Can a goiter be removed

Can a goiter be removed?

What's Goiter?

The thyroid gland in the neck, near the base of the neck, enlarges abnormally. This is called a goiter. It can cause neck swelling and interfere with thyroid hormone levels. Goiter is the swelling of the thyroid gland caused by nodules or diffuse enlargement.

A butterfly-shaped gland below the Adam's apple is the thyroid. It regulates metabolism, body temperature, heart rate, and digestion through its T3 and T4 hormones. Iodine deficiency is the main cause worldwide, and autoimmune thyroid disease is also important in India.

Goiter
Goiter 


Goiter types

The kind is described. Hormonal Status

  • Simple (Diffuse) Goiter is a uniform swelling of the thyroid gland. Normal or altered by reason.
  • Nodular Goiter is a single lump (nodule) in the thyroid. Possibly affects hormone levels.
  • A multinodular goiter causes irregular enlargement due to many nodules. Nontoxic or toxic (overactive).
  • The toxic goiter causes hyperthyroidism due to increased hormone production in the thyroid. Thyroid hormone excess.
  • A nontoxic goiter is an enlarged thyroid with appropriate hormone levels. Normal thyroid hormones.
  • Benign or malignant thyroid tumors cause neoplastic goiter enlargement. Variable by tumor kind.

Important Notes

  • Simple goiter is commonly iodine-deficient.
  • Nodular and multinodular goiters in older persons may progress.
  • Toxic goiter causes Hyperthyroidism symptoms, such as weight loss, palpitations, and heat intolerance in Graves' disease.
  • Usually asymptomatic, nontoxic goiter can produce neck swelling or pressure.
  • To rule out thyroid cancer, neoplastic goiter must be carefully examined

Risks and Factors

  • Large goiters can impair swallowing, breathing, and hoarseness.
  • Iodine deficiency is still a primary cause, but autoimmune thyroid disease is rising.
  • Treatment varies by type and severity and includes observation, medicine, radioactive iodine or surgery.
The video explains the ways to treat thyroid goiter without surgery



Treatments for Multinodular Goiter

1. Observation

  • Normal thyroid function may require regular monitoring for small, asymptomatic goiters.
  • Changes are monitored using ultrasounds and thyroid function testing.

2. Drug

  • For hypothyroidism, levothyroxine is used. Reduces TSH stimulation to decrease the goitre.
  • If hyperthyroidism develops, methimazole reduces hormone synthesis.
  • Beta-blockers are used to treat palpitations and tremors associated with toxic multinodular goiter.

3. Radioiodine therapy

  • Oral; it specifically kills thyroid tissue.
  • Gout and hormone production decrease.
  • May need permanent thyroid hormone replacement.

4. Surgery (Thyroidectomy)

Recommended if:

  • Goiter causes: Hoarseness Difficulty swallowing Difficulty breathing
  • Thyroid nodules suggest malignancy.
  • Goiter is cosmetically significant or considerable
  • Thyroid removal can be partial or total.
  • Usually, thyroid hormone replacement is needed after surgery.

Risks and Factors

  • Large goiters can compress the trachea or esophagus.
  • Most nodules are benign; however, a biopsy may be needed to rule out cancer.
  • Goiter can reappear if underlying causes like iodine deficiency are not treated.
  • Rural areas still have an iodine shortage, but autoimmune thyroid disease is on the rise.

Self-Care, Prevention

  • Consume enough iodized salt, shellfish, and dairy.
  • Regular thyroid exams if you have a family history of thyroid illness.
  • Avoid excessive iodine supplementation, which might aggravate thyroid disease.

Surgical risks for multinodular goiter

Multinodular goiter surgery (thyroidectomy) is safe but has hazards like any major operation. These hazards depend on goiter size, surgical extent (partial vs. whole thyroid ectomy), and patient health.

Common Surgery Risks

  • Neck bleeding: Rare but can restrict the airway.
  • Due to the thyroid's robust blood supply, infection is rare yet possible.
  • Voice alterations: Recurrent laryngeal nerve injury can induce hoarseness or permanent voice changes.
  • Hypocalcemia: Accidental parathyroid gland removal or injury can cause tingling, cramping, and convulsions.
  • Hypothyroidism: Thyroid hormone replacement is needed forever after thyroid removal.
  • Rare yet dangerous airway blockage owing to edema or hemorrhage.

Rare but Serious Risks

  • Permanent nerve damage: Speech and swallowing are affected.
  • Scarring: Cosmetic issue, but contemporary methods reduce it.
  • Rare complication of uncontrolled hyperthyroidism: thyroid storm.

Risk Reduction

  • A skilled thyroid surgeon should undertake surgery to reduce complications.
  • Imaging, thyroid function testing, and biopsies are preoperative evaluations.
  • Postoperative monitoring detects bleeding, calcium imbalance, and airway difficulties early.

Goiter causes

  • Iodine deficiency: Most frequent worldwide; thyroid hormone production requires it.
  • Hashimoto's thyroiditis and Graves' disease are autoimmune illnesses.
  • Nodules in the thyroid can cause unequal enlargement.
  • Drugs: Some affect thyroid function.
  • Consuming too much cabbage, soy, and millet may cause goiter.
  • Hormonal changes can increase the thyroid during pregnancy and puberty.

Causes of female goiter

Goiter in women is often caused by hormonal fluctuations, dietary variables, and autoimmune diseases. Thyroid diseases are more common in women due to estrogen and pregnancy.

The Causes of Goiter in Women

  • Most common global cause: Iodine deficiency. Thyroid enlargement compensates for iodine deficiency.
  • Women are more likely to have Hashimoto's thyroiditis and Graves' disease.
  • Puberty, pregnancy, and menopause all bring changing hormone levels that may cause the thyroid to swell.
  • Pregnancy-related goiter: Low iodine intake might increase thyroid hormone demand and enlargement.
  • Consuming too much cabbage, broccoli, soy, or millet may impair thyroid hormone synthesis.

Certain medications (such as lithium or amiodarone) can alter thyroid function.

  • A family history of thyroid disease increases risk.
  • Thyroid nodules: Localized or widespread enlargement from benign or cancerous masses.
  • Why Women Are More Affected
  • Men are 5–8 times less likely to suffer thyroid issues than women.
  • Estrogen affects the immune system, so females have a higher incidence of autoimmune thyroid disease.
  • The thyroid is at risk throughout pregnancy and after.

Care & Prevention

  • Consume enough iodized salt, shellfish, and dairy.
  • Regular thyroid exams, especially during pregnancy or if family history exists.
  • Eat well and avoid goitrogenic foods.
  • Preventing autoimmune thyroid hypertrophy with early treatment.

Symptoms

  • Visible neck base edema.
  • Fatigue, cold intolerance, dry skin, constipation, and memory problems are low thyroid symptoms.
  • Weight loss, fast heartbeat, heat intolerance, perspiration, and irritability are hyperthyroidism symptoms.
  • Symptoms of obstruction include swallowing, breathing, hoarseness, and snoring.

What are the 10 thyroid danger signs?

  • Thyroid enlargement causes neck edema.
  • palpitations or irregular heartbeat
  • jerking.
  • heated skin and profuse sweating.
  • Your palms are crimson.
  • loose nails.
  • - Itchy rash (urticaria) - Patchy hair loss or thinning.

Manage multinodular goiter medication

Medication Choices

1. Levothyroxine

  • Useful for hypothyroidism.
  • Thyroid hormone replacement normalizes metabolism.
  • Lowering TSH may reduce thyroid hypertrophy.

2. Anti-thyroid medications

  • Example: Methimazole or PTU.
  • For toxic multinodular goiter, it reduces hormone synthesis.
  • Usually administered temporarily before radioactive iodine or surgery.

3. Beta-blockers

  • Control hyperthyroidism symptoms (palpitations, tremors, anxiety) rather than treating the thyroid.
  • Commonly used until definite treatment.

4. Radioiodine supplement

Sometimes, thyroid-shrinking medicine is used to limit hormone output.

Lifelong hormone replacement may be needed.

Considerations

  • Multinodular goiter rarely shrinks with medication.
  • A big, obstructive, or worrisome goiter may require radioactive iodine therapy or surgery for long-term management.
  • Regular thyroid function testing and ultrasounds are necessary.

Practicable Management

  • Use beta-blockers to manage symptoms.
  • Treat hyperthyroidism with anti-thyroid medications.
  • Levothyroxine suppression therapy may work in some circumstances.
  • If symptoms continue or complications emerge, switch to radioactive iodine or surgery.

Eat to prevent goiter

To prevent goiter, eat enough iodized salt and iodine-rich foods while balancing selenium, zinc, and iron. Eat less goitrogenic foods, such as raw cruciferous vegetables and soy, to safeguard your thyroid.

