Don't Die From This Disease! - Colon Cancer is Preventable

By Veronica Carrillo

Colon cancer staging is a careful effort to ascertain whether the cancer has dispersed, and if it has, to what additional regions of the body it has spread to. Staging is really significant as it helps to show which sorts of treatment may be suitable in opposing the cancer.

When you are having any of these symptoms that could mean that you have parasites, Colonic Polyps, Ulcertaive Colitis, Diverticulitis or irritable bowel syndrome. These are diseases that should not be avoided at all, I will go into more detail about each one in a little bit, but just understand that these could escalate to even more problems if action is not taking to make you colon healthy again.

Now you already know what parasites are and you know that they are not friendly. The parasites enter you body from different types of ways, the most common is from eating uncooked food and drinking unfiltered water. Parasites eat up your nutrients from your food that is needed for your body also leaving behind a toxin that leaves the part of your intestines that absorbs the nutrient weak. When this happens your digestive system wont do what its suppose to do. Parasites could disguise themselves as healthy sells or they could be like a tapeworm type living in your system for years.

In this stage it has dispersed more profoundly into or through the colon or rectum. Potentially it might have affected additional tissue also. In this stage it has not arrived at the Lymph nodes (bean-sized structures which can be found in the entire body that assists in combatting all forms of infections and diseases. Stage 2 is also known as Duke B.

Once you're in this stage it has now spread to the Lymph nodes though it has not spread to nearby regions of the body. Stage 3 is also known as Duke C. In this stage the illness has spread through the Lymph node system to additional nearby tissue. This is most commonly known as metastasis. The organs that are most probably affected are the lungs and liver. Stage 4 is also known as Duke D.

Survival rates for early stage detection is approximately 5 times that of late stage cancers. Staging is crucial because the spread of infection at diagnosis is the most potent predictor of survival, and treatments are frequently altered based on the stage. - 30193

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