Pleural Mesothelioma
Pleural Mesothelioma
There are two types of Pleural
Mesothelioma: Cancerous and non-cancerous.
Benign mesothelioma many times can be surgically removed and is
generally not life threatening or a result of asbestos exposure. Malignant
mesothelioma is very serious, though. The infliction is quite rare
and less than three thousand people in the US get it each year.
The following section is about malignant pleural
mesothelioma:
Pleural mesothelioma is a cancer of the cells that affects the skin
or inner lining (known medically as the pleura) outside of the lungs and inside
of the ribs. This is caused ONLY by exposure to asbestos fibers found in
products made mostly by US corporations. The exposure could have occurred
many, many years ago because it takes many years for the disease to show
up. Pleural mesothelioma is the most common type of
mesothelioma and chances are that if you have mesothelioma, this
is the type you have.
Often Mesothelioma is diagnosed when no symptoms are present.
This could be because a tumor is present or is randomly discovered through
something like a routine exam. When these symptoms do occur, they can
include shortness of breath, weight loss, chest pains, pains about the lower
back, chronic cough, difficulty swallowing, and severe weakness. In the
initial examination a medical examination will often show a pleural effusion,
which is a bunch of fluid in the area between the lungs and the wall of the
chest.
A chest x-ray or CT scan is the necessary
first step in identifying mesothelioma, which is followed up with what is
called a bronchoscopy. A bronchoscopy requires a viewing scope to look
inside the lungs. The diagnosis itself requires a biopsy which allows the
medical professionals to take a little piece of tissue from the area in
question. This can be done using a tiny needle, an open cut, or even these
days through a tube with a camera on the end of it. This is a procedure
that must happen at the hospital, but it is not a painful procedure
typically.
Any fluid build-up from the pleural
effusion can generally be viewed via the x-ray and can be heard through the
dr.’s stethoscope during examination. The only firm diagnosis of
mesothelioma can be made through the biopsy described earlier.
Because other things like tumors and benign effusions can look like
mesothelioma, a biopsy is the only safe way to tell as a diagnosis of
mesothelioma can be one of the most difficult in the book.
As the tumor spreads over the lining
between the lungs and the chest, flexibility can be increasingly painful and
restricted. Because of this, breathing becomes much more difficult.
It begins with shortness of breath potentially while exercising but as function
continues to drop short breath can become more and more of a persistent
problem.
Although there is no cure for pleural
mesothelioma, the treatment options have improved for managing symptoms. As
with any cancer, the prognosis is better for those diagnosed early, and
treatment can be more aggressive. Most pleural mesothelioma patients are
treated with a multimodal therapy, or combination of treatment options. It is
possible for patients with pleural mesothelioma to live for 5 to 10 years after
diagnosis, although the average survival time is about a year.
Specific types of treatment include:
Chemotherapy and other drug-based therapies
Radiation therapy
Surgery
Intra-operative photodynamic therapy.
Experimental treatments such as gene therapy, angiogenesis inhibitors,
immunotherapy, and many clinical trials are also in the development
stages.
Although mesothelioma remains uncurable,
many other treatments have had success in pain reduction and improving lung
function. Surgeries to remove tumors and reduce pressure have shown promise in
pain reduction, and pain control medications are constantly improving. In some
cases, X-ray therapy has been shown to control tumor pain as well