OHANCAW

 

 


Links


Become a Facebook Fan


Follow Us on Twitter


Join our e-newsletter
and read past issues


 

Make a Donation

Enter Amount:

 

 

 

Screener Login

Shopping Cart


Your Cart is currently empty.

You are here: Home Education

The Head and Neck Cancer Alliance has a blog!

PDFPrintE-mail

Stop by our new blog for news and updates: www.hnca.tumblr.com 

 

 

EUSA Pharma

PDFPrintE-mail

EUSA Pharma is a rapidly growing transatlantic specialty pharmaceutical company focused on
in-licensing, developing and marketing late-stage oncology, pain control and critical care products. 

http://www.eusapharma.com/

 

 
PDFPrintE-mail

Download 50 facts about Oral, Head and Neck Cancer

Signs and Symptoms

An early indication of oral and throat cancer is one or more changes in the way the soft tissues of your mouth usually look or feel. Signs and symptoms may include:

  • A sore in your mouth that doesn't heal or increases in size
  • Persistent pain in your mouth
  • Lumps or white, red or dark patches inside your mouth
  • Thickening of your cheek
  • Difficulty chewing or swallowing or moving your tongue
  • Difficulty moving your jaw, or swelling or pain in your jaw
  • Soreness in your throat or feeling that something is caught in your throat
  • Pain around your teeth, or loosening of your teeth
  • Numbness of your tongue or elsewhere in your mouth
  • Changes in your voice
  • A lump in your neck
  • Bad breath

 Most oral cancers arise on the lips, tongue or on the floor of the mouth. They also may occur inside your cheeks, on your gums or on the roof of your mouth.   

Oral Head and Neck Cancer is:

  • Cancer that arises in the head or neck region, including the nasal cavity, sinuses, lips, mouth, thyroid glands, salivary glands, throat, or larynx (voice box).
  • The sixth-most-common form of cancer in the United States.
  • 40,000 cases diagnosed annually.

Risk Factors for Oral Head and Neck Cancer

  • Tobacco (including smokeless tobacco) and alcohol use are the most important risk factors for head and neck cancers, particularly those of the tongue, mouth, throat and voice box.
  • Eighty-five percent of head and neck cancers are linked to tobacco use. People who use both tobacco and alcohol are at greater risk for developing these cancers than people who use either tobacco or alcohol alone. (Source: National Cancer Institute)
  • Over the past decade, an increasing number of young, non-smokers have developed mouth and throat cancer associated with the human-papillomavirus, or HPV. Today, 25 percent – 10,000 cases each year – might be attributable to a strain of HPV. Physicians and researchers believe this might be due to an increase in oral sex as part of early sexual experience.
  • Thyroid cancers can develop in anyone, although there often is a family history or exposure to radiation involved. Salivary gland cancers also do not seem to be associated with any particular cause.
 
 

Cancer Drug Erases Man's Fingerprints

PDFPrintE-mail

Cancer drug erases man's fingerprints, doctor says

A Singapore man undergoing treatment for cancer was detained for four hours by U.S. immigration officials after the drug he was taking caused his fingerprints to disappear. Read the story.

 

Archived Web Cast Now Available

PDFPrintE-mail

Archived Web Cast Now Available

Original broadcast April 28, 2009:

Practical Answers to Key Clinical Challenges: Optimizing Patient Outcomes in Head and Neck Cancer

Featuring (from left to right) Dr. Terry Day, president of the Head and Neck Cancer Alliance and Cheryl A. Brandt, MSN, RN, ACNS-BC, CORLN; Edward Kim, MD; and David I. Rosenthal, MD, FACR.

Panel members discuss current therapies for head and neck cancer, highlight areas of new knowledge and controversy, including recent changes in the standards of care and appropriate interventions for toxicity management. In addition, they take a glimpse into the future directions of HNC management.

Access the archived Web cast here.

 
Joomla SEF URLs by Artio