Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery for the treatment of lung cancer.
- chemotherapy
- side effects
- feeling tired and weak
- feeling sick
- hair loss
- headaches
- coughing
- temperature is lower than normal
- Aching muscles
- drugs
- Mitomycin
- Ifosfamide
- Cisplatin
- Cyclophosphamide
- Doxorubicin
- Vincristine
- Prednisolone
- Methods
- injection in the blood
stream
- intravenous infusion
- tablets
- capsules
- why a doctor may suggest chemotherapy
- to reduce the size of the
cancer
- to relieve symptoms
- increase life expectancy
- to control the cancer or put it into remission
- complete remission
- cancer not seen on scans
- partial remission
- the treatment killed some of the cells so the cancer shrunk but is still visible
on scans
- to stop a cancer from growing back after
radiotherapy or surgery
- if a cancer has spread from original
area
- radiotherapy
- types
- external
- using x-rays
- protons
- internal
- drinking a liquid with
radioactive material which
is taken up by cancer cells
- radioactive metal (brachytherapy)
- radiotherapy wires
- radioactive chemical therapies
- strontium
- iodine
- phosphorus
- radium 223 therapy
- side effects
- tiredness and weakness due to low
levels of red blood cells
- sore skin
- redder and darker than usual
- dry and itchy
- area being treated
- long term
- skin colour changes
- dry mouth
- breathing problems
- infertility
- low sex drive
- long term pain
- bowel changes
- chest radiotherapy side effects
- swelling and soreness in
throat
- difficulty swallowing solid foods
- loss of appetite
- weight loss due to
problems eating
- inflammation on lungs
- breathlessness
- techniques
- conformal beam techniques
- Radiation is delivered from many beams at the same time. This allows the
radiation to be concentrated on the tumour with less damage to nearby normal
tissues.
- Intraoperative radiation therapy
- Radiation is delivered to a tumour during surgery
- Radiosensitisers
- These drugs increase radiation's damaging effect on cancer cells
- Radioprotectors
- These drugs protect normal cells from
radiation damage while nearby cancer
cells are destroyed.
- Radioimmunotherapy
- Radioactive substances are attached to antibodies, defensive chemicals made
by the body's immune system. These antibodies target cancer cells and deliver
damaging radioactivity only to them.
- surgery
- tests taken beforehand
- blood test
- urine test
- chest x-ray
- electrocardiogram (ECG)
- having an anaesthetic
- Local anaesthetic
- the anaesthetist injects anaesthetic to numb
the part of your body being operated on
- Regional anaesthetic
- the anaesthetist numbs a large area or part of your
body, for example, using an injection into your spine
(epidural) to numb your lower body
- General anaesthetic
- patient not aware of anything during the operation
- types
- Lobectomy
- where one or more large parts of the lung (called lobes) are removed.
- Pneumonectomy
- where the entire lung is removed. This is used when the cancer is
located in the middle of the lung or has spread throughout the lung.
- segmentectomy
- where a small piece of the lung is removed
- This procedure is only suitable for a small number of patients as it
is only used if your doctors think your cancer is small and limited to
one area of the lung
- This is usually very early-stage non-small-cell lung cancer.