Lung Cancer - Are Women More Preoccupied About Breast Cancer?
By Ben O'Rourke Submitted On November 24, 2006
Lung cancer is among the most common cancers in the Western
world. Lung cancer occurs due to the growth of malignant or abnormal cells in
the lung. It is the third most common cancer in males and the fifth in females.
Yet lung cancer is increasingly becoming a woman's problem. The risk for dying
of lung cancer is 20 times higher among women who smoke two or more packs of
cigarettes per day than among women who do not smoke at all. Lung cancer is cancer
that originates in the tissues of the lungs. It can be very difficult to detect
at an early stage because the symptoms often do not appear until the disease is
far advanced.
Health experts say more needs to be done to educate women
about the risk of lung cancer. Bearing in mind that breast cancer is the most
commonly diagnosed cancer in women, studies show that since 1987, more women
have died each year of lung cancer than from breast cancer. Researchers have
found that women who had one or more children had nearly a 40 percent lower
risk of contracting lung cancer compared to women without children. Recently,
research has suggested that women who don't smoke are two to three times more
likely than non-smoking men to develop lung cancer. In women, the three types
of cancer most commonly seen are breast cancer, lung cancer, and colon cancer.
Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in women
(behind lung cancer), and the most common cancer in women.
Lung cancer kills more people than breast or prostate
cancer, primarily because by the time it is detected, lung cancer is usually in
an advanced stage. Also when cancer spreads to the lung from the breast, the
resulting cells are breast cancer cells, not lung cancer cells. Breast cancer
is the second leading cause of cancer death in American women behind lung
cancer, yet surveys have shown that women are more worried about getting breast
cancer than lung cancer. Breast cancer has surpassed lung cancer as the leading
cause of cancer death in women worldwide, accounting for more than 400000
deaths per year.
Today there are many treatment options available to lung
cancer patients. The type of treatment for lung cancer depends on the cancer's
specific type, how far it has spread, and the patient's status. It is important
to know the stage to plan treatment. Treatment for secondary lung cancer
depends on primary cancer. However, new anti-cancer drugs, improved staging,
and imaging techniques, combined with new surgical procedures have all
contributed to dealing with the disease. Finding early-stage lung cancers is
crucial in the treatment results for lung cancer. While having treatment for
any stage of lung cancer, you will be able to manage some side effects that may
accompany lung cancer or any cancer treatment.
Summary:
Lung cancer is the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells in
the lung. We already know that the best way to prevent lung cancer is to quit
or never start to smoke in the first place. Small cell lung cancer is a bit
more common in men than in women. But lung cancer is increasingly becoming a
woman's problem. The links between your smoking history and lung cancer are
clear. Lung cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in the world. It is
the most deadly of cancers worldwide, resulting in up to 3 million deaths
annually.
For More Information On Lung Cancer: [http://healthinfodocs.com/category/lung-cancer/]
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