Gastric Cancer Treatment in Aurangabad | Dr. Tushar Mule

Gastric Cancer

Gastric Cancer

After swallowing, food moves through the esophagus (food pipe) and then enters a sac-like organ in the upper abdomen called the stomach. The stomach keeps food and starts to digest it by secreting gastric liquid. The stomach empties food saturated with gastric juice into the first part of the small intestine called the duodenum.

Cancer occurs when an error (mutation) occurs in a cell’s DNA. The cells then separate and improve uncontrolled. These accumulated cells form cancer. The abdomen wall is created of five layers of tissue. Stomach cancer, also known as gastric cancer, occurs in the innermost layer, mucus-producing cells that line the stomach. It then advances and spreads.

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RISK FACTORS FOR STOMACH CANCER

Anything that raises the risk of someone getting cancer is a risk factor. The risk factor does not directly cause the disorder. Some with various risk factors will not get the disease, while some with no known risk factors will get it.

RISK FACTORS FOR STOMACH CANCER ARE:

  • Older age

  • Older age

  • Infection with a bacterium called H. pylori

  • Persistent inflammation called gastritisp>

  • Pernicious anaemia

  • Certain types of polyps in the stomach

  • Smoking

SYMPTOMS OF STOMACH CANCER

While stomach cancer is comparatively unique compared to other types of cancer, one of the dangers of this disease is the challenge of diagnosing it. Gastric cancer like most gastrointestinal cancers is asymptomatic in the first stages. It often goes undiagnosed until after it expands to other parts of the body. This makes it difficult to treat.

THE SYMPTOMS, IF OCCUR, INCLUDE:

  • Indigestion, heartburn, and bloating

  • Loss of appetite

  • Unexplained weight loss

  • New satiety (feeling full after eating only a small amount of food)

  • Bloody or black stool

  • Gastric pain, which may be more serious after meals

  • Nausea and vomiting, with or without blood

  • Vague discomfort in the upper abdomen

  • Low haemoglobin (anaemia)

  • Fatigue

DIAGNOSIS OF STOMACH CANCER

What are the treatments meant for stomach cancer?