Nutritional Essentials for Thyroid Health

  • Iodine: Crucial for thyroid hormone synthesis.
  • Sources: Iodized salt, cod, shrimp, dairy, eggs, seaweed.
  • 150 mcg/day is recommended for adults; 1,100 is safe.
  • Selenium protects thyroid cells and enhances hormone metabolism.
  • Brazil nuts, tuna, poultry, eggs, and legumes are all examples of protein-rich foods.
  • Zinc: Activates thyroid hormones.
  • Oysters, meat, pumpkin seeds, chickpeas, and cashews.
  • Iron: T4 to T3 hormone conversion requires iron.
  • Red meat, poultry, lentils, spinach, and raisins are all examples of foods that are commonly consumed.

Limit Goitrogenic Foods

  • Broccoli, cabbage, kale, and Brussels sprouts are safe in moderation, although cooking lessens goitrogenicity.
  • Tofu, soy milk, and edamame.
  • Lima beans, millet.
  • Unpasteurized milk.
  • If ingested in large amounts, these foods inhibit iodine uptake, especially in iodine-deficient people.

Practical Prevention Advice

  • Cook with iodized salt daily.
  • Seafood twice a week provides natural iodine.
  • Eat 1–2 Brazil nuts daily for selenium.
  • Increase iron absorption by eating vitamin C-rich meals like citrus fruits.
  • Cook cruciferous vegetables instead of eating so much raw.
  • Avoid excessive iodine supplementation, which might aggravate thyroid disease.

Lifestyle factors

  • Regular exercise boosts metabolism.
  • Stress treatment (yoga, meditation) lowers thyroid strain.
  • Women, who are more susceptible to thyroid issues, need regular thyroid examination.

Conclusion

Goiter is thyroid gland enlargement caused by iodine shortage, autoimmune thyroid disease, hormonal abnormalities, or thyroid nodules.

Early detection and treatment can prevent and treat goiter. Hormonal factors make women more susceptible, thyroid checks are crucial. Diet, medical attention, and monitoring can control most instances and prevent serious problems.


How to treat pulmonary edema

How to treat pulmonary edema?

Explain pulmonary edema

Oxygen exchange is blocked by fluid in the alveoli of the lungs. Fluid builds up in the lungs' air sacs, making breathing more difficult, in pulmonary edema. It is usually caused by heart failure but can also be caused by infections, poisons, trauma, or extreme altitude. Emergencies like acute pulmonary edema require rapid treatment.

pulmonary edema
pulmonary edema

Types:

  • Cardiogenic pulmonary edema is caused by congestive heart failure, heart attack or valve dysfunction.
  • Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema can be caused by diseases, poisons, trauma, pharmacological responses, and acute respiratory distress syndrome.
  • High-altitude pulmonary edema: People rapidly ascending to high elevations can develop high-altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE).

Diagnosis

  • Exam: Listening for lung crackling or wheezing
  • Chest CT/X-ray: Finds fluid buildup
  • ECG and echocardiogram: Heart function checks
  • Monitor oxygen levels and causes with blood testing.

Groups at Risk

  • Heart disease and hypertension are more common among seniors.
  • Diabetes increases the risk of heart and renal failure.
  • Smoking causes lung and cardiovascular damage.
  • High-altitude travellers: Possible HAPE in the Himalayas or Andes
  • CKD patients: Fluid overload and electrolyte imbalance

Risks, complications

  • Life-threatening emergency: Untreated acute pulmonary edema can induce respiratory failure or cardiac arrest.
  • Repeated incidents can cause chronic lung disease or heart failure.
  • High-altitude risk: Indian Himalayan climbers and hikers should acclimatize carefully to avoid HAPE.

Pulmonary edema

Sudden Pulmonary Edema

  • They arise suddenly and can kill
  • Severe breathlessness, especially when lying down or active
  • Foaming, bloody cough
  • Gasping or wheezing
  • Fast or irregular pulse
  • Chilly skin and profuse sweating
  • Restlessness, impending dread, anxiety
  • Blue lips or skin (cyanosis) from low oxygen

Prolonged Pulmonary Edema

  • They evolve gradually.
  • Sitting up relieves nighttime breathlessness
  • Constant cough, sometimes worse at night
  • Reduced exercise tolerance and fatigue
  • Edema (leg and foot swelling)
  • Fluid retention causes rapid weight gain.
  • Shortness of breath when moving or lying down

Symptoms of HAPE

  • Relevant to Indian Himalayan trekkers/climbers:
  • Commonly first sign: headache
  • Shortness of breath during exercise and rest
  • Dry cough with pink sputum
  • Tightness and chest discomfort
  • Fast heartbeat, weakness
  • Low fever, nighttime symptoms intensify

Emergency Care When

  • Sudden breathlessness or suffocation
  • Coughing up pink, foamy sputum
  • Gasping/wheezing while sweating
  • Bluish skin, dizziness, or confusion

Pulmonary edema symptoms might mimic other lung or heart diseases; immediate medical evaluation is necessary.

The video explains how pulmonary edema damages the lungs



Treatment for pulmonary edema?

Pulmonary edema treatment involves oxygenation, diuretics, and addressing the cause, such as heart failure, infection, or high altitude exposure. Urgent medical emergencies require hospitalization.

Fast Emergency Care

  • Oxygen: Nasal cannula, face mask, or mechanical ventilation if severe.
  • Furosemide (Lasix) and other IV diuretics eliminate excess lung fluid.
  • Blood pressure control: Nitroglycerin and nitroprusside lower heart and lung pressure.
  • Inotropes: Improve heart pumping in severe heart failure.
  • Critical patients may require positive airway pressure or ventilators.

Addressing Root Causes

  • ACE drugs, beta-blockers, anticoagulants, lifestyle adjustments for heart failure.
  • If pneumonia or sepsis causes infection, antibiotics or antivirals.
  • In high-altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE), descend, use oxygen, and take nifedipine or acetazolamide.
  • Stop drug/toxin exposure and treat inflammation with steroids or support.

Long-term management, self-care

  • Salt restriction: Under 2,300 mg/day to decrease fluid retention.
  • Stop smoking: Protects lungs and heart.
  • Weight control: Lowers heart and lung strain.
  • Regular exercise improves cardiovascular health (with doctor consent).
  • Flu and pneumonia immunizations reduce infection risk.

Emergent pulmonary edema care

Emergency first aid for pulmonary edema is to keep the patient alive until medical help comes. It prioritizes breathing, fluid reduction, and emergency calls.

What Not to Do

  • Laying the person down worsens fluid pooling.
  • Pulmonary edema can rapidly progress to respiratory collapse, so seek medical attention.
  • Give oral drugs only if prescribed and safe.

High-Altitude Pulmonary Edema

For climbers/trekkers:

  • Reduce altitude promptly.
  • Administer oxygen if available.
  • Keep warm and rest to lessen the strain.
  • Pulmonary edema is life-threatening, and first aid just delays hospitalization.

How do you detect lung fluid?

Typical Warning Signs

  • Sudden breathlessness, especially when resting flat or active
  • Pink or blood-tinged foamy sputum from cough
  • Gasping or wheezing
  • A racing heart and palpitations
  • Blue lips or skin (cyanosis) from low oxygen
  • Heart failure can cause leg and foot swelling.
  • Low oxygen delivery fatigues and weakens

Doctors Confirm Lung Fluid

  • Chest X-ray: Lung fluid accumulation.
  • CT scan: Detailed imaging.
  • Physical exam: Stethoscope-heard crackling sounds.
  • Blood oxygen test: Reports low oxygen.
  • In case of cardiac failure, an echocardiogram is performed.

Most common cause of pulmonary edema?

  • Heart-related pulmonary edema
  • Congestive heart failure: The main cause is a weak or stiff heart muscle cannot pump blood.
  • Heart attack: Muscle damage slows pumping.
  • Valve disease: Leaky valves raise pulmonary pressure.
  • Chronic hypertension stresses the heart, causing fluid backup.
  • Heart arrhythmias restrict circulation.

Causes not related to the heart

  • These less prevalent causes can cause pulmonary edema:
  • ARDS: Severe inflammation from infection, trauma, or sepsis.
  • Pneumonia: Fluid-leaking lung infection.
  • HAPE: Rapid ascent above 8,000 feet can induce fluid accumulation.
  • In kidney failure, fluid retention leaks into the lungs.
  • Drugs and breathed poisons destroy lung tissue.

Survival rate for pulmonary edema

  • Hospitalized acute cases: Mortality 5–20%. The treatment depends on ICU, oxygen, diuretics, and therapy timeline.
  • Hospital mortality due to heart disease is 26-31%. Resurgence and worse long-term results.
  • 4-year outlook: 57-70% mortality. Coronary artery disease worsens.
  • Non-cardiac causes: Inadequate ARDS, trauma, or sepsis-related edema increases risk.

