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In medicine, stomach cancer (also called gastric cancer) can develop in any part of the stomach and may spread throughout the stomach and to other organs. The cancer may grow along the stomach wall into the esophagus or small intestine.It also may extend through the stomach wall and spread to nearby lymph nodes and to organs such as the liver, pancreas, and colon. Stomach cancer also may spread to distant organs, such as the lungs, the lymph nodes above the collar bone, and the ovaries.
When cancer spreads to another part of the body, the new tumor has the same kind of abnormal cells and the same name as the primary tumor. For example, if stomach cancer spreads to the liver, the cancer cells in the liver are stomach cancer cells and the disease is metastatic stomach cancer, not liver cancer.
A well known complication of stomach cancer is when it spreads to an ovary; the tumor in the ovary is called a Krukenberg tumor. This tumor, named for the doctor who first described it, is not a different disease; it is metastatic stomach cancer - the cancer cells in a Krukenberg tumor are stomach cancer cells, the same as the cancer cells in the primary tumor.
1 Epidemiology
Stomach cancer is more prevalent in China, Japan, Korea, and other countries in Asia and South America, than in the United States.
2 Symptoms
Stomach cancer can be hard to find early. Often there are no symptoms in the early stages and, in many cases, the cancer has spread before it is found. When symptoms do occur, they are often so vague that the person ignores them. Stomach cancer can cause the following:
- Indigestion or a burning sensation ( heartburnHeartburn also medically refered to as pyrosis is a painful burning sensation in the esophagus, just below the breastbone. The pain often rises in the chest and may radiate to the neck or throat. Most people have experienced occasional heartburn. However,);
- Discomfort or pain in the abdomen;
- Nausea and vomitingVomiting (or emesis is the forceful expulsion through the mouth of the contents of one's stomach. It is a mechanism for expelling ingested illness-causing food poisons. The act may be triggered by stimuli which might indicate the possibility of poisoning,;
- DiarrheaDiarrhea in American English, (spelt diarrhoea elsewhere) is a condition in which the sufferer has frequent and watery bowel movements. This condition can be a symptom of injury, disease or foodborne illness and is usually accompanied by abdominal pain, a or constipationConstipation is a condition of the digestive system where a person (or other animal) experiences difficulty in eliminating feces. Some of the main causes of constipation include: Constriction, where part of the intestine or rectum is narrowed or blocked,;
- Bloating of the stomach after meals;
- Loss of appetiteThe appetite is the desire to eat food, felt as hunger. It exists in all higher lifeforms, and serves to regulate adequate energy intake to maintain metabolic needs. It is regulated by a close interplay between the digestive tract, adipose tissue and the;
- Weakness and fatigueFatigue is a feeling of excessive tiredness or lethargy with a desire to rest, perhaps to sleep. Often it causes yawning. It is typically the result of working, mental stress, jet lag or active recreation, but also from boredom or disease or mold or simpl; and
- Bleeding (vomiting blood or having blood in the stool).
Any of these symptoms may be caused by cancer or by other, less serious health problems, such as a stomach virus or an ulcer. Only a doctor can tell the cause. People who have any of these symptoms should see their doctor. They may be referred to a gastroenterologist, a doctor who specializes in diagnosing and treating digestive problems. These doctors are sometimes called gastrointestinal (or GI) specialists.
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