Posted By: Meg Report - 11-19-2004 02:05 PM
Hey Everyone
i AM DOING A SCHOOL PROJECT ON ORAL CAVITY CANCER AND I WANTED TO KNOW IF ANYONE WOULD LIKE TO SHARE INFORMATION WITH ME. MY GREAT UNCLE AND CONFORMATION SPONSER IS A SURVIVOR OF ORAL CANCER. THANK YOU FOR ANY INFORMATION. MEG
Posted By: Meg Re: Report - 11-19-2004 02:09 PM
I WANTED TO KNOW WHAT THE SYMPTOMS OF ORAL CANCER ARE. THANK YOU.
Posted By: David Rex Re: Report - 11-19-2004 02:27 PM
Congratulations, Meg. You have found the most definitive site to answer most, if not all of your questions. Since you've signed on, you are qualified. Now show some mettle and begin your research. Look and read and you shall learn.

If you have specific questions, as individuals we can answer, all you will need is to post them. The experience here is vast.

Good Luck. David
Posted By: Meg Re: Report - 11-19-2004 03:22 PM
THANK YOU! I HAVE LEARNED SO MUCH ALREADY!
Posted By: Darrell G. Rakestraw Re: Report - 11-19-2004 05:38 PM
I had a dull ear ache, on the right side that was continuous and nagging. I went to my Ear nose and throat Doc with that complaint. After examination, he stated that there was really no reason for my ear to hurt and went on to further questions. He did a pysical exam of the throat with his finger,(we call that RUDE and CRUDE). When he withdrew his finger from my throat he stated that he felt something there that he was uneasy about and performed a scope procedure and called the diagnosis right then, SCC. That was on a Friday and Monday morning I was in surgery for a biopsy and the rest is history.
I was blessed that my ENT was thorough and found this cancer quickly.
I have had no Surgery, only radiation and Chemo and so far, I am cancer free. My ENT examines me every two months, and I see my primary Oncologist every three months. I have a comparative CT scan every 6 months.
Darrell
Posted By: Daniel Bogan Re: Report - 11-19-2004 09:15 PM
Hi Meg,

I had tonsil cancer. It was a stage 4 and invasive. I had a sore throat that wouldn't go away. At the point it started to effect my eating I went to the doctor. This was in a 7 month span. On the thrid visit to my reguler GP she referred me to an Oral Surgeon. If you want any details please feel free to email them to me. I will gladly answer any question on Head & neck Cancer I know.

Danny Boy
Posted By: Judy U Re: Report - 11-19-2004 11:53 PM
Hi Meg,
Thanks for all you are doing to get the word out there. My cancer started as a "sore" beneath my lower left teeth. It didn't heal in two weeks so I had it biopsied. I was very very lucky to have caught it early.
Judy U.
Posted By: Carol L Re: Report - 11-20-2004 12:31 PM
Hello Meg, my oral cancer started as a sore on the left side of my tongue that did not go away. Precious time was wasted on antibiotics, biopsy that came back negative, etc. The whole time it was cancer and Thank God I was finally referred to a competent oral surgeon who took one look at it and told me it was squamous cell carcinoma and arranged for the surgery. My gosh, I was at Stage IV at that point! Good Luck on your report, get the word out!!! Thanks, Carol
Posted By: Erik Kleiva Re: Report - 11-20-2004 01:00 PM
Hi Meg! I had the dull constant earache like Darrell for months. I have dealt with sinusitis on same side for 20 + yrs & thought the 2 wer'e related. Had sore throat last couple of months before diagnosis & also thought it was related to sinus infection. Hind site is so clear at this point. All the indicators we're there for a long time before I found out what was up! The last few weeks before diag, I was constantly trying to clear my throat & actually hacked out bloody flem. Again, hind site is crystal clear. When I finally went in to see GP the tumor was so large he knew right away it wasn't good & sent me next day for ct scan & reffered me directly to ENT who knew it was probably cancer on sight. Good luck with your report & may this disease never touch your family again. Erik
Posted By: Gary Re: Report - 11-20-2004 01:52 PM
Hi Meg,
Like Dan, I had a stage III/IV right tonsil cancer. My first symptoms where a little hoarseness and a mild cough at first. As the tumor got larger it felt like something was caught in my throat. At that point I started persuing a cause with my GP. I went through a couple rounds of antibiotics and some some routine bloodtests done with no results. My wife then noticed that at night I sounded as if I was choking. I would actually stop breathing. The tumor had gotten large enough, 6cm x 3cm, to actually block my throat cavity. She tape recorded it and it startled me enough to make yet another appointment with the GP so I immediately called him and he politely declined stating I needed a referal to an ENT. After another month passing while I processed my fear (mainly of a needle draining procedure as I thought it was a peritosillar abcess), I finally went. He took one quick look and told me that I had an advanced cancer and to get my affairs in order. My head & neck surgeon estimated it had been there for over 2 years.

