Mesothelioma

The Mesothelioma Resource Center

Symptoms of Mesothelioma

Tommy Jones

The main symptoms of Mesothelioma are shortness of breath, blood in the chest, severe coughing, pain in the chest, and rapid weightloss. Remember thee two kinds of Mesothelioma, which are Pleural and Peritoneal. Pleural is the most common for and the symptoms are listed above. Peritoneal symptoms include swelling of the feet, a constant feeling of nausea, fever, impaired bowel function, and abdominal bloating. The bloating is caused by excessive fluids in the chest cavity. It is important to get checked out by a physician if you have a majority of these symptoms. In general, people that have Mesothelioma wait too long before going to a doctor, because they relate the above symptoms to other physoligical factors in their livers. This is especially true with the symptoms of weight loss, bloating, fever, and nausea.

Also just as in any kind of cancer, there are two forms of Mesothelioma. They are benign and malignant. Usually benign Mesothelioma has few symptoms, if any, which makes it that much harder to detect. Malignant Mesothelioma will cause the typical symptoms that have been discussed in the first paragraph. The later the malignant mesothelioma goes undetected the more signs of fever and weight loss will occur.

When the patient tells the doctor about their symptoms, and he/she believes that the symptoms are Mesothelioma, the doctor will preform certain tests to make sure that an accurate diagnosis of Pleural or Peritoneal Mesothelioma can be made. A physical exam, chest XRay, a CBC blood count test (this test measures the amount of red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and hemoglobin in the red blood cells), a sedimentation rate (this test checks the rate at which red blood cells settle to the bottom of a test tube), a biopsy test (this involves a fine needle aspiration biopsy, thoracoscopy, laporatomy, and a thoracotomy biopsy), a bronchoscopy (this involves looking inside of the trachea in order to find abnormally large areas), and a cytologic exam (the doctor exams cells to determine if there is anything abnormal about the cells.

Diagnosis of Mesothelioma. Once the prognosis is made by the physician, the cancer will fall into on of four categories. The categories are stage one, stage two, stage three and stage four. Stage one cancer is localalized, meaning that it will be in the lungs and/or the diaphram. Stages two, three, and four cancer is more advanced. Stage two Mesothelioma will be found in the lymph nodes and like stage one cancer will be found in the lungs and diaphragm. Stage three cancer will advance to the chest wall, mediastinum, the heart beyond the diaphragm, and the lining of the peritoneum. Stage four cancer, the most advanced, will spread to distant organs or tissues.

Treatment for Mesothelioma. If you have a majority of the above symptoms or have family or friends that complain about these symptoms; go to the doctor. This fact can not be reiterated enough. Treatment options, though slim, are slowly progressing with technology. Currently, when someone is diagnosed with the Pleural or Peritoneal forms of Mesothelioma the doctor should suggest two types of treatment. One being the typical or traditional way of treating Pleural or Peritoneal Mesothelioma and the other being advanced treatments which are generally referred to as clinical trials. Surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy are currently the traditional ways of treating Mesothelioma.

Surgery can persist of Wide Local Excision, which is surgery to remove the cancer and some of the healthy tissue that surrounds the cancer; Decortication which is surgery to remove some of the covering of the lungs, lining of the chest, and a part of the exterior surface of the lungs; Extrapleural pneumonetomy which is surgery to remove the entire lung, some of the lining of the chest, the entire diaphragm, and the lining of the sac that is around the heart; and Pleurodesis which is surgery that uses chemicals or drugs to make a scar in the layers in between the pleura. The purpose of the last treatment mentioned is to stop the excessive fluid in the pleural cavity.

Radiation entails destroying the cancer cells with high powered radiation. The most common being XRays.

Chemotherapy involves using drugs to terminate the growth of cancer cells. Chemo can be injected directly into the body, which is done through veins, muscles, spinal cavities, or organs, and enters the blood stream, when taken by mouth or injection and kills the cancer cells. In the instance of chemotherapy performed through the spinal cavities or organs the drugs can kill some of the surrounding tissue.

Please remember that this is not medical advice and a doctor should be contact as soon as possible when symptoms arise.