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wiesia

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Posts posted by wiesia

  1. I also have never been bothered with people asking this question. I am assuming they are just looking for information/cause. We do know that smoking causes great many LC's (not to mention other diseases). All I need to do is too look at my family. My father's mother lived to be 97, her mother as well. My father always thought that he had great genes and that he will see 100. He is gone and so are his two brothers -- all died around 70, all smoked, all from very aggressive LC. Their two sisters are very healthy, both more than 80 years old now. Smoking has robbed my father and me of great many years of life. I know that my father regretted ever smoking. He stopped some 15 years ago but that did not help. But most people get pulled into smoking in their teens - when one hardly thinks. I also think that my father would not have touched a cigarette had he known how many years of life this would cost him. We really need to focus on educating young people about the dangers of smoking. And if people ask us about smoking and LC maybe it is one way to spread the word in a real way about what might happen if you do smoke.

  2. I think gastrointestinal problems are very hard to figure out. I am suffering for more than 30 years now with gallbladder/liver/stomach issues that noone can figure out. I had all the tests done that exists both in Poland and in US and all we have learnt is that during an attack the gallbladder is very inflamed but why ? Who knows !! The surgeon is reluctant to remove it because the problem may persist even without it. I have learnt to cope: coffee or eggs after prolonged hunger are bad; stress is really bad, alcohol is no no etc. Still I often have mild nausea and discomfort. I am sick of it but ... it seems that modern medicine has its limits !

  3. Yes, for most treatments it does not matter what type of NSCLC you father has. It is only recently that we have learnt that Tarceva (for example) works differently on adeno than on squamus. If I were in your shoes I would not worry about it now and if you ever need to know it for further treatments you can always ask them to check it (they should have enough tissues).

  4. My father had squamous cell NSCLC in both lungs. I think squamous cell is the most common NSCLC in Europe and adeno is in US (for whatever reason; they think adeno came after people started smoking cigaretts with filters and had to inhale deeply). It does grow slower but not really slow and is more resistant to chemo.

  5. Ned,

    The Army x-rays were done in days where doctors were still looking for active TB. In Poland, when you worked you needed a "work card" and to get one you had to get a chest x-ray. After the war TB was rampant and it took some time to wipe it out. But with the new resistant strends it is still a worry.

    My father had yearly x-rays all his life till he stopped working at 65. Wild horses would not drag gim to a doctor after that. We often wonder what would have happened had he still had those x-rays...

    In Poland, you just walk into any clinic and ask for a chest x-ray if you want to. They will give it to you for free and you do not even need to see a doctor. Couple of days later you will get the report.

    The gv has figured that between a possibility of a resitant TB appearing somewhere and lung cancer it is better to screen the population.

  6. tierdmom,

    your observation could be correct. It is one of the theories bounced around (at least in breast cancer). The idea is that the primary controls the mets to a degree while it is there. Once removed the "control" signals are gone and the mets grow wildly. In breast cancer this is a big issue since most women do have a surgery and who knows whether the tests picked up correctly that there is no mets.

  7. I looked into it for my father and also for my mother (who has metastatic breast cancer). I think the logic for lung cancer is like that: lung surgery is very hard, lung cancer is an aggressive cancer and the first priority is to treat the spread. Surgery would need some recovery time and you would not be able to get chemo for a month or more. In that time the mets can run away from you.

    Keeping that in mind, I thought (when my father was still alive) that if we could control the mets (he never had problems with the two spots on his bones), and could shrink one of the tumors in lungs (he had two) then we could cyberknife the other one. Bad luck for us: his lung tumors (one of them) run away from us. But, in principle, this is something to look into, I think.

  8. My mother had taxotere for breast cancer. It wiped her out. I think it was every three weeks. But it really worked for her: she had 15 out of 17 lymph nodes positive and her cancer did come back but only after five years. Five very good years.

  9. Bone mets: my mother has breast cancer that has progressed to bones after 5 years. She had radiation and is on Aredia and Femara. Recent scans showed that the two 'ole" spots were healed but there was something new on one vertebrae. The doctors looked at that bone carefully and decided that it is cancer probably but it seems like it is calcifying already so they decided to keep her on the current treatment and check in three months.

