1 / 14

Cancer

Cancer. Classification Causes Diagnosis Grading Staging Effects/Surgical Tx. Objectives. Discuss the pathophysiology of cancer. Differentiate between benign and malignant neoplasms Discuss causes of cancer Describe the lab and diagnostic tests used to diagnose cancer. Pathophysiology.

lila-le
Download Presentation

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. Cancer Classification Causes Diagnosis Grading Staging Effects/Surgical Tx

  2. Objectives • Discuss the pathophysiology of cancer. • Differentiate between benign and malignant neoplasms • Discuss causes of cancer • Describe the lab and diagnostic tests used to diagnose cancer

  3. Pathophysiology • Normal cell growth review • The Cell Cycle: 4 phases • A malfunction of any of the regulators of cell growth can result in rapid proliferation of immature cells • Differentiation • Etiology

  4. Known Causes • Viruses • Drugs and Hormones • Chemical Agents • Physical Agents

  5. Benign Neoplasms • Localized growths • Form a solid mass • Well-defined borders • Frequently encapsulated • Response to homeostatic controls • Grow slowly; same size • Destructive with crowding/pressure

  6. Malignant Neoplasms • Grow aggressively • Response to homeostatic controls • Noncohesive; irregular shape • Cut through surrounding tissues; Rapid • Cells may travel thru blood or lymph • Not always easy to remove • Can recur

  7. Characteristics of Malignant Cells • Loss of regulation of mitotic rate • Loss of cell specialization • Loss of contact inhibition • Progressive acquisition of the cancerous phenotype & immortality • Irreversibility of cancerous phenotype to greater aggressiveness • Altered cell structure; diff in cell nucleus & cytoplasm • Simplified metabolic activity • Transplantability (metastasis) • Ability to promote own survival

  8. How Cancer Invades Normal Tissue Fig. 09.05

  9. Diagnostics • X-ray imaging • Computed Tomography • Ultrasonography • Magnetic Resonance Imaging • Tissue Samples • Screening: PSA

  10. Grading and Staging • Grading • Amt of differentiation (level of functional maturity) of the cell • Estimates rate of growth based on the mitotic rate • Staging • Use to classify solid tumors • Refers to relative size of tumor and extent of disease • TNM classification system

  11. TNM Classification System

  12. Effects of Cancer • Disturbed or loss of physiologic functioning, from pressure to obstruction • Hematologic Alterations: Impaired function of Blood Cells • Infections: Fistula development & tumors may become necrotic; erode skin surface • Hemorrhage: Tumor Erosion, bleeding, severe anemia • Anorexia-Cachexia Syndrome: wasting away

  13. Effects of Cancer • Paraneoplastic Syndromes: ectopic sites w/excess hormone production • Pain: major concern • Physical Stress: body tries to respond and destroy neoplasm • Psychological Stress

  14. Surgical Tx • Surgical Tx isused for Dx and staging of more than 90% of all cancers and for primary TXx of more than 60% of cancers • If possible, tumor is removed in entirety; may necessitate mutilation of body • Less distressing results • Remove nonessential portion of organ or tissue containing tumor, such as in situ bowel tumors • Remove organ whose function can be replaced chemically, such as thyroid • Resect a pair of organs when the unaffected organ can take over the function of the missing one, such as a lung

More Related