Early B-ultrasound symptoms of liver cancer
summary
Now it's easier to understand liver cancer. The question is whether you want to know it or not. We know that it takes two years for liver cancer to develop from the first cancer to abdominal pain and other obvious symptoms. Early general symptoms are few, but patients with advanced liver cancer not only have abdominal pain and abdominal distension, but also tend to be weak and thin, with progressive hepatomegaly symptoms, and patients with advanced liver cancer will have upper abdominal mass; even patients with liver cancer will have low fever symptoms, once the liver cancer ruptures, they will have acute abdominal symptoms. Patients will have symptoms of metastases that are not obvious.
Early B-ultrasound symptoms of liver cancer
First: the early B-ultrasound symptoms of liver cancer are obvious, and we know that the early liver cancer not only has no obvious symptoms, but also can not be ruled out by B-ultrasound. Most patients with liver cancer are in the middle and late stage when they are diagnosed. It is suggested that high-risk people need B-ultrasound, serum AFP, MRI and other examinations.
Second: Patients with early stage liver cancer will have no obvious signs. And some patients with early liver cancer even have symptoms and signs similar to cirrhosis. But some advanced liver cancer patients are more painful, patients will have symptoms of liver enlargement, and patients will jaundice and ascites.
Third: early liver cancer patients do not eat spicy food, do not eat carp and other hair, and liver cancer patients need to eat high protein diet, high vitamin diet and high carbohydrate is necessary, and patients must not eat greasy food, need to low-fat food.
matters needing attention
Early liver cancer patients do not eat spicy food, patients do not eat chili and curry, and do not eat stimulating food. Normal people need to check hepatitis B antibody every year, and those who still have no antibody after routine vaccination should be given high-dose vaccine.