Advanced symptoms of female lung cancer?
summary
As we all know, lung cancer is a common malignant tumor of respiratory system, and its incidence rate is relatively high. When patients enter the advanced stage of lung cancer, they will show a series of obvious symptoms. There may be such patients around them. Even non-smokers may also suffer from lung cancer, which will seriously affect the life and health of patients. When the disease develops to the advanced stage, the harm will be greater. In this case, let's look at the symptoms of advanced lung cancer.
Advanced symptoms of female lung cancer?
Hoarseness occurs. When it comes to the advanced stage of lung cancer, the recurrent laryngeal nerve, which controls the vocal cord, will be compressed in a large range and lose its normal physiological function, which will lead to hoarseness and other symptoms, but there will be no symptoms such as sore throat and upper respiratory tract infection.
There will be shortness of breath, pleural effusion, this situation is almost all patients with lung cancer in the late stage will appear varying degrees of shortness of breath phenomenon, at the same time, the normal lung cells and pleural lymph fluid will gather in the lung. Such a vicious circle leads to the aggravation of symptoms.
When patients with lung cancer reach the advanced stage, the first thing is that they may have a bleeding mass. Because cancer cells will infiltrate normal lung cells, leading to normal cell rupture and necrosis and so on, which leads to the symptoms of bleeding. When bleeding silts up, it will form hematoma, so patients will have hemoptysis symptoms in the late stage.
matters needing attention
When patients with these four symptoms, we must actively take treatment measures. For example, through drug control, or through chemotherapy and radiotherapy to inhibit the rapid proliferation and metastasis of cancer cells. The symptoms of lung cancer patients in each period are different, so understanding the symptoms of advanced lung cancer is helpful to better control the development of the disease.