canadian cancer statistics 2013. cancer in canada

26
Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013

Upload: annabel-benson

Post on 08-Jan-2018

216 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013

Page 2: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013

Page 3: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013

Page 4: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013

Page 5: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

Cancer in Canada

Page 6: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

MONITORING ORGANS: Cancer

Page 7: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

Why Use Imaging?• non-invasive way of:– Screening for cancer

• ex. mammograms for breast cancer– Diagnosing/staging

• ex. location in the body, spread, guiding a biopsy– Guiding cancer treatments

• ex. focus on the tumors and minimize damage to surrounding tissue

– Determining if a treatment is working

– Monitoring for cancer recurrence

Page 8: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

1. Ultrasounds

• Use of sound above human hearing range to image body structures, including soft tissues

• Sounds waves are reflected (echo) off of different density tissues differently

Page 9: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada
Page 10: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

2. X-Rays• Oldest form of imaging

• Found by German physicist Wilhelm Rontgen, 1895

• High-energy electromagnetic waves that pass through soft tissue (ex. muscle) but are absorbed by dense tissue (ex. bone)

Page 11: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

• Can also be used to see soft tissues with the help of stains (ex. bismuth)

Page 12: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

Most popular use:

• Dental x-rays

Page 13: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada
Page 14: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

An aside...

Electromagnetic radiation- Forms of energy, some on the visible spectrum

(light)

Page 15: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

• Some can be damaging to our DNA, in particular high-energy high-frequency waves (above colour spectrum)

Page 16: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

3. CAT Scans: computerized axial tomography scan

• An X-ray machine rotates around the patient taking hundreds of individual pictures form many angles

• More sensitive than an X-ray alone

• Computer re-assembles the picture into a 3-D image, allowing for organs to be viewed section-by-section

Page 17: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada
Page 18: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada
Page 19: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

• Full body scans are still not routinely done due to high incidence of “incidentalomas”, not real issues that show up as issues on the scan

• Known to increase chances of cancer in children…

Page 20: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada
Page 21: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

4. MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging)• uses radio waves and a strong magnet

• different tissues (including tumors) emit a more or less intense signal based on their chemical makeup

• produces a three-dimensional images of sections of the body

• MRI is sometimes more sensitive than CT scans for distinguishing soft tissues.

Page 22: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

• can use radioisotopes (unstable atoms) that are injected into the target organ for imaging

Page 23: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada
Page 24: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

5. PET (Positron Emission Tomography)

• used to locate a tumor

• the patient is given an injection of regular sugar and a small amount of radioactively labeled sugar

• because cancer cells take up sugar more than other tissues in the body the tumor is easier to find

Page 25: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada
Page 26: Canadian Cancer Statistics 2013. Cancer in Canada

• large amounts of radiolabelled sugar collect at site of damage “lighting” it up

• PET scans are beginning to be used to check if a treatment is working - if tumor cells are dying they use less sugar