News1 min ago
Fao Sqad
6 Answers
Hi your Sqadness. Can I give you a set of symptoms for your opinion please?
Male, 50, alcoholic, chain smoker of roll-ups, long standing femoral occlusion, develops a hacking cough 3 months ago, loses 4 stone in weight, develops pain in right shoulder and pain in chest. Loses use of right hand (unable to grip anything).
Can this be anything other than lung cancer?
Male, 50, alcoholic, chain smoker of roll-ups, long standing femoral occlusion, develops a hacking cough 3 months ago, loses 4 stone in weight, develops pain in right shoulder and pain in chest. Loses use of right hand (unable to grip anything).
Can this be anything other than lung cancer?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by mrs_overall. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.\\\develops a hacking cough 3 months ago, loses 4 stone in weight, develops pain in right shoulder and pain in chest. Loses use of right hand (unable to grip anything). \\\\
If and a big if, these symptoms are due to lung cancer, wherever in the lung, then they indicate a marked degree of spread and should well be seen on routine chest X-Ray.
Yes ,I do agree with slaney that at the onset of growth, an apical cancer may be difficult to spot............but these symptoms would suggest that we are not dealing with an early cancer.
If and a big if, these symptoms are due to lung cancer, wherever in the lung, then they indicate a marked degree of spread and should well be seen on routine chest X-Ray.
Yes ,I do agree with slaney that at the onset of growth, an apical cancer may be difficult to spot............but these symptoms would suggest that we are not dealing with an early cancer.
I disagree Sqad; it all depends on the direction of growth of the tumour.
Yes, it can be more readily picked up on CXR if it grows downwards into the chest, but classically with a Pancoast tumour growth is into the chest wall structures rather than the underlying lung, so even a fairly advanced tumour may not be easily seen on plain chest X-ray.
Yes, it can be more readily picked up on CXR if it grows downwards into the chest, but classically with a Pancoast tumour growth is into the chest wall structures rather than the underlying lung, so even a fairly advanced tumour may not be easily seen on plain chest X-ray.