Type of Cancer

AIDS-related lymphoma
Acoustic neuroma
Acral lentiginous melanoma
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Acute monocytic leukemia
Acute myeloid leukemia
Acute promyelocytic leukemia
Adamantinoma
Adenoid cystic carcinoma

Adrenal cancer

Adenomatoid Odontogenic Tumor
Adrenocortical carcinoma
Adult T-cell leukemia

Alveolar soft part sarcoma

Anal cancer
Anaplastic large cell lymphoma

Angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma

Angiomyolipoma
Appendix cancer
Astrocytoma

Atypical Teratoid Rhabdoid Tumor (AT/RT)
Basal cell carcinoma

B-cell leukemia
Bladder cancer
Bone tumor
Brain tumor
Breast cancer

Breast-ovarian cancer
Brenner tumour

Bronchioloalveolar carcinoma

Brown tumor
Burkitt's lymphoma

Carcinoid

Carcinoma

Carcinoma in situ

Carcinoma of the penis

Cervical cancer

Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia

Cholangiocarcinoma

Chondrosarcoma

Chordoma

Choriocarcinoma

Choroid plexus papilloma

Chronic neutrophilic leukemia

Clear cell tumor

Colorectal cancer

Craniopharyngioma

Cutaneous T cell lymphoma

Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans

Dermoid cyst

Desmoid tumor

Desmoplastic small round cell tumor

Ductal carcinoma

Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumour

Ear cancer

Embryonal carcinoma

Endodermal sinus tumor

Endometrial cancer

Endometrioid tumor

Ependymoma

Erythroleukemia

Esophageal cancer

Ewing's sarcoma

Extramammary Paget's disease

Fetus in fetu

Fibroma

Fibrosarcoma

Follicular lymphoma

Gallbladder cancer

Ganglioneuroma

Gastric lymphoma

Gastrointestinal cancer

Gastrointestinal stromal tumor

Germ cell tumor

Germinoma

Gestational choriocarcinoma

Giant cell tumor of bone

Glioblastoma multiforme

Glioma

Gliomatosis cerebri

Glomus tumor

Glucagonoma

Gonadoblastoma

Granulocytic sarcoma

Granulosa cell tumour

Hairy cell leukemia

Head and neck cancer

Heart cancer

Hemangioblastoma Hemangiopericytoma

Hemangiopericytoma

Hemangiosarcoma

Hematological malignancy

Hepatocellular carcinoma

Hepatosplenic T-cell lymphoma

Hodgkin's lymphoma

Inflammatory breast cancer

Islet cell carcinoma

Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia (JMML)

Kaposi's sarcoma

Klatskin tumor

Krukenberg tumor

Laryngeal cancer

Lentigo maligna melanoma

Leukemia

Lip Reconstruction

Liposarcoma

Lung cancer

Lymphangioma

Lymphangiosarcoma

Lymphoepithelioma

Lymphoid leukemia

Lymphoma

Malignant fibrous histiocytoma

Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor

MALT lymphoma

Mediastinal germ cell tumor

Mediastinal tumor

Medulloblastoma

Melanoma

Meningioma

Merkel cell cancer

Mixed Mullerian tumor

Monocytic leukemia

Mucinous tumor

Multiple myeloma

Mycosis fungoides

Myeloid leukemia

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma

Neoplasia

Neuroblastoma

Neurofibroma

Neuroma

Nodular melanoma

Non-Hodgkin lymphoma

Ocular oncology

Oligoastrocytoma

Oligodendroglioma

Oncocytoma

Optic nerve sheath meningioma

Oral cancer

Osteosarcoma

Ovarian cancer

Paget's disease of the breast

Pancoast tumor

Pancreatic cancer

Paraganglioma

Pinealocytoma

Pituicytoma

Pituitary adenoma

Pituitary tumour

Pleuropulmonary blastoma

Polyembryoma

Primary central nervous system lymphoma

Primary effusion lymphoma

Primary peritoneal cancer

Prostate cancer

Pseudomyxoma peritonei

Renal cell carcinoma

Retinoblastoma

Rhabdoid tumour

Rhabdomyoma

Rhabdomyosarcoma

Richter's transformation

Sacrococcygeal teratoma

Schwannomatosis

Secondary neoplasm

Serous tumour

Sertoli-Leydig cell tumour

Sex cord-stromal tumour

Sézary's disease

Skin cancer

Somatostatinoma

Spinal tumor

Splenic marginal zone lymphoma

Stomach cancer

Teratoma

Testicular cancer

Thecoma

Thymoma

Thyroid cancer

Urethral cancer

Warthin's tumor

 

 

 

 Diet and cancer

 
 

 

 

 

 

Treatment & Prevention of mesothelioma

Legal issues

Mesothelioma lawyer and Legal Guide to Lawsuits

 

 

 

 

 

Bone tumor

 

 

Bone tumor is an inexact term, which can be used for both benign and malignant abnormal growths found in bone, but is most commonly used for primary tumors of bone, such as osteosarcoma (or osteoma). It is less exactly applied to secondary, or metastatic tumors found in bone.

