Saturday, July 26, 2008

Stomach Tumor

I had my one year CT scan earlier this month and a tissue-like mass was identified in the anterior of the stomach. My oncologist indicated that colon cancer metastisis does not usually present itself in the stomach and stomach cancer is rare. I am scheduled for an upper endoscopy (which I was to have in November) August 8, as a result. I have no other symptoms and the rest of the CT scan was clear of cancer.

It is difficult for my mind to stay in the present and just wait and see. I jump to in the implications – surgery, more chemo. It seems so unfair. I’m scared. It’s not quite as intense as the first time I got diagnosed, however. Maybe once to face your own mortality, you accept it more or maybe you just learn better coping skills.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

CT Radiation

An article by Catherine Guthrie in Time magazine: "...researchers behind two recent studies that sound the alarm about the increased cancer risk associated with multiple CT scans... physicians ... evaluated the medical-imaging records of 1,243 randomly selected patients to calculate just how much radiation each patient had sustained in the past five years. Although CT scans were the biggest source of radiation, other offenders included X-rays and mammograms. The results of the study, presented in May at the annual conference of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, were disturbing: the average patient had received 45 millisieverts (mSv) of radiation. (The typical chest X-ray dispatches 0.02 mSv of radiation.) And 12% of patients had gotten more than twice that amount - 100 mSv or more. "Our focus is to bring awareness to the fact that people are getting large doses of radiation and it's not innocuous," says Timothy Bullard, the study's lead author and chief medical officer at Orlando Regional Medical Center."