Survival Factors

  • Heart failure responds better to treatment than ARDS or trauma-related edema.
  • Age: Older patients die faster.
  • Prognosis worsens with diabetes, renal, and vascular illness.
  • Treatment speed: Early oxygen, diuretics, and ICU care boost survival.
  • Multiple incidents increase long-term mortality.

Survivability Improvement

  • Immediately treat emergencies
  • Aggressive heart disease treatment: Revascularization or valve surgery improves outcomes.
  • Lifestyle changes: Stop smoking, cut sodium, lose weight, and control blood pressure.
  • Flu and pneumonia immunisations minimise pulmonary edema.

Pulmonary edema risk factors

Heart disease (particularly congestive heart failure), high blood pressure, kidney illness, and high altitudes are the main risk factors for pulmonary edema. Severe infections, chest injuries, drugs, and toxin inhalation are other dangers. Patients with certain diseases or exposures are more likely to develop lung fluid.

Risk factors for the heart

  • Coronary artery disease: Narrow arteries reduce cardiac pumping.
  • Attack: Heart muscle damage raises lung pressure.
  • Cardiomyopathy: Heart weakness or stiffness increases risk.
  • Leaky valves cause fluid backup.
  • Chronic high blood pressure enlarges and weakens the heart.
  • Irregular rhythms impede circulation.

Risk factors not related to the heart

  • Severe inflammation from trauma, infection, or pneumonia causes ARDS.
  • Kidney disease: Lungs fill with fluid.
  • Cirrhosis and fluid imbalance exacerbate liver damage.
  • Rapid elevation above 8,000 ft can cause HAPE.
  • Drug reactions: NSAIDs, chemotherapy, heroin, cocaine.
  • Smoking, chemical fumes, or aspiration expose us to toxins.
  • Near drowning: Inhaled water builds up.
Also, read https://www.baptisthealth.com/care-services/conditions-treatments/pulmonary-edema.

Prevention Advice

  • Control hypertension and diabetes with food and medicine.
  • Avoid smoking and toxins.
  • Check kidney and liver disorders regularly.
  • If instructed, ascend slowly at high elevations and use protective drugs.
  • Reduce fluid retention with a low-salt diet.

Conclusion

In conclusion, pulmonary edema is a dangerous disorder that causes fluid buildup in the lungs, usually owing to heart failure but possibly from infections, trauma, or high-altitude exposure. It may appear immediately as a medical emergency or gradually.

Without treatment, pulmonary edema is fatal, although early detection and treatment enhance survival rates. Managing heart disease, blood pressure, and kidney function affects long-term outcomes.


Why do people get lung cancer without smoking

Why do people get lung cancer without smoking?

Lung Cancer Without Smoking

One in five cases of lung cancer occurs in adults who have never smoked or smoked fewer than 100 cigarettes. About 10–20% of lung cancers worldwide are diagnosed in nonsmokers. Radon exposure, air pollution, secondhand smoke, occupational toxins like asbestos, and genetic abnormalities like EGFR or ALK are major causes in India and worldwide.

lung cancer without smoking

Lung cancer risk factors

Types:

  • Adenocarcinoma: Most common in nonsmokers (50–60%).
  • Squamous cell carcinoma: 10-20%.
  • Small-cell lung cancer: 6–8%.

Beyond Smoking: Major Risk Factors

  • Radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer and can build up inside your home.
  • Air pollution: Fine particles from vehicles, factories, and power plants injure lung cells.
  • Secondhand smoke: Annually causes ~7,000 lung cancer deaths in the U.S. Workplace chemicals: Asbestos, diesel exhaust, arsenic, silica, chromium.
  • Mutations such as EGFR, ALK, ROS1, MET, RET, BRAF, and NTRK are more frequent in non-smokers.

Same symptoms as smokers

  • A persistent cough or bloody cough
  • Breathlessness or chest discomfort
  • Wheezing, hoarseness, weariness
  • Diagnostic delays are common when symptoms are late.

Treatment, prognosis

  • NSCLC: Localized surgery is possible; targeted therapy (EGFR/ALK inhibitors like osimertinib or lorlatinib) increases survival.
  • Usually advanced, SCLC is treated with chemotherapy/radiation.
  • Survival: Non-smokers with actionable mutations live 3–5 years with advanced NSCLC, compared to 1–2 years without mutations.

Prevention Tips: 

  • Test dwellings for radon (Indian kits are available).
  • Stay away from smoke and pollution.
  • Use PPE if exposed to workplace chemicals.
  • Air pollution should be monitored, and outside activities limited.
  • Discuss family history with your doctor.

Lung cancer prevention for nonsmokers

Non-smokers can minimise their lung cancer risk by avoiding radon, air pollution, and secondhand smoke and living a nutritious diet and active lifestyle. Test dwellings for radon and limit outdoor activities on high AQI days in India, where urban air pollution is a big issue.

Important Non-Smoker Prevention Strategies

  • Avoid secondhand smoke.
  • Avoid smoking areas; even brief exposure increases danger.
  • Radon test
  • Radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer. Low-cost radon test kits and mitigation systems can decrease indoor levels.
  • Take in less air pollution
  • Monitor AQI in Chennai and minimize outdoor activity on pollutant days. If exposure is inevitable, wear N95 masks.

Workplace safety

  • Wear protective gear if exposed to asbestos, diesel exhaust, arsenic, silica, or chromium.
  • Dietary health
  • A diet rich in fruits and vegetables may minimize risk. Avoid high-dose cancer-causing vitamins like beta-carotene.

Regularly exercise

  • Exercise helps your lungs and lowers your chances of getting cancer.
  • Knowing family history
  • If lung cancer runs in your family, explore genetic testing and monitoring with your doctor.

Important Notes

  • Genetic mutations (EGFR, ALK, ROS1) can cause lung cancer in non-smokers despite all measures.
  • Screening limits: Currently, non-smokers should not undergo routine lung cancer screening due to risks outweighing benefits.
  • Early detection: Seek medical attention for chronic coughing, chest pain, or bloody coughing.

Nonsmokers' Early Lung Cancer Detection

Non-smokers are not checked like heavy smokers, making early lung cancer detection difficult. Understanding risk factors, symptoms, and new diagnostic technologies can improve outcomes.

Current Methods

  • CT low-dose scans
  • Standard for high-risk smokers, not advised for nonsmokers. Research is investigating whether non-smokers with family history or genetic alterations may benefit.
  • Being aware of symptoms
  • See a doctor if you have a cough that lasts a long time, pain in your chest, trouble breathing, loss of weight, or coughing up blood.

Biomarker testing

  • Liquid biopsies are being examined to detect tumour DNA or proteins before symptoms arise.
  • Profiling genetic risk
  • EGFR, ALK, ROS1, and other mutations are more prevalent in nonsmokers. Finding them can aid early detection and treatment.

Risk-Based Monitoring

  • Housing should be tested for radon, especially in areas with large natural concentrations.
  • Air pollution monitoring: Limiting exposure to AQI in Chennai may lessen risk.
  • Family history tracking: Lung cancer descendants may need more medical attention.

Lung cancer biomarker blood testing

Lung cancer biomarker blood tests can detect tumour DNA, RNA, or proteins in the blood, providing a less intrusive technique to detect cancer early and guide individualised treatment. No blood test can definitively identify lung cancer, although research reveals encouraging accuracy rates (up to 90% in some trials), especially for non-smokers without screening options.

Tests for Biomarkers in Blood

  • EGFR, ALK, ROS1, KRAS, and other cancer-causing DNA alterations.
  • RNA activity: Determines tumor cell gene activity.
  • Protein levels: PD-L1 overproduction guides immunotherapy.
  • Advanced sequencing can detect tumor DNA fragments in the bloodstream.

Current Uses

  • Treatment advice: Helps clinicians chose targeted medicines like osimertinib for EGFR mutations and lorlatinib for ALK.
  • Monitoring response: Detects resistance mutations and therapy efficacy.
  • Biomarker panels for early detection in non-smokers are being tested in many clinical trials.

Research Highlights

  • An enzyme sensor panel from 2024 properly identified lung cancer in 90% of patients.
  • NGS is increasingly utilized to evaluate ctDNA, providing a complete perspective of tumor mutations.
  • Repeated liquid samples can track disease progression and are less intrusive than tissue biopsies.

Risks and Limits

  • Blood testing cannot yet replace CT scans or biopsies.
  • Fake positives/negatives: Biomarkers may be present in unrelated disorders or may be missing early in the disease.
  • Access and cost: Advanced sequencing testing in India may be pricey and scarce.

Lung Cancer Liquid Biopsy

Liquid biopsy detects tumor DNA, RNA, or CTCs shed into the circulation without surgery. It is changing lung cancer diagnosis, monitoring, and treatment, especially for non-smokers who get genetic alterations rather than smoking-related damage.

