959 resultados para HEAD AND NECK CANCER
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Federal Aviation Administration, Washington, D.C.
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Sponsored by Health Effects Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park, N.C.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"August 1996."
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"July 1993."
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Description based on: fiscal year 2007/2008 ; title from cover.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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Merkel-cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare form of skin cancer of neuroendocrine origin that has been described as the most aggressive cutaneous malignancy. The cell of origin is thought to be the Merkel cell or skin-pressure receptor. It has the propensity for dermal-lymphatic invasion, and nodal and haematogenous spread. Factors that have been implicated in its cause include exposure to sunlight and immunosuppression. The tumour has many similarities to small-cell carcinoma of the lung, with intrinsic sensitivity to ionising radiation and chemotherapy, and an aggressive metastatic potential. The best treatment outcomes can be achieved with early diagnosis and the integration of surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy. The treatment challenges for the clinician are often enormous because many of the patients are elderly and because lesions occur in difficult sites such as the head and neck region and the lower leg.
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Targeted treatment education for cancer patients has the potential to promote adjustment through assisting patients to participate in treatment decision making, comply with treatment regimens and cope more effectively with treatment side effects. A quasi-experimental longitudinal pre-test post-test and follow-up design was used to assess the effect of a patient education video about radiation therapy on patients' psychological distress, knowledge about radiation therapy, self-efficacy about coping with treatment and physical symptoms. Patients with head and neck (n = 26) and breast cancer (n = 66) were recruited into the study and allocated into control and intervention groups. No significant differences were found between the control and intervention groups on any of the outcome variables. However, patients in the intervention group reported high levels of satisfaction with the video and all reported that they would recommend the video to other patients preparing for radiation therapy. As well, 90% of patients in the intervention group reported that some or all of the information in the video was new to them. Education materials that have excellent face validity and that are well received by patients may fail to produce significant change using standard controlled study designs. Future research in this area may need to consider alternative paradigms for evaluating the helpfulness of such materials. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Skin cancers pose a significant public health problem in high-risk populations. We have prospectively monitored basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) incidence in a Queensland community over a 10-y period by recording newly treated lesions, supplemented by skin examination surveys. Age-standardized incidence rates of people with new histologically confirmed BCC were 2787 per 100,000 person-years at risk (pyar) among men and 1567 per 100,000 pyar among women, and corresponding tumor rates were 5821 per 100,000 pyar and 2733 per 100,000 pyar, respectively. Incidence rates for men with new SCC were 944 per 100,000 pyar and for women 675 per 100,000 pyar; tumor rates were 1754 per 100,000 pyar and 846 per 100,000 pyar, respectively. Incidence rates of BCC tumors but not SCC tumors varied noticeably according to method of surveillance, with BCC incidence rates based on skin examination surveys around three times higher than background treatment rates. This was mostly due to an increase in diagnosis of new BCC on sites other than the head and neck, arms, and hands associated with skin examination surveys and little to do with advancing the time of diagnosis of BCC on these sites as seen by a return to background rates following the examination surveys. We conclude that BCC that might otherwise go unreported are detected during skin examination surveys and thus that such skin cancer screening can influence the apparent burden of skin cancer.