MEASURES USED WITH CHILDREN • Bone Marrow transplantation • Can be autologous or allogenic • Hematopoitic Stem Cell transplant • Autologous, peripheral • Stored umbilical cord blood • Embryonic?

  7. THE LEUKEMIAS • Leukemia-uncontrolled proliferation ofWBCs and the most common childhood cancer • Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia • 75% of leukemias fall into this category • Overproliferation of lymphocytes • S/S • Pallor, low-grade fever, lethargy • Goal • Total cure, 95% of children will have a first remission but if they experience a relapse, the prognosis is less favorable

  8. THE LEUKEMIAS • Acute Myelogenous Leukemia • Accounts for 20% of leukemias • Overproliferation of granulocytes • S/S are the same as with ALL but may also have had recent URIs • Goal • Remission is harder to achieve than in ALL and tends to be shorter

  9. THE LYMPHOMAS • Malignancies of the lymph or reticuloendothelial system • Hodgkin’s Disease • Reed-Sternberg cells • S/S • One painless, enlarged, rubbery-feeling lymph node, usually cervical • Therapeutic Management • Chemo and radiation • 90% 5-year survival rate and relapses respond well the further therapy

  10. THE LYMPHOMAS • Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma • Proliferation of lymphocytes • Spread through the bloodstream rather than by lymph flow • S/S • Enlargement of lymph nodes of neck and chest • Therapeutic Management • Chemo and autologous bone marrow transfusion • 80-90% of those with minimal symptoms will achieve remission

  11. Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma • Burkitt’s lymphoma • Rare form of Non-Hodgkins • Associated with the Epstein-Barr virus that causes mononucleosis • S/S • Enlarged lymph node in the neck or abdomen • Therapeutic Management • Surgery, then chemo

  12. NEOPLASMS OF THE BRAIN • Types of Brain Tumors • Astrocytomas • Medulloblastomas • Brain stem tumors • S/S • Symptoms of increased ICP • Headache, vomiting, vision changes, enlarging head circumference • Therapeutic management • Surgery, then chemo and radiation

  13. BONE TUMORS • Osteogenic Sarcoma-malignant tumor of thelong bone • S/S • Pain and swelling, esp. around the knee • Therapeutic Management • Surgery, usually amputation, then chemo • 60-65% of those rigorously treated can be cured • Ewing’s Sarcoma-occurs most often in the bone marrow of long bones • S/S is pain • Therapeutic Management is surgery, radiation, and chemo

  14. OTHER CHILDHOOD NEOPLASMS • Neuroblastoma • Tumors that arise from the cells of the sympathetic nervous system • The most common abdominal tumor in childhood • S/S • Palpable abdominal mass • Therapeutic Management • Depends on staging • Surgery, chemo, bone marrow transplant • Overall survival rate is 70-90%

  15. OTHER CHILDHOOD NEOPLASMS • Rhabdomyosarcoma • Tumor of striated muscle • S/S depend on site • Therapeutic Management • Surgery, then chemo • Prognosis depends on size and location of tumor

  16. OTHER CHILDHOOD NEOPLASMS • Wilm’s tumor- malignant tumor that rises from the metanephric mesoderm cells of the upper pole of the kidney • Accounts for 20% of solid tumors in childhood • Associated with aniridia, cryptorchidism, hypospadias • S/S • Firm, nontender, abdominal mass • Therapeutic Management • Abdominal palpation seems to increase metastasis • Surgery, radiation, chemo

  17. OTHER CHILDHOOD NEOPLASMS • Retinoblastoma-malignant tumor of the retina of the eye • Accounts for only 1-3% of childhood malignancies • Associated with an alteration of chromosome 13 and also an inherited autosomal dominant pattern • S/S • Absence of red reflex in the pupil then later, strabismus • Therapeutic Management • Cryosurgery for small tumors, enucleation for large ones

More Related