Works How

  • Mutations in EGFR, ALK, ROS1, KRAS, and other ctDNA are detected.
  • CTCs: Identify intact cancer cells in the blood.
  • Small exosomes transmit tumor RNA and proteins.

Clinical Uses

  • Early detection: Though not a regular screening, liquid biopsy can discover cancer before symptoms arise.
  • Selects targeted therapy (e.g., osimertinib for EGFR mutations, lorlatinib for ALK).
  • Monitoring response: Detects resistance mutations and therapy efficacy.
  • Detects relapse before imaging.

Latest lung cancer liquid biopsy research

Liquid biopsy for lung cancer is improving early identification, minimal residual disease surveillance, and precision treatment guiding, according to 2025 research. Proteomic profiling, whole-genome sequencing, and ctDNA analysis are useful techniques for smokers and non-smokers, according to WCLC 2025 studies.

2025 Research Highlights

Profile proteomics

  • Determines protein biomarkers that predict lung cancer risk, improving nodule diagnosis.
  • Tumor-informed WGS tests detected minimal residual disease (MRD) in resectable NSCLC with high sensitivity. MRD elimination after neoadjuvant osimertinib or chemo-immunotherapy improved survival.

Tumour DNA circulates.

  • Dynamic subclonal evolution found in longitudinal ctDNA analysis explained early treatment resistance. Improved outcomes were connected to MET exon 14 skipping and BRAF-mutated tumour ctDNA clearance.

Signature microRNAs

  • Radiation stratification and immunotherapy toxicities are being investigated with emerging indicators such as circulating microRNAs.

Small-cell lung cancer

  • MRD surveillance with ctDNA-guided consolidation immunotherapy after chemotherapy and detected progression earlier.

Risks and Challenges

  • Integration into practice: Cost and accessibility are issues, especially in India.
  • Early-stage illness sensitivity: Liquid biopsy may miss tiny cancers.
  • Standardization: Lab procedures differ, resulting in conflicting results.

Conclusion

Non-smokers account for 10–20% of lung cancer cases, often caused by environmental exposures (radon, air pollution, secondhand smoke, and workplace toxins) and genetic abnormalities.

The risk of lung cancer for nonsmokers is disguised. Until universal screening is available, risk reduction, symptom vigilance, and sophisticated diagnostics offer the best hope for early discovery and better results.


The purpose of a humidifier

The purpose of a humidifier

Humidifier-Overview

An indoor humidifier maintains a healthy humidity level (preferably 30–50%) to alleviate dry skin and sinus congestion, while also protecting furnishings and plants. Indoor humidifiers are most effective in hot weather, when air conditioning reduces humidity, thereby alleviating dryness and discomfort.

Best humidifier

What Humidifiers Do

  • For dry air, moisture balance releases water vapor or mist.
  • Treats dry throat, cracked lips, nasal congestion, and allergy/asthma discomfort.
  • Home protection: Protects wood furniture, wallpaper, and houseplants.
  • More comfortable sleep and less static electricity indoors.

Humidifier Types

  • Evaporative wick filter + fan evaporates water. Low-cost, easy upkeep
  • Ultrasonic vibrations create a thin mist. Runs quietly, saves energy
  • Steam vaporiser: Boils water, cools steam. Cheap and effective for colds
  • Whole-house integration with HVACHuge dwellings, constant humidity

Tips for Use

  • Place in bedrooms or living spaces; avoid direct sunlight.
  • Weekly cleaning prevents mould and bacteria.
  • Distilled water reduces mineral accumulation.
  • Monitor humidity at 30–50% with a hygrometer.

Risks and Precautions

  • Mould, dust mites, and asthma can result from over-humidification.
  • Uncleaned humidifiers risk spreading bacteria or white dust.
  • To prevent burns, keep steam vaporizers away from youngsters.

What Humidifiers Do for Congestion

  • Moisture relief: Dry air thickens mucus, hindering drainage. Mucus thins, and breathing is easier with humidifiers.
  • Cilia function: Moist air helps cilia clear mucus and irritants from the respiratory tract.
  • Comfort: Treats symptoms but not causes, such as colds, flu, or allergies.

Top Congestion Humidifiers

Benefits, risks, and considerations

  • Child-safe cool mist moisturizes the air without heat. Mould/bacteria prevention requires periodic cleaning.
  • Warm steam loosens heavy mucous and soothes. Hot water/steam burn risk; greater energy use
  • Flexible dual-mode cool and warm mist. More pricey, needs care

Risks and Precautions

  • Due to mold and dust mites, humidity above 60% might exacerbate allergies.
  • Dirty humidifiers: Spread bacteria and white dust, aggravating respiratory difficulties.
  • Beneficial for allergic rhinitis, although improper maintenance may aggravate dust mite/mould allergies.

When not to use a humidifier

  • High humidity: Tropical climates have outdoor humidity above 70%. Excess moisture inside can cause mould, dust mite and structural damage.
  • If you find mould on walls, ceilings, or around the humidifier, stop using it.
  • Water droplets on walls, soggy furniture, and wet windows suggest over-humidification.
  • Humidifiers can help with congestion, but too much humidity can trigger asthma and allergies.
  • In summer and monsoon, natural humidity is high; humidifiers are unnecessary.
  • Poor maintenance: Bacteria, mold spores, and mineral dust from dirty humidifiers can cause health issues.

Incorrect Use Risks

  • Dust mites and mold thrive in high-humidity conditions and can lead to asthma attacks.
  • Moisture can distort wood, remove paint, and harm electronics.
  • Standing water in tanks breeds bacteria that can spread into the air.

Safe Use Guidelines

  • Use a hygrometer to maintain 30–50% indoor humidity.
  • Use only when necessary: In Chennai, humidifiers are ideal for AC-cooled rooms with dry air.
  • Empty and disinfect tanks monthly to avoid contamination.
  • Select the proper type: Cool mist models are safer for families, while warm mist may treat colds but burns.

For congestion, what humidifier works best?

The ideal humidifier for nasal congestion depends on your needs. Warm mist humidifiers effectively loosen heavy mucus and soothe irritated sinuses, while cool mist humidifiers are safer for children and give year-round relief without raising room temperature. Flexible multiple mist modes are available in many current versions.

Compare Warm vs. Cool Mist for Congestion

  • Warm mist: Nighttime flu/cold relief. Softens heavy mucus, soothes with steam, and destroys bacteria in water. Higher energy use, burn risk
  • Cool mist: Safe for kids and year-round congestion. Air hydration without heat is safer and energy-efficient. Frequent cleaning may spread mineral dust.
  • Dual mode: Seasonal flexibility. Two mist types are adjustable. More pricey, needs attention.

Look for these features

  • Tank capacity: For continuous sleep, larger tanks (4–6L) operate overnight without replenishing.
  • Controlling humidity can prevent over-humidification (recommended range: 40-50% RH).
  • Whisper-quiet variants are ideal for bedrooms.
  • Filter-free ultrasonic devices are easier to clean but require distilled water to prevent white dust.

Expert Picks (2026)

  • Vicks Warm Mist Humidifier— Best for nighttime sinus relief.
  • LEVOIT 2.5L Cool Mist—Quiet, child-safe, long-lasting.
  • Mypurmist Steam Inhaler—Direct, portable warm mist for rapid congestion treatment.
  • Large bedrooms benefit from Homvana 3.6L Cool Mist's long runtime.

How to Use a Humidifier for Congestion?



Using a humidifier properly can reduce congestion. Maintain safe humidity, situate the gadget appropriately, and clean it.

Guide: Steps

  • Select the appropriate humidifier: Warm mist devices break up heavy mucus, while cool mist versions are safer for youngsters and year-round use.
  • Aim for 40–50% relative humidity. Use a hygrometer to avoid overhumidification.
  • It should be 1–2 meters from your bed or chair in the bedroom or living room, away from walls and windows.
  • Overnight use prevents the nasal passages from drying out.
  • Distilled water reduces mineral buildup and lung-irritating “white dust."
  • Regularly clean: Empty and disinfect the tank every 2–3 days to prevent mould and germs.

Precautions

  • Avoid overuse: Mold and dust mites thrive in humidity above 60%, increasing congestion.
  • Avoid burns by keeping heated mist units out of reach of children.
  • If congestion or asthma worsens, cease using the humidifier and recheck humidity levels.

Does a humidifier ease baby congestion?

Humidifiers can benefit babies with congestion, but use them carefully. If a new baby has a cold or allergies, adding moisture to the air helps keep the nasal passages from drying out and makes it easier for the baby to breathe and sleep. Paediatricians recommend cool-mist humidifiers because they’re safer to use on babies.

Baby Benefits

  • This mucus soothes stuffy noses.
  • Sleep better: Less coughing and congestion.
  • Skin comfort: Prevents dry skin and chapped lips in AC rooms.