 

Classification

 Bone tumors may be classified as "primary tumors" which originate in the bone, and "secondary tumors" which originate elsewhere.

 

Primary tumors

 Primary tumors of bone can be divided into benign tumors and cancers. Common benign bone tumors may be neoplastic, developmental, traumatic, infectious, or inflammatory in etiology. Examples of benign bone tumors include osteoma, osteochondroma, aneurysmal bone cyst, and fibrous dysplasia.

 Malignant primary bone tumors include osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma, and other sarcoma types. Multiple myeloma is a hematologic cancer which also frequently presents as one or more bone tumors.

 

Secondary tumors

 Secondary bone tumors include metastatic tumors which have spread from other organs, such as the breast, lung, and prostate. Metastatic tumors more frequently involve the axial skeleton than the appendicular skeleton. Tumors which originate in the soft tissues may also secondarily involve bones through direct invasion.

 Symptoms

 The most common symptom of bone tumors is pain, but many patients will not experience any symptoms, except for a painless mass. Some bone tumors may weaken the structure of the bone, causing pathologic fractures.

 Treatment 

Treatment of bone tumors is highly dependant on the type of tumor. Treatment for some bone cancers may involve surgery, such as limb amputation, or limb-sparing surgery (often in combination with chemotherapy and radiation therapy). Chemotherapy and radiotherapy are effective in some tumors (such as Ewing's sarcoma) but less so in others (such as chondrosarcoma).

 Limb sparing or limb salvage surgery, means the limb is spared from amputation. Instead of amputation the affected bone is removed and is done in two ways (a) bone graft, in which a bone from elsewhere from the body is taken or (b) artificial bone is put in.

 The other surgery is called van-ness rotation or rotationplasty which is a form of amputation, in which the patient's foot is turned upwards in a 360 degree turn and the upturned foot is used as a knee.

 

 Types of amputation

 Leg 

    * Below knee

    * Above knee

    * Symes

    * Hip disarticulation

    * Hemipelvectomy or hindquarter, in which the whole leg is removed with one half of the pelvis 

Arm

     * Below elbow

    * Above elbow

    * Shoulder disarticulation

    * Forequarter (amputation of the whole arm, along with the shoulder blade and the clavicle)

 The most radical of amputations is hemicorporectomy (translumbar or waist amputation) which removes the legs, the pelvis, urinary system, excretory system and the genital area (penis/testes in males and vagina/vulva in females). This operation is done in two stages. First stage is doing the colostomy and the urinary conduit, the second stage is the amputation. This is a mutilating operation and is only done as a last resort (e.g. when even pelvic exenteration doesn't work or in cases of advanced pelvic/reproductive cancers).

 

 

complementary and alternative medicine and cancer

A small number of CAM therapies, which were originally considered to be purely alternative approaches, are finding a place in cancer treatment--not as cures, but as complementary therapies that may help patients feel better and recover faster. One example is acupuncture. In 1997, a panel of experts at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Consensus Conference found acupuncture to be effective in managing chemotherapy-associated nausea and vomiting and in controlling pain associated with surgery. In contrast, some approaches, such as the use of laetrile, have been studied and found ineffective or potentially harmful. 

  • Complementary medicine is used together with conventional medicine.

  • Alternative medicine is used in place of conventional medicine.

  • Integrative medicine combines treatments from conventional medicine and CAM for which there is some high-quality evidence of safety and effectiveness. It is also called integrated medicine.

 

Reasons People with Cancer Choose CAM

People with cancer may use CAM to:

  • Help cope with the side effects of cancer treatments, such as nausea, pain, and fatigue;

  • Comfort themselves and ease the worries of cancer treatment and related stress;

  • Feel that they are doing something more to help with their own care;

  • Try to treat or cure their cancer.

 

When considering CAM, what questions should patients ask their health care providers?

  • What benefits can be expected from this therapy?

  • What are the risks associated with this therapy?

  • Do the known benefits outweigh the risks?

  • What are the potential side effects?

  • Will the therapy interfere with conventional treatment?

  • Is this therapy part of a clinical trial? If so, who is sponsoring the trial?

  • Will the therapy be covered by health insurance?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

List of branches of alternative and Complementary Medicine grouped in following categories

 

 

 * Acupuncture

   o Auriculotherapy

   o Korean hand acupuncture

   o Medical acupuncture

   o Meridian therapy

   o Sonopuncture

 * Acupressure

 * Alexander Technique

 * Alternative Medical Systems

   o Ayurveda

   o Homeopathy

   o Naturopathic medicine

   o Osteopathy

   o Traditional Chinese

      medicine

   o Unani medicine

 

* Bates Method

* Biologically BasedTherapies

  o Apitherapy

  o Bates Method

  o Chinese food therapy

  o Fasting

  o Herbal therapy

  o Macrobiotic lifestyle

  o Natural health

  o Natural therapy

     + Diet and Food

     + Dietary supplements

     + Exercise

  o Naturopathy

  o Orthomolecular medicine

 

* Body-Based Manipulative

  Therapies

   o Body work or Massage

   o Bowen Technique

   o Chiropractic medicine

   o Craniosacral Therapy

   o Medical acupuncture

   o Osteopathy