All cancers can kill you
bladder cancer has a very good survival rate. if the cancer is discovered early than the survival rate or five years is 94%. this is very good compared to other cancers we know about today. however when the cancer has spread to the organs in the pelvic region than the rates drop down to 49% and once it has spread to the other organs the rate falls to 6%. this is a fact that bladder cancer is more common in men then women.- my great-grandfather has this :/
Yes, if not treated/ caught early. The prognosis of bladder cancer is poor. It is like any other cancer. Left untreated, it spreads to other parts of the body. If it spreads to the lymphatic system (lymph nodes) it spreads even faster.
well you can try it if you do have cancer there is a book about it and it says that 3% hydrogen and 97% oxygen can cure it the book is called the 1 minute cure for cancer look it up on eBay or Google it might just cure it! worth a try!
The bladder stores urine produced by the kidneys, which is a combination of water and waste products. The bladder does not remove water from the body; its primary function is to hold urine until it is expelled from the body during urination.
the urinary bladder is in the midline of the abdomen, behind the pubic bone. the gallbladder is in the upper right abdomen.
Doctors treat bladder cancer based on the stage and aggressiveness of the cancer. Treatment options may include surgery to remove the tumor or the entire bladder, chemotherapy to kill cancer cells, radiation therapy to target and destroy cancer cells, immunotherapy to boost the body's immune response against cancer, and targeted therapy to attack specific molecules involved in cancer growth. The treatment plan is individualized for each patient and may involve a combination of these therapies to achieve the best possible outcome.
There is no specific threat of bladder cancer during or after prostate cancer. The prostate cancer could spread to the bladder just as easily as it could spread to any other organ.
There are several tests to find out whether bladder cancer is present.
Bladder cancer will force normal cells to divide uncontrollably.
Not Kidney cancer but bladder cancer
Bladder cancer is cancer affecting the urinary bladder. Bladder cancer is a fairly common form of cancer and men are affected two to three times more than women. Most bladder cancers occur after the age of 55. The disease is not contagious. No one can "catch" bladder cancer from another person.
The success rate for radiation in bladder cancer is 67 percent.
There many areas you can find bladder cancer treatments from the national cancer institute. Once on that website you can see there is many general information about bladder cancer and how your diet, gender and smoking can risk development of the cancer.
Bladder cancer is the production of tumors in the urinary bladder that affect how the body controls itself. It is treated by chemotherapy, radiation and surgery.
Bladder cancer cannot be treated with bicarbonate of soda. There are three types of cancer that affect the bladder. They are transitional cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and adenocarcinoma. Bladder cancer is treated with chemotherapy, which sometimes causes the tumors to shrink, and then with surgery.
No, because they are 2 different cancers, one is in the bladder and the other is in the womb
Bladder cancer typically begins when cells in the bladder start to grow abnormally and form a tumor. This cancer can develop due to a combination of genetic factors, exposure to certain environmental toxins such as tobacco smoke, and chronic bladder irritation or inflammation. Early detection and treatment are essential for managing bladder cancer effectively.