Best Practices

  • A cool mist humidifier has the lowest burn risk.
  • Bedroom placement: 1–2 meters from crib, not blowing on infant.
  • Maintain 40–50% humidity to prevent mould.
  • Keep bacteria and mould away by emptying and disinfecting daily.
  • Distilled water: Reduces lung-irritating mineral dust.

Precautions

  • Avoid warm mist: Steam burns.
  • Check for mould: Excessive humidity can exacerbate allergies and asthma.
  • Consult a physician if congestion worsens.

Bad Things About Baby Humidifiers

  • Steam vaporizers or warm mist humidifiers can burn if hot water spills or babies are inquisitive.
  • Mold and Dust Mites: Humidity above 50-60% supports the growth of mold and dust mites, which can aggravate asthma and allergies.
  • Humidifiers can transfer bacteria into the air and cause respiratory infections if not cleaned frequently.
  • White dust: Ultrasonic models utilizing tap water may emit mineral particles (“white dust”) that hurt babies' lungs.
  • Humidifier noise might disturb a baby's sleep.
  • Excessive humidity can cause condensation on walls and furniture, producing an unhealthy environment.

Safe Use Guidelines

  • Always use a cool-mist humidifier for infants to minimize burns.
  • Every day, empty and disinfect the tank.
  • Use a hygrometer to maintain 40–50% humidity.
  • Proper placement: 1–2 meters from the crib, without blowing on the baby.
  • Distilled water decreases mineral dust and cleanses.

Conclusion

Humidifiers, used properly, can help relieve congestion. Moistening dry indoor air thins mucus, eases nasal passages, and helps breathing. Choose the proper type, maintain safe humidity levels, and clean the equipment to reap the benefits.

Humidifiers only relieve symptoms, not congestion. Consult a doctor if congestion worsens, is accompanied by fever, or breathing difficulties.


How aggressive is nasopharyngeal cancer?

How aggressive is nasopharyngeal cancer?

What Is Nasopharyngeal Cancer?

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is a rare form of head and neck cancer that begins in the nasopharynx, the upper throat area behind the nose. A cancer that arises in the nasopharynx—the space between the back of the nose and the throat—is known as nasopharyngeal carcinoma. It often starts in the squamous cells, which line the nasopharynx. It is more prevalent in Southeast Asia, especially India, and is closely associated with environmental factors, food, and the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV).

Nasopharyngeal Cancer
Nasopharyngeal Cancer

Symptoms

  • Typical warning indicators consist of:
  • Neck lump (generally painless, enlarged lymph nodes)
  • Chronic ear infections, tinnitus (ear ringing), or hearing loss
  • Nasal problems include bloody saliva, stuffiness, and nosebleeds.
  • Numbness or discomfort in the face
  • headaches, sore throats, and trouble breathing or speaking

Causes and Risk Elements

  • Infection with the Epstein-Barr virus
  • A diet high in meat and fish that have been salt-cured
  • Use of alcohol and tobacco
  • NPC's family history
  • Dust and smoke exposure in the environment
  • Three times more common in men than in women

Diagnosis

  • Physicians may utilise:
  • Nasopharyngoscopy combined with biopsies
  • PET, MRI, and CT scans
  • Blood testing for EBV
  • Neurological examinations and hearing testing

Options for Treatment

  • The primary treatment is radiation therapy.
  • Chemoradiation or chemotherapy
  • Therapy that is specifically targeted (for advanced cases)
  • Surgery (rare because of the challenging position; occasionally used to remove lymph nodes)

Prognosis

  • 5-year survival rate overall: approximately 63%
  • About 82% of localized NPCs survive
  • Spread regionally: about 72% survival
  • About 49% of patients with metastatic illness survive
Also read https://www.genesiscare.com/uk/condition/cancer/head-and-neck-cancer/nasopharyngeal-cancer.

What is the primary cause of cancer of the nasopharynx?

Although the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is the primary cause of nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC), other factors like nutrition (salt-cured foods), tobacco, alcohol, genetics, and environmental exposures also play significant roles. In Asia, notably India, where the disease is more prevalent, EBV is closely associated with NPC cases.

Principal Cause

  • EBV, or Epstein-Barr virus
  • A common virus that typically results in moderate disease (such as mononucleosis).
  • In certain people, an EBV infection causes DNA alterations in nasopharyngeal cells, which can result in malignancy and unchecked growth.
  • Since EBV is seen in the majority of NPC tumors, it is the most likely cause.

Additional Risk Elements

  • Salt-cured foods: When exposure starts in childhood, the chemicals released during cooking—particularly salted fish—increase risk.
  • Alcohol and tobacco: Excessive usage greatly increases risk.
  • Genetics: A family history of NPC increases susceptibility.
  • Environmental exposure: Inhaling smoke and dust increases the risk.
  • ANCESTRY AND GEOGRAPHY NPC is more common among people living in the Arctic, northern Africa, southern China, and Southeast Asia.

How long have you had cancer of the nasopharynx?

Nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC) patients typically live for many years following diagnosis, particularly if the disease is discovered early. Overall, the 5-year survival rate is roughly 63%; however, it varies from 40% for advanced, distant dissemination to 86% for localised disease.

Factors Affecting Lifespan

  • Stage at diagnosis: Improved outcomes with early diagnosis.
  • Treatment response: For localised illness, radiation and chemoradiation are quite successful.
  • Age and health: Patients who are younger and in better health typically have longer lifespans.
  • High levels of EBV DNA in the blood before therapy may be a sign of a worse prognosis.
  • Access to care: Specialized cancer centers increase survival rates.

Important Lessons

  • Chemotherapy and radiation are frequently effective treatments for early-stage NPC.
  • After being diagnosed, the majority of patients survive for at least five years, and many go on to live considerably longer.

Advanced situations

Treatment for nasopharyngeal carcinoma

Since the position of the tumour makes surgery challenging, radiation therapy and chemotherapy are typically used to treat nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). While severe instances may need immunotherapy or targeted therapy in addition to chemoradiation, early-stage NPC is frequently curable.

Principal Options for Treatment

The video explains the treatment for Nasopharyngeal cancer 


Radiation treatment

Primary care is available for most stages.

To accurately target the tumour while protecting healthy tissue, intensity-modulated radiation treatment (IMRT) is frequently utilized.

Chemotherapy

  • It is frequently used in conjunction with radiation (chemoradiation).
  • Standard medications include cisplatin.
  • This drug is used for recurring diseases or for stage II and above.

Chemoradiation

  • Combination.
  • Increases survival when compared to radiation alone.

Targeted treatment

  • Certain cancer cell proteins are the target of medications such as cetuximab (Erbitux).
  • This approach is used in advanced or recurrent situations.

Immunotherapy

  • Pembrolizumab and nivolumab are examples of checkpoint inhibitors that support the immune system's assault on cancer cells.
  • considered for a resistant or advanced NPC.

Surgery

  • Due to the challenging location, it is rarely used.
  • This procedure is occasionally carried out to remove neck lymph nodes if they do not improve with previous therapies.

Stage-by-Stage Treatment Method

Stage I: Just radiation therapy

Stage II Chemoradiation (radiation with cisplatin)

Stage III: Chemoradiation → Induction Chemotherapy

Stages IVA and IVB:  Immunotherapy, chemotherapy, and radiation therapy

For recurrent NPC: Re-radiation, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and surgery  

 Adverse Reactions

  • Dry mouth, hearing loss, and trouble swallowing are side effects of radiation therapy.
  • Chemotherapy: reduced immunity, nausea, and exhaustion.
  • Immunotherapy and targeted therapy: rash and inflammation of the immune system.

Lessons Learned

  • Radiation and chemotherapy form the basis of NPC treatment.
  • Early identification provides the best chance of a cure.
  • In more advanced cases, newer treatments such as immunotherapy may be useful.

Can nasopharyngeal carcinoma be cured?

When identified early and treated with contemporary medicines, nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) may be curable.

Curability Elements

Diagnosis stage

  • Radiation or chemoradiation is frequently effective in curing early-stage NPC (limited to the nasopharynx or adjacent lymph nodes).
  • Chemotherapy, targeted therapy, or immunotherapy can still be used to control advanced-stage NPC (spread to distant organs), although it is more difficult to cure.

Reaction to treatment

  • The remarkable sensitivity of NPC cells to radiation therapy makes it exceedingly effective.
  • Radiation and chemotherapy together improve cure rates.

Availability of sophisticated medical treatment

Specialised oncology facilities that provide immunotherapy and IMRT (intensity-modulated radiation therapy) increase the likelihood of recovery.

Conclusion

A rare but dangerous condition that starts in the upper neck behind the nose is called nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection is the primary cause, although environmental, genetic, and dietary variables also play a role.

