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PCE - Multisystem conditions > Tumours > Flashcards

Flashcards in Tumours Deck (40)
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1
Q

Name for an epithelial tumour

A

Carcinoma

2
Q

Name for a Mesenchymal tumour

A

Sarcoma

3
Q

Name for a Glial tumour

A

Glioma

4
Q

Name for a lymphoid tumour

A

Lymphoma

5
Q

Name for a Hematopoietic tumour

A

Leukemia

6
Q

Name for a Melanocytic tumour

A

Melanoma

7
Q

TNM staging

A

Tumour - extent/spread
Nodes
Mes - Distant/local

8
Q

Clinical presentation of a cancer survivor

A

Fatigue, myalgia, arthralgia, bone health, peripheral neuropathy, deconditioned

9
Q

Types of lung cancer

A
Small cell 
Non-small cell 
- Squamous cell 
- Adenocarcinoma 
- Large cell
10
Q

Where does 20-25% o small cell lung cancers develop

A

Bronchial cel mucosa

11
Q

Small cell lung cancers spread ____ and met ____

A

rapid

early

12
Q

Where do squamous cell lung cancers arise

A

Central portion near hilum

13
Q

Squamous cell lung cancers spread ___ and met ____

A

slow

late

14
Q

Adenocarcinoma lung cancers spread ____ and met ____

A

slow to mod

early

15
Q

Where do adenocarcinomas lung cancers met to

A

lungs, brain, and others organs

16
Q

Large cell lung cancers spread ___ to which organs?

A

rapidly
Kidney
Liver
Adrenal and other organs

17
Q

Do large cell lung cancers have a good or poor prognosis

A

poor prognosis

18
Q

6 types of brain tumours

A
  1. Intracerebral primary
  2. Intracerebral metastatic
  3. Intra spina
  4. Low grade astrocytoma
  5. Medulloblastoma
  6. Neuromas
19
Q

Where do intra cerebral metastatic brain tumour come from? how does the brain compensate for them

A

Come from lung, breast, prostrate,

compensate by dec brain tissue, CSF and blood flow volume

20
Q

Intraspinal tumour
S&S
Rx

A
  • Nerve root pain
  • worst @ night
  • cough
  • radicular pain

Rx surgery or radiation

21
Q

Which brain tumour has a good survival rate?

A

Low grade astrocytoma

** if treated early

22
Q

Which type of brain tumour frequently mets to other areas of brain and spine

A

Medulloblastoma

23
Q

Neurom S&S

A
  • CN 8 (vestibular)
  • head ache
  • seizure
  • nausea, vomit
  • cognition and behaviour
24
Q

4 types of connective tissue tumour

A
  • Osteosarcoma
  • Synovial sarcoma
  • Osteoid osteoma
  • prostate
25
Q

Where do Osteosarcoma develop? what are their symptoms

A

End of long bones

produce pain

26
Q

What does an osteosarcoma look like on an x-ray? are they primarily primary or secondary tumours?

A

X-ray moth eaten appearance

usually secondary, primary is rare (can occur in youth)

27
Q

Osteosarcoma Rx

A

Surgery

28
Q

Where do synovial sarcomas develop?

S&S ?

A

Usually in larger joints

Swelling and instability

29
Q

Synovial sarcoma Rx

A

surgery +/-chemo/rad

30
Q

Where may synovial sarcomas met to?

A

may met to bone, may come from breast, lung, prostate, thyroid

31
Q

Are osteoid osteoma’s benign or malignant?

A

Benign

32
Q

Osteoid osteoma S&S

A

exercise related bone pain and tenderness, abolition of symptoms with aspirin,

33
Q

Osteoid osteoma Rx

A

ablation, ethanol, laser

34
Q

Prostate tumour Rx

A
  • Surgery
  • external beam radiation
  • brachytherapy
  • androgen deprivation therapy
35
Q

3 types of skin tumours

A
  • Basal cell carcinoma
  • Squamous cell carcinoma
  • malignant melanoma
36
Q

Which skin tumour is the most common?

A

Basal cell carcinoma

37
Q

Basal cell carcinoma - high or low risk of spreading? appearance?

A

Low

Translucent and red in colour

38
Q

Squamous cell carcinoma - high or low risk of spreading? Appearance?

A

High risk

Solid skin tumor - often volcano shaped

39
Q

Malignant melanoma - high or low risk of spreading?

A

HIgh - most dangerous

40
Q

ABCD rule for skin cancer

A

Asymmetry
Border
Colour
Diameter