The lymph nodes in the mediastinum are likely to show if lung cancer has spread beyond the lungs.
Mediastinoscopy allows a physician to observe and extract a sample from the nodes for further study. Involvement of these lymph nodes indicates diagnosis and stages of lung cancer.
The surgeon may clear a path and feel the patient's lymph nodes first to evaluate any abnormalities within the nodes.
The first station for the spread of breast cancer is the lymph nodes in the axilla then to the lymph nodes in the neck. If a patient has a biopsy it is not uncommon to have a test on the lymphnodes there.
In the majority of procedures performed to diagnose cancer, a normal result indicates the presence of small, smooth lymph nodes, and no abnormal tissue, growths, or signs of infection.
Lymphatic cancer can be very serious because the lymph nodes are throughout the body.
Please rephrase this question for it to make sense. Thanx
It could be lymphoma or another cancer that has metastasized to the lymph nodes.
In the majority of procedures performed to diagnose cancer, a normal result involves evidence of small, smooth, normal-appearing lymph nodes and no abnormal tissue, growths, or signs of infection.
If you have breast cancer and you just had your lymph nodes removed, a hospital stay is very important.
Removal of Lymph NodesThe lymph nodes are a way of travel for breast cancer cells. This is the first place they go if the cancer has spread. They remove the lymph nodes to see if the cancer has spread. Hopefully, the breast cancer cells will not have gone past the lymph nodes, and with removal of them and the cancer in the breast, the cancer is gone. Unfortunately, this is not always the case, and the cancer can spread to other parts of the body through the lymph nodes. The more lymph nodes that are positive for cancer, the more likely the cancer has spread to distant places in the body. Early detection is the key! Keep up on the mammograms and self examination. It could save your life!AnswerThe above poster gave an excellent answer, but just wanted to add that lymph nodes are throughout our body and are filters for our body, thus, of there are cancer cells they can travel through lymph nodes.
The American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) TNM system is a staging system that classifies cancers based on their T, N, and M stages, which is to say their Tumor, Node and metastasis. The nodal status refers to the "N" portion of this classification system. The N indicates the presence, if any, of cancer spread to other lymph nodes. The system is: NX: Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed. N0: Cancer has not spread to regional lymph nodes. N1: Cancer has spread to 1 to 3 lymph node(s) under the arm N2: Cancer has spread to 4 to 9 lymph nodes under the arm N3: Cancer has spread to 10 or more lymph nodes under the arm or also involves lymph nodes in other areas around the breast. The TNM, taken together, yield the stage of breast cancer a patient is in.
The significance of enlarged lymph nodes connected to breast cancer is that when these lymph nodes get enlarged by either cancerous cells or other problems, it may be felt at breast examination.