Early detection is crucial because doctors can significantly improve survival rates by discovering cancer before it spreads. Lifestyle and preventive actions, such as abstaining from alcohol, tobacco, and salt-cured foods, can decrease risk. Many patients enjoy long lives with contemporary treatment, particularly if they receive an early diagnosis.

Although nasopharyngeal cancer is closely associated with EBV, it can be successfully treated with prompt detection and cutting-edge treatments. Early detection depends on being aware of signs such as nose hemorrhage, hearing loss, and neck tumours.


Merkel cell carcinoma spreads fast. Don’t ignore.

Merkel cell carcinoma spreads fast. Don’t ignore. 

Merkel Cell Carcinoma: Overview 

A rare but extremely aggressive skin cancer, Merkel Cell Carcinoma (MCC), develops rapidly and frequently spreads to distant organs and lymph nodes. In elderly individuals with high levels of sun exposure or compromised immune systems, it usually manifests as a painless, rapidly expanding lump on skin exposed to sunlight. Survival depends on early discovery and treatment

MCC is an uncommon type of cutaneous neuroendocrine carcinoma. There are approximately 3,000 cases in the United States each year, and diagnoses are increasing globally due to improved detection methods. With a high recurrence rate, this skin cancer is the second most deadly after melanoma.

Merkel Cell Carcinoma
Merkel Cell Carcinoma

Symptoms

  • A cutaneous mass that is painless and frequently has a dome form.
  • Quick development over several weeks.
  • Colors: bluish-red, purple, red, or skin-colored.
  • Locations: Often found on the arms, legs, neck, or face (in darker skin tones).
  • may look like a cyst, insect bite, or pimple.

Causes and Risk Elements

  • Exposure to UV radiation (tanning beds, sunlight).
  • About 80% of cases had Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV).
  • HIV, leukaemia, and organ transplant drugs all weaken the immune system.
  • Older age: Most prevalent in those over 50.
  • Fair skin: People with lighter skin are more at risk.

Diagnosis: 

  • Cancer cells are confirmed by a skin biopsy.
  • CT, PET, and sentinel lymph node biopsies are staging studies.

Stages:

  • Stage 0: In situ (limited to the epidermis)
  • Stage I–II: Tumour localisation
  • Stage III: Lymph nodes are affected
  • Distant metastases in stage IV

Prevention

  • Steer clear of the 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. peak sun.
  • Sunscreen with a broad spectrum (SPF ≥30–60).
  • headgear and protective clothes.
  • No beds for tanning.
  • Check your skin frequently for any new or changing lumps.

Early Warning Indications of MCC

  • Painless bump: MCC lesions don't cause pain or itch like many skin malignancies do.
  • Quick growth: In a matter of weeks to months, the lump becomes substantially larger.
  • Nodules that appear shiny, pearly, or dome-shaped; the average size at detection is approximately 1.7 cm, or roughly the size of a dime.
  • Skin-colored, red, pink, purple, or bluish-red are possible colors.
  • Location: Frequently found on the head, neck, eyelids, and arms that are exposed to the sun. more frequently on the legs in those with darker skin tones.
  • Risk of misdiagnosis: Frequently confused with styes, pimples, cysts, or insect bites.

AEIOU Regulation for MCC Identification

Physicians use the acronym AEIOU to sum up the early characteristics of MCC:

  • A: Asymptomatic: The lesion is neither sensitive nor painful.
  • E: Growing quickly: Growth is quick.
  • I. Immunosuppressed: If the immune system is compromised, there is an increased risk.
  • O: Over 50: Older persons account for the majority of instances.
  • U-UV-exposed skin: Found in regions that receive a lot of sun exposure.
Also, read https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/neuroendocrine-tumours-nets/types/merkel-cell-skin-cancer.

When to Get Medical Assistance

  1. Any newly formed lump that expands rapidly.
  2. A change in size, shape, or color.
  3. An easily bleeding bump following little trauma (such as shaving).
  4. Be especially watchful if you are over 50 or immunocompromised.

Useful Guidance

  • Once a month, examine your entire body.
  • Make an appointment for yearly dermatologist examinations.
  • Use clothing, sunscreen, and shade to protect your skin.
  • Growths that are unusual or new should be reported immediately.

How fast is Merkel's cancer spreading?

Compared to the majority of other skin malignancies, Merkel Cell Carcinoma (MCC) spreads extremely quickly. In a few months, it can spread from the skin to neighboring lymph nodes and, in more difficult situations, to distant organs like the liver, lungs, or bones. At the time of diagnosis, about one in three individuals already exhibits regional or distant dissemination.

Rapidity of Spread

  • Quick local growth: MCC tumours can double in size in a few of weeks.
  • Early lymph node involvement: At diagnosis, about 30–40% of patients have spread to lymph nodes.
  • Risk of distant metastasis: Approximately 3–5% of patients are first diagnosed with Stage IV illness, which has progressed to other organs.
  • Recurrence: MCC has a significant recurrence rate within two to three years, even after treatment.

Impact of Spread Stage on Survival (Extent of Spread) 

  • Rate of 5-Year Survival
  • Skin-only, localized: 79% Regional (lymph nodes) ~66%
  • Organs far away: ~31%

Why MCC Spreads Quickly

  • Aggressive biology: MCC has a high level of mitotic activity and is a neuroendocrine tumour.
  • Immune suppression: Individuals with compromised immunity, such as those with leukaemia, HIV, or transplants, will proceed more quickly.
  • The MCC polyomavirus is linked to UV exposure and unchecked cell proliferation.

Is Merkel cell cancer a dangerous condition?

Indeed, Merkel Cell Carcinoma (MCC) is an extremely dangerous disease. It has a significant chance of spreading and recurring, making it one of the most aggressive types of skin cancer. Despite being uncommon, it is significantly more hazardous than the majority of other skin cancers due to its quick growth and propensity to spread.

The Significance of MCC

  • Aggressive growth: Tumors grow rapidly, frequently in a matter of weeks.
  • High recurrence: MCC frequently returns even after treatment.
  • Early spread: Frequently spreads to distant lymph nodes and organs.
  • Mortality risk: Melanoma is the leading cause of death from skin cancer.
  • Immune system link: Those with compromised immunity are more aggressive.

Treatment for Merkel cell carcinoma

  • Principal Options for Treatment
  • Surgery
  • Wide local excision: Removes the tumor while leaving a healthy tissue margin.
  • Mohs surgery: To protect tissue from head and neck lesions, layer-by-layer removal is frequently utilized.
  • Early spread to lymph nodes is detected by sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB).
  • Lymph node dissection is used to remove the affected lymph nodes if the cancer has spread.

Radiation Treatment

  • Often used to eliminate cancer cells that persist following surgery.
  • It may be used as the primary treatment if surgery is not an option.
  • can lower the chance of recurrence, particularly in people who are at high risk.

Immunotherapy

  • Checkpoint inhibitors, such as nivolumab, avelumab, and pembrolizumab, aid in the immune system's assault on MCC cells.
  • Now the recommended course of action for metastatic or advanced MCC.
  • demonstrated to increase survival as compared to chemotherapy.

Chemotherapy

  • Due to the transient nature of replies, it is used less frequently now.
  • If immunotherapy isn't available or effective, it might be taken into consideration.
  • Etoposide and agents based on platinum are examples of medications.

Treatment by Stage: Standard Treatment

  • Phases I–II (localised) Radiation plus surgery
  • Phase III (lymph nodes): Radiation, surgery, and lymph node dissection; immunotherapy if recurrence
  • Metastatic Stage IV. First-line treatment is immunotherapy; chemotherapy may be required.

Hazards and Things to Think About

  • Risk of recurrence: Within two to three years, up to 40% of patients had a recurrence.
  • Side effects: Immunotherapy may result in immune-related side effects; radiation may cause skin irritation.
  • Multidisciplinary care: A team comprising radiation specialists, oncologists, and dermatologists produces the best results.

In conclusion,

Merkel cell carcinoma is a rare but very aggressive form of skin cancer. On sun-exposed skin, it often begins as a painless, rapidly expanding lump that can quickly spread to distant organs and lymph nodes. Because of its high mortality risk and recurrence incidence, MCC is a dangerous condition despite its rarity.

Although MCC is dangerous, it can be treated if discovered early. Results have been greatly enhanced by vigilance, prompt diagnosis, and contemporary treatments, particularly immunotherapy. The greatest defence is still to protect your skin and keep an eye out for any strange growths.


What makes hypertrophic cardiomyopathy worse?

What makes hypertrophic cardiomyopathy worse? 

Overview of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a genetic heart condition that thickens the heart muscle, usually in the left ventricle, making it harder for the heart to pump blood. Although it can be silent, it can occasionally result in shortness of breath, chest discomfort, or even sudden cardiac death, particularly in young athletes.

Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: What is it?

  • Definition: A disorder where the heart's capacity to pump blood effectively is diminished by an abnormally thick (hypertrophied) heart muscle.
  • The septum, the wall that separates the ventricles, is where thickening typically occurs, though it can occur anywhere in the left ventricle.