I started smoking in my late teens and quit in my early 20's, started again in my late 20's and quit my the time I was 30. I also am a recovering alcoholic with 10 years of sobriety. I had hepatitis back in the late 70's and drank mainly beer from that point on, after a year of total abstinence. I was a periodic binge drinker, which means I did not drink every day. I was also a high functioning drunk, i.e., always held a job and also fooled many people. Many of my close friends were shocked when I confided that I was an alcoholic, some had worse denial than I did. Most modern alcoholics these days are not the down and out types you see on TV (like Ray Liotta on ER last week) or the seedy part of town. I also smoked pot for many years. Any or all of these may have have been causitive factors. Certainly they were aggravators if nothing else.

Hope this helps.
Posted By: Nicki Re: Report - 11-20-2004 02:54 PM
Hi, Meg - - great topic for a school paper, especially if the class gets to read it!

My husband's tonsil cancer presented itself in the manner of what appeared to be swollen lymph glands. The primary site (right tonsil) did not show any visible signs of disease, but the cancer had spread to the lymph nodes - visibly on the right, and later, they were found on the left side nodes as well.
Our GP prescribed strong antibiotics for 3 days, and when the swelling did not respond to that treatment, my husband was sent for chest x-rays and biopsy.
Chemo and radiation treatments finished; surgery set for next month.
Good luck on your report.
Nicki
Posted By: digtexas Re: Report - 11-20-2004 03:25 PM
Meg,
One of the problems with oral cancer is that it is one of the "hidden cancers". I was a non-smoker and rare drinker, who, for a long time had a dry, scratchy sort of hoarse throat. If a guy down the hall in my office lit up a cigarette, I was very sensitive to it. My doctor friends all figured that since I was an active, healthy guy, it was just allergies. I began having some gum pain but the dental people thought that is was a periodontal problem, and when a periodontal procedure did not work, I was sent to an endodontist who opened up and old root canal, only to find that it was still in good shape.

It was not until, months later, when food that I swallowed hit something and came back up, that I finally went to an ENT, who ordered a barium swallow with a radiologist, and later stuck the scope down my nose to reveal a large tumor on the base of my tongue that had also spread to neck nodes, diagnosed as Stage IV.

I don't know how anyone could have found it sooner unless a doctor or dentist with trained and sensitive hands could have felt the swollen lymph nodes. I asked the periodontist and a doctor friend of mine to look down my throat, but I gagged so easily that they could not see anything. Naturally if I knew then what I know now, I would have been to see an ENT much earlier.

Take care,
Danny G.
Posted By: Eileen Re: Report - 11-20-2004 09:52 PM
Hi Meg,
One of the problems with oral cancer is that it often shows no symptoms until is already in the later stages.

I have had two different occurrences of oral cancer and both were preceded a change in voice about 3 months prior to a second symptom. The second symptom, the first time, was a lump in the neck near the submandibular saliva gland. The dr did a needle biospy and put me on antibiotics for 2 weeks to see whether it went away. Biopsy came back negative, but check up two weeks later revealed a new lymph node that that was also swollen. This was surgically removed 2 days later and came back SCC.

The second time the only symptom I had other than voice change was an occasional minor pain in the throat. Then one day I swallowed a large vitamim pill and it hurt bad. I knew that this had to be checked immediately and found out I now had a small tumor growing on my larynx.

The thing to remember with this disease is that early detection is the key to survival. And to have it detected properly, you should really be examined by a specialist who regularly deals with SCC cancers, preferably at one of the major national cancer centers. Too many people have succumbed to this disease because the doctors they saw were unable to recognize the symptoms and order the proper tests.

Good luck on your paper and thank you for helping to inform your fellow students about this disease.

