Commemorating World Cancer Day

04 Feb, 2022 - 08:02 0 Views
Commemorating World Cancer Day World Cancer Day aims to raise awareness on cancer and therefore prevent millions of deaths

The ManicaPost

Dr Tendai Zuze
Health Matters

TODAY, Friday, February 4, is World Cancer Day and the theme for the next three years is ‘Close the care gap’.

World Cancer Day aims to raise awareness on cancer and therefore prevent millions of deaths.

 

This year’s theme recognises the power of knowledge and challenges assumptions.

You would generally imagine that only adults get cancer.

However, there are quite a number of childhood cancers and below I will try and shed light on some of them.

Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia (ALL)

The most common childhood cancer, this accounts for about 34 percent of all cancers in children.

 

ALL typically occurs between the ages of two and four, and is more common in males than females.

 

Leukaemia begins in bone marrow and spreads to the blood, and can then spread to the organs.

Symptoms include:

◆ Bone and joint pain

◆ Fatigue

◆ Weakness

◆ Bleeding

◆ Fever

◆ Weight loss

◆ Brain Tumours

These and other nervous system tumours make up about 27 percent of childhood cancers.

There are many types of brain tumours and the treatment and outlook for each is different.

 

Most brain tumours in children start in the lower parts of the brain, such as the cerebellum or brain stem.

 

Although brain tumours are typically different in children as opposed to adults, many of the symptoms remain the same.

Symptoms include:

◆ Headaches

◆ Dizziness

◆ Balance problems

◆ Vision, hearing or speech problems

◆ Frequent vomiting

Neuroblastoma

This arises from immature nerve cells in infants and young children.

 

Primarily found in children younger than five, this disease often begins in the adrenal glands.

 

It’s more common in males than females, and only one to two percent of children with this disease have a family history of it.

Symptoms include:

◆ Impaired ability to walk

◆ Changes in eyes (bulging, dark circles, droopy eyelids)

◆ Pain in various locations of the body

◆ Diarrhoea

◆ High blood pressure

Wilms Tumour

This starts in the kidneys and is the most common type of paediatric kidney cancer.

 

Wilms tumours usually only form in one kidney, but sometimes both – only in small cases — and accounts for about five percent of all paediatric cancers.

 

This disease is typically found in very young children — three to four years old – and is not common in children over six.

Symptoms include:

◆ Swelling or lump in the belly

◆ Fever

◆ Pain

◆ Nausea

◆ Poor appetite

Lymphoma

This starts in certain cells othe imf mune system called lymphocytes.

 

These cancers affect lymph nodes and other lymph tissues, like the tonsils or thymus.

They can also affect the bone marrow and other organs, and can cause different symptoms depending on where the cancer is growing.

There are two main types of lymphoma:

Hodgkin’s lymphoma, sometimes called Hodgkin disease, is rare in children younger than five years of age.

 

This type of cancer is very similar in children and adults, including which types of treatment work best.

Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma is more likely to occur in younger children than Hodgkin lymphoma, but it is still rare in children younger than three.

The most common types of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in children are different from those in adults.

These cancers often grow quickly and require intensive treatment, but they also tend to respond better to treatment than most non-Hodgkin lymphomas in adults.

Symptoms include:

◆ Swollen lymph nodes in the neck, armpit, or groin

◆ Weight loss

◆ Fever

◆ Sweats

◆ Weakness

If you think your child might have cancer, please take them to a doctor.

 

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