Types

  • The pumping action of the heart is hindered by thickened muscle.
  • Non-obstructive HCM: The ventricle may stiffen, yet the muscle is thickened without significant obstruction.

Symptoms

  • Pain in the chest, particularly during exercise
  • Breathlessness
  • Palpitations (pounding or fluttering heartbeat)
  • Syncope (fainting, frequently with effort)
  • Some folks don't have any symptoms until problems start.

Causes and Risk Elements

  • Genetic mutations: 50% probability if one parent has HCM; inherited in families.
  • Family history: Screening should be done for first-degree relatives.
  • Myofiber disarray: An irregular arrangement of heart muscle cells that raises the risk of arrhythmias.

Issues

  • Stroke risk is associated with atrial fibrillation.
  • Mitral valve regurgitation exacerbates symptoms.
  • Heart failure decreases blood production because it tightens the ventricles.
  • Although uncommon, sudden cardiac death can occur, particularly in young athletes.

Diagnosis

  • The primary test is an echocardiogram.
  • ECG, or electrocardiogram,
  • Heart MRI
  • genetic testing for hereditary families.

Management & Treatment

The video is a comprehensive treatment. 

Drugs:

  • Blockers of beta
  • Blockers of calcium channels
  • Mavacamten, a novel targeted treatment for obstructive heart failure

Methods:

  • Open heart surgery, or septal myectomy,
  • Alcohol septal ablation (reduction treatment without surgery)
  • ICDs, or implantable cardioverter defibrillators, prevent arrhythmias.
  • Lifestyle: eating a heart-healthy diet, abstaining from smoking, controlling diabetes and blood pressure, and routine monitoring.

What is the severity of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy?

  • Variable severity: Some people have no symptoms at all, while others have episodes of fainting, chest pain, or shortness of breath.
  • Risk of sudden cardiac death: In young athletes, HCM is the most frequent cause of sudden mortality. Those with extreme thickness, arrhythmias, or a familial history are more at risk.
  • Heart failure: Stiffening the ventricle due to thickened muscle can result in decreased blood flow and, ultimately, heart failure.
  • Arrhythmias: Atrial fibrillation or hazardous ventricular arrhythmias can be brought on by electrical irregularities.
  • Risk of stroke: Atrial fibrillation raises the possibility that blood clots will reach the brain.

Spectrum of Risk

  • Level of Severity Features Results
  • Mild/Asymptomatic: Normal activity, minimal or no symptoms. Normal life expectancy under observation
  • palpitations, light blockage, fainting, and moderate chest pain. need lifestyle modifications and medicines.
  • heart failure, arrhythmias, and severe blood flow obstruction. may require extensive therapy, ICD, or surgery.
  • Risk of critical sudden cardiac arrest, particularly in athletescan be lethal if preventive steps are not taken.

Important Risk Elements

  • Sudden cardiac death in the family history
  • Severe thickening of the septum (>30 mm)
  • Episodes of unexplained fainting
  • Monitoring revealed dangerous arrhythmias
  • Young people who engage in vigorous physical activity (athletes)

Outlook & Management

  • Mavacamten, beta-blockers, and calcium channel blockers are examples of medications that assist in managing symptoms.
  • Two procedures that relieve blockage are alcohol septal ablation and septal myectomy.
  • High-risk individuals can avoid sudden death by using an implanted cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). Lifestyle changes include managing blood pressure, avoiding physically demanding competitive activities, and getting frequent exams.

Which four symptoms indicate cardiomyopathy?

  • Heart muscle disorders are referred to as "cardiomyopathies," and their symptoms frequently indicate the heart's diminished capacity to efficiently pump blood. There are four typical indicators:
  • Fluid accumulation in the lungs causes breathing difficulties, especially when a person exerts themselves or lies flat.
  • Oedema, or swelling brought on by fluid retention, can occur in the legs, ankles, feet, or belly.
  • Fatigue: The body feels abnormally weak or worn out when the heart isn't pumping enough blood to meet its needs.
  • Palpitations, fluttering, or pounding feelings that could indicate arrhythmias are examples of irregular heartbeats.

Guidelines for Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Important Suggestions from the Most Recent Guidelines

1. Imaging and Diagnosis

  • The first-line test is still echocardiography.
  • For tissue characterization, scar detection, and risk assessment, cardiac MRI is advised.
  • The use of multimodality imaging (Echo, MRI, CT, and nuclear imaging) for thorough assessment is growing.

2. Family screening and genetic testing

  • For all patients with suspected HCM, genetic counselling is recommended.
  • Imaging and ECG screening should be done regularly for first-degree relatives.

3. Sudden Cardiac Death (SCD) Risk Stratification

  • Risk models that include septal thickness, family history, unexplained syncope, and arrhythmia burden are highlighted in the guidelines.
  • For high-risk individuals, an implanted cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is advised.
  • Although the ESC and AHA guidelines emphasize customized assessment, they differ slightly in how they quantify SCD risk.

4. Medical Treatment

  • The primary line of treatment for symptoms is still beta-blockers and calcium channel blockers.
  • Guidelines for obstructive HCM now include the cardiac myosin inhibitor mavacamten.

5. Options for Procedures

  • For severe obstruction, septal myectomy—the surgical removal of thickened muscle—is the gold standard.
  • For some patients, alcohol septal ablation is an alternative.

6. Exercise & Lifestyle

  • To determine safe activity levels, exercise testing is advised.
  • While moderate recreational activity is recommended, competitive sports are generally prohibited in high-risk patients.

Dangers and Safety Measures

  • Assessing the risk of sudden cardiac death is essential to therapy.
  • Clinicians should adjust care to patient-specific risk due to variations in guideline definitions (e.g., diagnostic criteria, MRI use).
  • Although they show promise, new treatments like mavacamten require close monitoring for adverse effects.

Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Prevention

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a genetic illness, so it cannot be completely prevented. However, lifestyle management, early treatment of factors like arrhythmias or high blood pressure, and genetic screening can reduce its risks and effects. Family screening, avoiding triggers, and monitoring the risk of sudden cardiac death are the main components of preventive interventions.

Prevention of Genetics and Families

  • Genetic testing: Finds sarcomeric protein mutations (e.g., MYH7, MYBPC3).
  • Family screening: ECGs and echocardiograms should be performed on first-degree relatives frequently.
  • Counselling: Assists families in comprehending inheritance risks and patterns.

Lifestyle and Medical Prevention

  • Blood pressure control: High blood pressure exacerbates the development of HCM.
  • Steer clear of dehydration and stimulants: Arrhythmias can be brought on by low fluid intake or stimulants like caffeine.
  • Moderate exercise: For high-risk patients, recreational activity is recommended, but competitive sports are discouraged.
  • Limit alcohol use and give up smoking, both of which worsen cardiovascular stress.
  • A balanced, low-sodium diet can lessen the strain on the heart.

Preventive Treatments

  • Calcium channel blockers and beta blockers lessen stress and discomfort.
  • Mavacamten: A more recent medication that may slow the course of a disease by targeting aberrant contractility.
  • Anticoagulants: Prevent stroke in atrial fibrillation patients.

Preventing Sudden Cardiac Death

  • Risk stratification: based on arrhythmias, fainting episodes, septal thickness, and family history.
  • For high-risk individuals, an implanted cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is advised to prevent potentially deadly arrhythmias.

Dangers and Difficulties

  • No treatment or complete prevention: Since HCM is inherited, risk management is the main focus of prevention.
  • Variable expression: Individualised monitoring is crucial because severity varies even across families.
  • Early intervention: Early detection of arrhythmias or blockage improves results.

In conclusion,

The severity of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a genetic heart muscle condition, varies greatly. Some people suffer serious dangers such as arrhythmias, heart failure, and sudden cardiac death, while many remain asymptomatic and lead regular lives.

Because of its unforeseen complications, HCM is a dangerous condition that can be controlled with early discovery, genetic counselling, and customised treatment. The emphasis is on lowering risks and enhancing the quality of life rather than treating the illness.


Can chronic lymphocytic leukemia be cured

Can chronic lymphocytic leukemia be cured

Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia-Overview

The most common leukemia in adults is CLL, which advances slowly. It is commonly diagnosed during normal blood tests. Abnormal B cells in the bone marrow aggregate in the blood and organs, causing immunological failure, anaemia, and enlarged lymph nodes or spleen.

Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia

What's CLL?

  • Definition: A blood and bone marrow malignancy caused by excessive lymphocyte production.
  • Compared to acute leukemias, chronic progression is gradual.
  • Most affected are B lymphocytes, which fight infections.
  • It is rare in children and most common in adults over 55.

