Cancer Causes and Risk Factors Questions

28 Question and Answer Results
  1. Where can I find out more information about Castleman's disease?

    In your search for information about castleman's disease, have you tried the American Institute for Cancer Research? They have an amazing amount of credible information at their disposal, and often will mail you information for free. Their web site is www.aicr.org, and phone is 1-800- 843-8114. Good luck...
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  2. What causes any form of cancer in general?

    There is still much controversy about the cause of cancer.
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  3. What is hemochromatosis?

    Hemochromatosis, a genetic condition, causes your body to absorb too much iron from food. The excess iron is stored in your liver, heart and pancreas, which eventually damages these organs. This leads heart problems, diabetes, and liver disease. If left untreated, it can also cause liver cancer in up to 30% of patients...
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  4. Was I right not letting my doctor perform another CAT scan on me?

    In the situation you describe, I believe that the importance of an accurate picture of possible change outweighs the risk of the CT Scan. Yes the radiation exposure of a Ct Scan is much greater than that of an x-ray but the risks are still very small. Knowing as early as possible if there is growth in the mass is crucial...
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  5. Can cancer recur in a different area?

    Hi. It is always possible for cancer to appear in another part of the body but you can schedule regular exams with your doctor and try not to think about the danger of this occurring often. In other words, try and eat well so you get proper nutrition, exercise often if you can and think positively...
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  6. What Are the Signs and Symptoms of Prostate Cancer?

    Early-stage prostate cancer often doesn't have many symptoms, so many men don't find out they have it until the cancer has spread, making it more difficult to treat. This is unfortunate, because prostate cancer is the second most common kind of cancer in American men, after skin cancer.
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  7. When should preventive colon checkups begin for someone with a family history of cancer?

    Sorry to hear about the loss of your father. Generally, doctors recommend that you start colon checkups ten years prior to the diagnosis age of the family member; in your case, age 35. However, if you have other incidence of cancer or other family members that have been diagnosed, you may want to be checked earlier...
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  8. What if the chemotherapy doesn't work?

    The goal of chemotherapy is to stop a tumor from growing and to stop cancer from recurring and spreading to other parts of the body. There are many different chemotherapy drugs, and if one doesn't work your oncoogist will most likely try another...
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  9. Do cervical polyps mean I have cervical cancer?

    There is a relationship between cervical cancer and polyps, BUT, many women have benign polyps that are not cancerous.
    1 Community Answer
  10. Does endometriosis increase the risk of cervical cancer?

    Endometriosis can be so painful and debilitating. Many of my friends have had it and had to undergo surgery and other painful procedures to keep it under control, so when I started to research whether endometriosis and cervical cancer I related, I fully expected to discover more bad news about it increasing cervical cancer risk...
    1 Community Answer
  11. Does smoking increase the risk of cervical cancer?

    According to what I read at the American Cancer Society website, there is a link between smoking and cervical cancer.
    1 Community Answer
  12. Is clotting a symptom of cervical cancer?

    Yes there can be a connection between cervical cancer and clotting. Abnormally heavy menstrual cycles or bleeding between periods can be a symptom of cervical cancer and those can include clots.
    1 Community Answer
  13. What leads to cervical cancer?

    Cervical cancer is interesting, because we actually do know what leads to it. Almost all cases of cervical cancer are caused by the human papillomavirus or HPV. HPV is a sexually transmitted disease that many women contract. Most of them are able to fight the virus off just with their own immune systems...
    1 Community Answer
  14. Does pancreatic cancer run in families?

    I became concerned about whether pancreatic cancer runs in families when my uncle was diagnosed. What I found is that the risk for developing it triples if a person's mother, father, sister, or brother had the disease. The American Cancer Society has very accessible information about genetic syndromes...
    1 Community Answer
  15. Who gets pancreatic cancer?

    I was worried about this too—and was somewhat relieved to find that most people who get pancreatic cancer are over 65, with the average age at the time of diagnosis being 72. The American Cancer Society says that men are slightly more likely to get it than women, and black people are more likely to o get it than whites, Asians, and Hispanics...
    1 Community Answer
  16. Who gets ovarian cancer?

    The most common type is epithelial, though, and most of the info you read about who gets ovarian cancer relates to this type.
    2 Community Answers
  17. Who is at risk for ovarian cancer?

    It's interesting which things put you at lower risk for ovarian cancer, too -- having children, breastfeeding, taking birth control pills, for example. Apparently the number of times a woman ovulates is part of the equation; experts are studying that.
    2 Community Answers
  18. Who does ovarian cancer affect?

    Yes, the Clomid link is an interesting one. Sounds like they're not sure if it's the use of the drug or the fertility issue that's the real link. There's a fairly recent study that says there's no link between the fertility drugs and ovarian cancer, but they only tracked women until they were in their...
    2 Community Answers
  19. Does THC increase the risk of testicular cancer?

    Yes, there's a study that was published in 2009 about TCH and testicular cancer that concluded that young men who smoke pot are more likely to develop testicular cancer. In fact, smoking at least once a week, or using it regularly from adolescence, they concluded, doubled the chance of nonseminoma (the more aggressive form of the cancer)...
    1 Community Answer
  20. Does alcohol increase the risk of throat cancer?

    For sure, alcohol and throat cancer are connected. Maybe not moderate drinking, but what doctors call “excessive alcohol use” definitely increases the risk. One of the sites I found said people who drink frequently are six times more likely to get cancer of the mouth or th...
    1 Community Answer
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