Take care,
Eileen
Posted By: KirkGeorgia Re: Report - 11-21-2004 09:01 PM
Hi Meg, my cancer was similar to Nicki's husband Tom's cancer. I was shaving one morning and as I was checking to see how close I was shaving and whether or not I was getting all of the beard, I felt a lump in my neck. This is the type of thing I usually ignore and hope it goes away. This time, I had my normal yearly physical in 2 weeks, so I kept it in mind and asked my General Practitioner about it. He immediately sent me to an Ear, Nose and Throat doctor. This doctor had just graduated from the University of Miami, Jackson Memorial Hospital, comprehensive cancer center. He told me he thought it was SCC and took a needle biopsy. It came back inconclusive so he took another and sent me for a CT scan. Both came back inconclusive so he took another and sent me for a PET scan. Both came back inconclusive again so he sent me for a sonigram directed needle biopsy. Bingo, it came back SCC. This all took months. From late August to early November. I was then scheduled for a tonsilectomy because the doctor couldn't find the primary site. They found it in the right tonsil and were able to identify it as stage IV with metastasis to the right side lymph node. I was treated with 7 weeks of radiation, 5 days per week, along with cisplatin chemotherapy every 21 days during radiation. After those treatments ended, I waited 6 weeks for the treatments to calm down, then had a modified radical right side neck dissection. The biopsy of the 35 lymph nodes removed from the 5 sections in my right neck was that all of the cancer cells were destroyed by the rad/chemo treatments. The Lord blessed me and my cancer was killed by the treatments. Needless to say, after 45 years, I quit smoking and drinking. I am now searching for some kind of bad habit to develop as I am feeling entirely to pristine. Hope this helps you with your paper.
Posted By: trvlnjak Re: Report - 11-23-2004 11:32 AM
Hi Meg,
I am one of those who had NO initial symptoms until the day, like Kirk, that I was shaving and noticed the lump (first saw, then felt) in right side of my neck. Usually the type to ignore these types of things, this time I KNEW that I had to have it looked at immediately. The first two quacks that I went to thought that I had mononucleosis and gave me the test for it, even though I told them that at 47 years of age and not having been in the position to have contracted mono, that I wanted to be checked out by an ENT. The third Dr. DID send me to an ENT, the next day. I was given a needle biopsy and was diagnosed the next week with SCC, undetermined primary, metastasis to right neck lymph nodes. CAT scan the next day showed slightly enlarged right tonsil. One week later, Jan. 23, 1987, I was in surgery for right side tonsilectomy (biopsy confirmed SCC in tonsil) and modified radical neck dissectomy on right side. Of the 81 lymph nodes removed, cancer was present in only 2. I then received the 7 week radiation treatment (35 treatments 5 days per week) to both sides of my neck.
Thanks for helping educate
Posted By: John N Re: Report - 11-23-2004 12:15 PM
Hi Meg
I had tonsol cancer in my right tonsil T2( 2x3cm) and no metastsas visible to any nodes. I had dull ear ache and my throat felt scratchy when I swallowed food. I thought I had a ear infection and went to my doctor. He say my tonsil was enlarged and bleeding. He sent me to and ENT who felt a lump in it and took a biopsy which came back malignant. I then went to two cancer hospitals and got two opinions on the diagnossis and treatment. Luckily they both said the same thing which was to have radiation only to my troat and neck. That was 6 weeks, 5 days a week of IMRT radiation which can pin point what level and where the radiation went. The radiation killed the cancer in my tonsil and as a precaution killed any in my neck nodes. The side effects were reduced saliva, some altered taste and risk of increased tooth decay from the reduced saliva. Other than than I am completely healed and operating like nothing happend, thank God!
Posted By: Kris Re: Report - 11-23-2004 12:29 PM
Hi Meg-
I had a sore throat for a couple of weeks, then devloped a swollen gland on the left side of my neck. I was talked in to going to my family doctor. Since I did not smoke, female age 50 and only occasionally had a glass of wine I did not fit the "profile" of oral cancer and was treated for two weeks with antibiotics until I could see an ENT. I had had my tonsils removed in 8th grade and one had grown back. It looked suspicious so the ENT removed it. He did not biopsy or do base line tests as he did not think it was cancer. But it was SCC. Then I ran to a major cancer center for the rest of my treatment - neck dissection, chemo and radiation. Stage I/V. There are a lot of people on this web site that did not fit the "profile." Early detection is so important. - Kris
Posted By: trvlnjak Re: Report - 11-23-2004 08:05 PM
Hi Meg,
Must make a correction to my post from earlier this morning. Surgery date was Jan 23, 1997, not 1987. First post and didn't even proof it. shocked

trvlnjak
Posted By: Cathy G Re: Report - 11-23-2004 11:08 PM
Meg,

I had an abnormal spot on the left side of my tongue that gradually got larger and eventually became painful. Over the course of a couple of years and numerous office visits, I was told by three different doctors (dentist, GP, oral pathologist) that it was nothing to be concerned about because I had never smoked. I finally found an oral surgeon who recognized the symptoms, performed a biopsy and referred me to an oncology team that concluded I needed both surgery and radiation. The surgery involved removing a portion of the left side of my tongue, along with many lymph nodes in the neck. Radiation consisted of about 7 weeks of external beam treatment followed by a radiation implant in my tongue for about 30 hours. Long-term effects have included some impact on my speech, and dry mouth (from radiation) that can cause difficulty eating and swallowing from time to time and requires frequent dental checkups.

Cathy
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