May 26 2008
Ask your question | Share your pancreatic cancer story
I am the author of Metastatic Liver Cancer - How you share the cancer of your loved one.
If you are like me and you or your loved one gets cancer: you start looking on the Internet for answers, the latest treatments and similar cancer stories. We want to make your search a bit easier since time is suddenly overly precious.
Please ask any question that’s on your mind about cancer and we will answer you or find another cancer story that relates to your question.
Make sure you ask your doctor any question that comes through your mind and when they answer like what they did with us: "stop reading the Internet about cancer"… make sure you devote your time wisely with your loved one. Once he sleeps because the cancer does take away their energy, make sure you sleep enough yourself or use that time to surf the Internet.
Save some time buying the recommended cancer books,especially the Guaranteed Method For Beating Cancer, as it comes with a money back guarantee… You will find too many people trying to promise you cancer treatments you never heard of: make sure you only step into those that offer a money guarantee! (not many will do, cancer is not the easiest disease to cure…)
2 Responses to “Ask your question | Share your pancreatic cancer story”
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Hi
My dad had a whipple 3yrs ago for 3.5cm ductal adenocarcinoma in the head of the pancreas. His recent scan shows a very small lesion in the Superior Mesenteric Artery to liver.
My question is why cant surgery not be carried out to remove it?
Does anyone know of a surgeon that might be prepared to do this?
There is no sign of cancer anywhere else!
Desperately seeking some answers!!!!
Please Help, thank you
CJ
CJ,
Always ask your doctor first, and if he cannot answer your question, ask him to refer you to a doctor that can.
Having a dad with secondary liver cancer and reading that your dad already had pancreatic cancer: how do the doctors define the cancer he is having now? (if I understand you right he is having a cancer now?).
Another option than surgery is embolization, yet again all depends on how the cancer is defined.
Since there is no time to waist, please also ask your question at
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.support.cancer/topics