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AIMS AND TYPES OF OPERATIVE TREATMENT
Surgical intervention is usually considered to be the most definitive
treatment of most forms of cancer. When considering the influence
of cancer on a patient, the most important concern is how to remove
as much of the cancerous tissue as possible while doing the least
possible degree of harm to the patient’s appearance or physiologic
function. Also, the use of artificial blood vessels, bones, and
other structures as substitutes for the excised body parts complicate
surgery and increase its cost. Thus the decision to make a patient
undergo surgery is not an easy one to make.
Operative treatment is divided into radical surgery, which attempts
to achieve complete cure, and palliative surgery, which aims merely
to reduce the severity of the patient’s symptoms or remove
an immediate threat to the patient’s life. In radical surgery
the objective is to cut away the original focus of infection as
well as the adjoining affected organs and lymph nodes to which the
cancer might spread.
Palliative surgery is decided upon in cases wherein the tumor is
too large to operate on or cannot entirely be cut away without seriously
damaging surrounding structures. It is used to debulk, or reduce
the size of the tumor. Thus reduced, the tumor may respond better
to chemotherapy or irradiation. Furthermore, the symptoms of the
patient related to the size of the tumor may also be relieved, such
as if it is obstructing some section of the digestive tract. If
the tumor begins to bleed an operation could be undertaken to stanch
the bleeding.
Operations may be classified into three categories, these being:
shrinking operations, standard operations, and enlarging operations,
all with regards the scope and extent of surgery and the amount
of tissue removed. They may be used for tumors in various levels
of development, from early to late stages of cancer.
The ultimate goal of surgery is to effect a radical cure by removing
the tumor and focus without harming the original functions of other
organs. Some operations are necessary for the sole purpose of restoring
or conserving the function of a certain organ or organ system; for
instance, function conservation operations are sometimes performed
to relieve the sexual and urinary hindrances imposed by tumors of
the urinary tract.
Restorative operations are those which are intended to reconstruct
the patient’s body after the deforming effects of previous
surgery. Transplantation and artificial organs may be as aesthetic
and physiological substitutes for the damaged or missing structures.
Some examples of operations requiring reconstructive surgery are
breast cancer and cancer of the tongue, head and neck.
Another aid to diagnosis and early treatment is the use of fiberoptic
technology. The endoscope is one well-known application of fiberoptics.
It helps the physician diagnose tumors of the digestive tract that
are too small to manifest clinical symptoms. The detection of these
tumors makes treatment more feasible and increases the possibility
of a cure. Furthermore, surgery can be performed through the endoscope,
and operations conducted in this manner on small tumors may have
the same effect as more radical open operations. This is particularly
effective when used against polyps (mushroom-shaped tumors) in a
procedure known as a polypectomy. A wire apparatus inserted at the
tip of the endoscope is used to snare the tumor after it has been
anesthetized with local anesthetic through another attachment on
the tip of the scope. The laser endoscope is equipped with a laser
that can be used to cauterize early stage cancers in the digestive
or respiratory systems.
In addition to the endoscope, another weapon against cancer is
the practice of using high-frequency electric currents to crystallize
the blood vessels and cells of cancer tissue, thereby killing the
malignancy. This is very effective against bleeding at the focus
of the cancer.
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