Transcript Slide 1

Welfare for the Elderly Seminar
Stomach and Intestinal Diseases: How to
recognise them
Dr Kalpesh Besherdas
Consultant Gastroenterologist, Barnet & Chase Farm Hospital
Sunday 12 February, 3.30 – 5.00pm
BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir, Neasden
What to worry about most?
What to worry about most?
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Bowel cancer
Oesophageal and stomach cancer
Pancreatic cancer
Liver cancer
2003 Estimated US Cancer Cases*
Prostate
222,849
Men
Men
675,300
675,300
Women
658,800
210,816 Breast
Lung/bronchus
94,542
79,056 Lung/bronchus
Colon/rectum
74,283
72,468 Colon & rectum
Urinary bladder 40,518
39,528 Uterine corpus
Melanoma of
skin
27,012
26,352 Ovary
Non-Hodgkin
lymphoma
27,012
26,352 Non-Hodgkin
lymphoma
Kidney
20,259
19,764 Melanoma of
skin
Oral cavity
20,259
19,764 Thyroid
Leukemia
20,259
13,176 Pancreas
Pancreas
13,506
13,176 Urinary bladder
All other sites
114,801
62,238 All other sites
ONS=Other nervous system.
*Excludes basal and squamous cell skin cancers and in situ carcinomas except urinary bladder.
Source: American Cancer Society, 2003.
How Does Colorectal Cancer Develop?
Colon Polyp
Colon Cancer
Symptoms of Colorectal
Cancer
Time Course
Symptoms
Findings
Early
None
None
Occult blood in stool
Mid
Rectal bleeding
Change in bowel
habits
Rectal mass
Blood in stool
Late
Fatigue
Anemia
Abdominal pain
Weight loss
Abdominal mass
Bowel obstruction
Bowel cancer: how to recognise it
•Rectal bleeding with change of bowel habit of ≥ 3 weeks duration
•Rectal bleeding without change in bowel habit with no obvious
cause ≥ 3 weeks duration
•Change of bowel habit persisting for 3 weeks or more without
bleeding
•Abdominal mass thought to be large bowel cancer
•Anaemia : fatigue
Is Colorectal Cancer
Preventable?
YES!
• Screening
The Programme
Eligibility
Men and Women aged 60-69, and registered
with a GP will automatically be invited to
participate and offered a FOB test kit every two
years
Those aged 70 and over are not invited
automatically but are able to request a test kit
from the Hub
THE KIT
Colonoscopy
CT Colography
Colon Polyp
CT Colography
Colon Polyp
CT Colography
Colon Cancer
Rectal Bleeding
•If you’ve had blood in your poo or
looser poo for 3 weeks, your doctor
wants to know.
•Chances are it’s nothing to worry about,
but these symptoms could be signs of
bowel cancer, so tell your doctor. Finding
bowel cancer early makes it more treatable
and could save your life.
Upper GI cancer
Oesophageal/Stomach cancer
•Indigestion or heartburn that doesn’t go away
•Not feeling hungry (loss of appetite)
•Bloating after a small amount of food
•Nausea and vomiting
•Difficulty in Swallowing
•Feeling very tired and lethargic (symptom of
anaemia)
•Unexplained weight loss
•Blood in your vomit or faeces or black tar like
faeces.
Oesophageal/Stomach cancer
causes
• Obesity or a poor diet, particularly one which contains a lot of salty,
pickled or processed foods
• Infection with an organism called Helicobacter pylori
• Barrett's oesophagus (where abnormal cells develop in the lining of
the lower oesophagus)
• Pernicious anaemia (an autoimmune condition where the lining of
the stomach becomes thin, less acid is produced and anaemia
develops due to lack of vitamin B12), atrophic gastritis or a
hereditary condition of growths in the stomach
• Smoking
• Previous surgery for peptic ulcer
Diagnosing stomach cancer
• Endoscopy
• Barium X-ray
• CT scan
Abdominal pain
Diarrhoea
Common causes of
constipation
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not enough fibre in the diet
not drinking enough water
lack of exercise
Medications
irritable bowel syndrome
changes in life or routine such as pregnancy,
older age, and travel
• abuse of laxatives
• problems with the colon and rectum
Bloating
Cause of bloating and flatulence
Bloating treatment: diet
The End