Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Lung cancer
- Types
- Small cell carcinoma (SCC) 15%
- arise from neuroendocrine cells (Kulchitsky cells)
- Rapidly growing and highly malignant; spread early
and are almost always inoperable at presentation.
- Poor prognosis
- Non- SCC (85%)
- Large cell (8%)
- less differentiated form, metastasize early
- Squamous (42%)
- Local spread is common but
widespread metastases occur
relatively late
- Adenocarcinoma
- arise from mucous cells in the bronchial
epithelium.
- most common one assoc
with asbestos
- most common one in
NON-SMOKERS
- invades pleura, mediastinal
lymph nodes, metastasize to
brain and bone
- Carcinoid (7%)
- Brochoalveolar (4%)
- Metastasis
- kidney, prostate, breast, bone, gastrointestinal tract, cervix and
ovary
- Risk factor
- Active and passive SMOKING
- Age
- previous history of cancer
- Exposure to chemicals, dust, radiation, asbestos, heavy metals
- COPD
- Presentation
- Lungs
- Dyspnoea, SOB, chest pain,
hemoptysis, wheeze, cough
- collapse, pleural effusion
- Systemic
- Wt loss, fever, fatigue,
nausea and vomiting, clubbing
- Local effects
- Dysphagia, hoarse voice (recurrent
laryngeal nerve), Horner's syndrome
(sympathetic chain), SVC obstruction
- Metastasis
- Bone pain
- CNS: Headaches, weakness,
confusion, fits, focal neurological
deficit, cerebellar syndrome,
proximal myopathy, peripheral
neuropathy
- Hepatomegaly
- Lymphadenopathy
- INVESTIGATIONS
- CXR
- peripheral circular opacity, hilar
enlargement, consolidation,
pleural effusion or bony
secondaries
- CT and PET scan
- Biopsy
- Bronchoscopy
- Percutaneous
transthoracic
needle
- Surgical biopsy