Home
Stage 4 Bone Cancer Resources
Lung Cancer Statistics Links
Sitemap

Sponsored Links

 

Navigation

Cancer prevention
Lung cancer warning signs
Colon cancer early symptoms
Facts about lung cancer
Skin cancer
Prostate cancer surgery
Causes of lung cancer
History of colon cancer
Prostate cancer staging
Stage 4 cancer treatment
Definition of lung cancer
Prostate cancer information
Cancer stages lung
Prostate cancer statistics
Stage 4 stomach cancer

Books
The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen: Nourishing, Big-Flavor Recipes for Cancer Treatment and Recovery
The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen: Nourishing, Big-Flavor Recipes for Cancer Treatment and Recovery
by Rebecca Katz Mat Edelson
Our Price: $21.45
Used from: $20.31

Cancer on Five Dollars a Day (chemo not included): How Humor Got Me Through the Toughest Journey of My Life
Cancer on Five Dollars a Day (chemo not included): How Humor Got Me Through the Toughest Journey of My Life
by Robert Schimmel
Our Price: $11.20
Used from: $7.41

Tropic of Cancer
Tropic of Cancer
by Henry Miller
Our Price: $10.08
Used from: $2.00

Beating Cancer with Nutrition, book with CD
Beating Cancer with Nutrition, book with CD
by Patrick Quillin
Our Price: $16.47
Used from: $6.36

The Biology of Cancer
The Biology of Cancer
by Robert A. Weinberg
Our Price: $149.69
Used from: $128.99



How You Can Survive Stage 4 Bone Cancer

Getting diagnosed with any type of stage 4 cancer is normally a cause for deep concern and worry and bone cancer is no different. However, due to medical advancements today, there exist treatments, so don’t lose hope if you find yourself in such a situation. This article provides a rundown of these available treatments so that can survive stage 4 bone cancer.

 

Surgery

At this dangerous stage of bone cancer, it is common that doctors opt for surgery in order to physically remove as much of the tumor as possible. This may also involve removing healthy tissue around it to make sure that it doesn’t spread any further. However, the tumor may have spread so much that the best decision is to remove part or an entire limb. This is obviously not an easy decision to make, but when you weigh it up against the possibility of dying, it’s actually not a difficult one to make.

Chemotherapy

This involves the use of drugs to destroy cancer cells in the body. It also prevents cancerous cells from dividing. While this treatment has a good rate of success, it comes with severe side effects such as the onset of anemia, fever, loss of hair, vomiting, nausea and even sterility.

Radiation Therapy

This involves using powerful x-rays to destroy cancer cells in your body. This has been known to be effective in removing a majority of cancer cells especially the ones that can’t be reach or safely removed with surgery. However, there are some side effects such as fatigue and skin irritation.

I hope this article has been able to convince you and give you hope that you (or anyone else for that matter) can survive stage 4 bone cancer.



 

Cancer Recommended Products


Lung Cancer News

Doc Says 'It's Not Cancer, There's a Pea Plant Growing in Your Lung

A patient who feared he had cancer was told he had grown a pea plant which had sprouted leaves in his lung. More Articles

Read more...


BBC News - Man grows pea plant inside lung

A Massachusetts man who was rushed to hospital with a collapsed lung came home with an unusual diagnosis: a pea plant was growing in his lung. Ron Sveden had been battling emphysema for months when his condition deteriorated.

Read more...


Soldier dies after receiving smoker's lungs in transplant

A leading UK hospital has defended its practice of using organs donated by smokers after the death of a soldier who received the cancerous lungs of a heavy smoker.

Read more...


Ontario wide effort promotes 'smoke free rides'

Excerpt: Local smokers are being asked to take a deep breath and resist the urge to light up in their vehicles, especially when children are riding with them.

Read more...


Opinion: Cancer's not the only smoking risk

There are searing images that make indelible and emotional imprints on our brains. The burning twin towers. Jack Ruby and Lee Harvey Oswald. Jack Nicholson’s demonic face in “The Shining.” I experienced one of those images as a medical student, on the first day I stepped into an anatomy laboratory.

Read more...