    My guess would be that the doctors could be really split on what to do if there is just some minor progression.

  10. Hello !

    It is tough to fight lung cancer when it spread to the bones. But each cancer is different and there are people here on the board that lived many years with it. Lucy lived 4 years of decent quality life.

    My father had it in the bones as well and it turned out that that was not a problem. The tumor in his lymph nodes and lung was.

    Just focus on getting your husband strong (I did, I think, suggest IV feeding as a possibility before; it really helped my father) and taxotere may really

    stop the cancer for quite a while.

  11. Echinacea is known to increase WBC. But it has to be in liqued form and should be taken in large doses (not the ones they tell you in health stores). My mother took it during chemo for breast cancer and it worked. I do not remember the dosage but it probably can be found on medline (search "echinacea cancer wbc" or something similar)

  12. My father was 1 at dx. Very healthy all his life, no health problems at all. They told him that he should have easy time with chemo. It turned out to be terrible. Maybe because he never took any drugs, the chemo drugs were very hard on him and he started to deteriorate really fast after the third cycle of chemo. There was one week when he lost 7kg.

  13. This is what I have never understood about my family.

    My father was a heavy smoker but one day he had a hernia operation, the doctor told us that he did not like the sound of his lungs and he will try to convince him to quit. I think he scared him about, maybe, needing another operation. Anyway, my father stopped it just then and there. Never smoked again. And if asked he would say that stopping it was a piece of cake. I can not understand why it was so easy for him.

    His older brother was an alcoholic. But when the lent came he would put away alcohol for a month without even blinking. Strange, no ?

  14. Looking back my father said that for about a year before he was diagnosed strange things were happening. he had a bad luck in that his primary tumor was in a lower lobe so caused no cough or wheezing until it spread to the mediastinum and the other lung (central part). Then he had a cold and a cough that would not go away for a month so he went to see a doctor. But later he remembered that about a year before he had a similar episode with cold and cough. Cough lasted a month or so and then went away on its own. Had it lasted any longer he would have gone to a doctor. Oh well ! the other problems he remembered were sweating a lot, even doing light labor. He also lost some weight (noticably) without trying to but, silly us, we were happy because he was really getting overweight.

    Had we gone to a doctor with that first caughing episode perhaps he would still be around. But, honestly, it seemed like a annoying cold that he caught on his fishing expedition to the North Pole

  15. My father smoked for 40 years; stopped 15 years ago. It did not help. He is the fourth person on his side of our extended family to get lung cancer. All in the 70's. All smokers. The siblings who did not smoke live to be around 90 or 100. We clearly have lungs genetically predisposed to cancer when hit by smoke.

  16. Some remarks,

    My father was also performance status 3 at some point and the doctor was afraid to give him chemo. So he just gave him Avastin (no side effects from that one at all, so you should seriously look into it; it worked on the primary tumor of my father) and

    waited a week. After a week my father's condition being stable, he got Navelbine. No side effects from that one either. Btw, you can check on the web about the grading for performance status; it will give you an idea whether your father is indeed 3 or not.

    RFA, cyberknife etc are not generally used in stage IV. The reasoning is that with an agressive cancer like lung cancer it is most important to treat

    the disease systemically.

    Again, I would look more carefully into adding Avastin.

  17. There are scales that doctors/researchers use to determine whether patient is able to take chemo. Performance status scales. There are two of them that are in use. One is called Karnofsky scale and you can find plenty on it on the web. You will find a discussion of how to decide what

    number your father is and how risky it might be to give him chemo. I do not remember the name of the other scale at the moment but it should be easy to find it on the web as well.

  18. When my father was found to have NSCLC he also had a terrible paing in his hips (could not walk) and a reall bad paing in one elbow. Naturally we assumed it was from cancer that has spread so he was sent for a bone scan. It has turned out that the pain had nothing to do with cancer (he did have two spots of cancer: on the spine and one clavicle that were usymptomatic). The pain in hips went away by itself and the pain in elbow was from a nurve that had to be blocked.

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