Wednesday, November 14, 2018

can leukemia be cur | Testicular cancer is not something you can expect to get treated. There is a type of testicular cancer called testicular choriocarcinoma as it causes only a small tumor in (usually) the testicle, but it rapidly metastasize to the brain. exist another type of testicular cancer called testicular seminoma that is more resistant and easy to treat.




Testicular cancer is not something you can expect to get treated. There is a type of testicular cancer called testicular choriocarcinoma as it causes only a small tumor in (usually) the testicle, but it rapidly metastasize to the brain. exist another type of testicular cancer called testicular seminoma that is more resistant and easy to treat.



Testicular cancer and other testicular conditions
There is an ace trait that identifies men as being at high risk for testicular cancer. It is a condition called criptorchidismo, a failure of one or both testicles to alight.

Men who have undescended testicles are up to 40 times more likely to develop testicular cancer. About 10 percent of men as have criptorchidismo develop cancer.

What are the symptoms of testicular cancer?

Very often man that presents this condition:

It's between 15 and 35 years old,

You have had an inpaint lump in a testicle for several days or several months (men tend to be very lentzs to consult physicians about this condition),

It may have hydrocele, or  "fallen balls " due to the accumulation of liquid, and

He's not in an advanced stage of the disease.

About 75 percent of men are diagnosed with testicular seminoma before the tumor has spread. However, cancer sometimes spreads to the lungs and/or brain included when the tumor in the testicle is small. In testicular choriocarcinoma, the tumor in the testicle remains small inclum when the cancer is diemina so widely that it is essentially intreatable. However, this form by testicular cancer is rare. Men are much more likely to have seminoma.

Although any form of cancer is treated with radical orquidectomía, the surgical extirpation of a testicle, it is much more likely that men lose their testicles to a condition called testicular torsion, a torsion of the spermatic cord that cuts the Supply of blood to the testicle. This problem can occur in men of any age, included in baby males. It is also more common in younger men, under the age of 35 years. Testicular torsion is more of a medical emergency than testicular cancer. If it is not treated immediately, the tissues that lie around the testicle may die and the testicle may become gangrenous.

The testicular torsion is more common as teenage girls as they are just getting their full production of sex hormones. The problem arises when the "spherical sac" protector, known as the vaginal robe, is connected to the torso too high in relation to the weight of the testicle. If the connection is too high, the spermatic cord may rotate into the vaginal robe in a movement similar to the Claqueta inside a bell. It can become entangled around an artery and cut off blood flow. This intravaginal testicular torsion ( "vagina " which retrusts to a male structure, not to a female or sexual structure) causes severe pain in a single testicle. As that testicular tissue begins to die, pain decreases. Only 4 to 8 percent of testicular torsion cases are caused by a "kick in the balls" or a similar lesion. It is usually a gradual process, which went up to the development of the testicles rather than a particular use of them.

Sometimes testicular torsion may appear and disappear. There may be intense pain that resolves  "by itself, and everything seems to return you the normality. This is only a sign that the placement of the vaginal tunic is not high enough to be causing the full rotation of the spermatic cord. It is important to consult medical, preferably a urologist, as soon as possible when there is severe testicular pain, included if it disappears, to determine if the underlying problem is anatomical or possibly cancerous.

Men who nuvvula more than 24 hours for testicular torsion treatment have a 10 percent chance of saving the testicle. Similarly, men as are treated for testicular cancer before reaching stage IV (scattered throughout the body) have a 86 percent chance of surviving, but it is very unlikely that they survive as men do not attend Medical Before that cancer reaches the brain.

Dr. Manuel Silva

Dr. Manuel Silva finished his specialization in neurosurgery in Portugal. He is interested in the experience of radiosurgery, the treatment of brain tumours, and interventional radiology. Acquired significant operational experience that is done under the supervision and guidance of senior residents.

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