Symptoms

  • CLL often starts without symptoms. Existing ones may include:
  • Swollen neck, armpit, and groin lymph nodes
  • Fatigue and weakness
  • Fever, night sweats
  • Unforced weight loss
  • Poor immunological function causes frequent infections
  • Upper left abdominal pain/fullness (enlarged spleen)

Causes and Risks

  • Most common in over-55s.
  • Whites have a higher incidence.
  • Blood malignancies grow with family history.
  • Chemical exposure: Herbicides/insecticides (Agent Orange).
  • Pre-existing condition: MBL can become CLL.

Diagnosis

  • Complete blood count (CBC), flow cytometry.
  • Genetic testing: TP53 mutations, del(17p) chromosomal deletions.
  • BM biopsy: Confirms aberrant lymphocyte accumulation.
  • Imaging: Finds swollen liver, spleen, or lymph nodes.

Complications

  • Low immunoglobulins cause frequent infections.
  • Richter's transformation: Aggressive lymphoma.
  • Hemolytic or thrombocytopenia autoimmunity.
  • High secondary cancer risk includes skin, lung, and digestive tract cancers.

Stages of CLL

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is staged using the Rai (U.S.) and Binet (European) systems. Both use blood counts, lymph node involvement, and organ enlargement to categorize low-risk to high-risk disease development.

US Rai Staging System

  • It splits CLL into five phases (0–IV):
  • Stage 0: High lymphocyte count; no swollen nodes, spleen, or liver; normal red blood cells and platelets.
  • In Stage I, lymphocytosis and swollen lymph nodes are present, but the spleen/liver are normal.
  • Stage II: Lymphocytosis, enlarged spleen and/or liver, lymph nodes, normal red blood cells, and platelets.
  • Stage III: Anemia, lymphocytosis, and enlarged lymph nodes, spleen, or liver; platelets are normal.
  • Stage IV: Lymphocytosis + thrombocytopenia (low platelets); enlarged lymph nodes, spleen, or liver; anemia.

Risk grouping:

  • Low-risk Stage 0
  • Stages I–II intermediate risk
  • Risky: Stages III–IV

European Binet Staging System

  • This method divides CLL into three stages (A–C) based on the affected lymph node groups and the presence of anemia or thrombocytopenia.
  • Stage A: Fewer than 3 swollen lymph nodes; no anemia or thrombocytopenia.
  • Stage B: 3 or more swollen lymph nodes; no anemia or thrombocytopenia.
  • Stage C: Thrombocytopenia, anemia, and enlarged lymph nodes.

* For clinical use, monitor early stages (Rai 0–II, Binet A–B) with cautious waiting if asymptomatic.

* Advanced stages (Rai III–IV, Binet C): Anemia, thrombocytopenia, or organ involvement requires treatment.

* Prognosis factors: Age, lymphocyte doubling time, and genetic alterations (TP53, del(17p)) affect therapy options.

Common Early Leukaemia Signs

  • Anaemia-related fatigue and weakness
  • Regular infections due to faulty white blood cells' ineffective germ-fighting.
  • Unexpected bleeding or bruising from low platelets
  • Swollen neck, armpit, or groin lymph nodes
  • Unknown night sweats and fevers
  • Unintentional weight loss
  • Joint or bone discomfort from marrow enlargement
  • Spleen or liver enlargement causing abdominal fullness

Why Do These Signs Happen?

  • Leukemia impairs the production of blood cells in the bone marrow.
  • Anemia, tiredness, and pallor result from red cell loss.
  • Platelet loss causes bleeding and bruising.
  • Healthy white cells → infections
  • Lymphocyte abnormalities cause node and spleen swelling.

Staying healthy with CLL?

  • Stay Fit
  • Walking, cycling, and swimming are examples of moderate exercise that improve sleep, immunity, and fatigue.
  • Exercise increases cancer-fighting natural killer cells, research reveals.
  • Start modest and progressively increase moderate activity to 150–300 minutes per week.

Balance Your Diet

  • Select fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean meats, nuts, and seeds.
  • Cut back on processed meals, sweets, and saturated fats.
  • Drink lots of water.
  • Adjust diet if treatment side effects impair appetite—small, frequent meals may help.

Rest and sleep first

  • Adults need 7–9 hours of quality sleep per night.
  • Keep your sleep and bedtime routines constant.
  • Limit coffee and screen time before bed.
  • Quality sleep boosts immunity and lowers fatigue.

Prevent Infections

  • Keep your distance from sick people and wash your hands.
  • Check with your doctor about flu and pneumonia immunizations.
  • Avoid raw meats and unpasteurized goods and cook thoroughly.
  • In crowded places, use masks if your immune system is insufficient.

Support Mental Health

  • Stress reduction through meditation, yoga, or counseling.
  • Connect with CLL patients in support groups.
  • Set achievable goals and celebrate minor achievements.

Risks and Precautions

  • Immune suppression raises infection risk—avoid exposure.
  • Treatment side effects like fatigue, nausea, and low blood counts require dietary and physical activity adjustments.
  • Regular screenings are needed due to increasing risk.

Why CLL Matters

  • Abnormal B-lymphocytes crowd out healthy cells in this blood and bone marrow malignancy.
  • As the immune system declines, infections become more frequent and severe.
  • Fatigue, bleeding, and bruising can result from anemia and thrombocytopenia.
  • It may become Richter's transformation, a more aggressive lymphoma that's difficult to treat. Therapies can induce remission, but there is no cure.

Compared to Other Leukemias, severity

  • Type: Progression Impact of Curability
  • CLL is a slow-growing, asymptomatic cancer that can last for years. Uncurable but managed, long-term risk of infections and subsequent malignancies.
  • Pediatric Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia: Rapid progression is treatable. Must be treated immediately
  • Leukaemia, Acute: Fast-growing: Intensive therapy may cure. Deadly if untreated
  • Sluggish CML progression. Targeted medicines are controlled. Untreated, it can go acute.

Living With CLL

  • Many symptom-free patients are handled with “watchful waiting."
  • Immunotherapy and BTK/BCL2 inhibitors have dramatically increased survival.
  • Many survive 10–20+ years following diagnosis; genetic factors affect median survival.
  • Habits, including nutrition, exercise, and infection avoidance, help sustain quality of life.

Key Risks

  • Low immunoglobulins cause frequent infections.
  • Richter’s lymphoma turned aggressive.
  • Secondary malignancies (lung, stomach, skin).
  • Immune issues (hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia).

Treatment for CLL

  • Main Treatment Methods
  • Watchful Waiting
  • For early-stage, asymptomatic CLL.
  • Regular blood and physical checks.
  • Reduces side effects till disease advances.

Targeted Therapy

  • First-line treatment for many.
  • BTK inhibitors (ibrutinib, acalabrutinib, zanubrutinib).
  • BCL2 inhibitor (venetoclax, commonly with obinutuzumab).
  • Blocks proteins that enable leukemia cells to survive.

Chemotherapy

  • Less prevalent but still used in senior individuals.
  • Fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and bendamustine.
  • Often with monoclonal antibodies (rituximab, obinutuzumab).

Immunotherapy

  • The immune system targets CLL cells with monoclonal antibodies.
  • It may be used in combination with chemotherapy or targeted therapies.

Stem Cell Transplant

  • Refractory or high-risk CLL patients may take this infrequently used treatment.
  • Allogeneic stem cell transplants replace damaged marrow.

CAR-T Cell Therapy

  • Experimental yet promising for CLL relapse/refractory.
  • Patients' T cells are modified to fight leukemia.

Radiotherapy

  • Only for symptom relief (enlarged spleen or lymph nodes).

Risks, side effects

  • Diarrhea, hypertension, and liver disorders were targeted.
  • Side effects of chemotherapy include nausea, hair loss, and secondary malignancies.
  • Immunotherapy: Fever, chills, allergies.
  • Infertility, organ damage, and infections from stem cell transplants.
  • Cytokine release syndrome (fever, disorientation, low blood pressure) from CAR technology.

Treatment Pathway Summary

  • Stage/Condition: A typical approach
  • Early symptoms are free. Watchful waiting
  • Symptomatic or immunotherapy ± Target therapies
  • Mutations at high risk (TP53, del17p) BTK/BCL2 inhibitors target therapy
  • Relapsed/Refractory CAR-T treatment, stem cell transplant, clinical trials
  • Localised symptoms: Radiation therapy

Supportive Care

  • Flu, pneumonia, and COVID-19 vaccines lower infection risk.
  • Antibiotics or antivirals for severe immune suppression.
  • Eating well, exercising, and managing stress.

Conclusion

CLL is a dangerous yet slow-growing blood malignancy. Modern medications make it bearable for the majority of patients, who often go years without experiencing any symptoms.

Continuous medical treatment is needed for infections, autoimmune problems, and severe lymphoma.

Although incurable, CLL is highly treatable. Many people live long, satisfying lives with diligent monitoring, sophisticated medicines, and healthy living.