Care of the client with cancer – Flashcards
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What is cancer?
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cancer is a disease where the mechanisms that control the growth and development of the cell are taken over and changed by the disease process. the resulting cell becomes nonfunctional for normal body function. Cancer cells are able to reproduce and spread. The malignant cell (primary cancer) are capable of spreading to surrounding tissues and lymph nodes. cancer growth of the primary cancer in other tissues is metastasis.
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Is age a risk factor for being susceptible to cancer?
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yes, as a person ages they become susceptible to developing cancer. about 77% of those developing cancer are older than 55 years old.
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what play an important part in development of cancer?
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lifestyle. 80% of those developing cancer is related to lifestyle habits i.e. smoking, ETOH, and diet and environmental factors.
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What is related to 90% of all lung cancer?
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smoking, in combination with ETOH is responsible for cancers of the mouth larynx, throat, esophagus, and liver.
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What are environmental contributions to cancer?
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exposure to asbestos, benzene and radiation increase risk for developing cancer. UV from the sun increases the risk for skin cancer.
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Are people predisposed to developing cancer?
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yes, some individuals are predisposed to developing cancer d/t their heredity.
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What are infections that can cause cancer?
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human papilloma virus (cervical cancer), Epstein-Barr virus (lymphoma), hepatitis B and C (hepatocellular), and helicobacter pylori (GI cancer)
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What is a benign tumor?
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grow slowly and expansively. they do not metastasis.
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what are malignant tumors?
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they are invasive and poorly differentiated. they spread to other organs and ares of the body.
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What helps decrease the death rate of cancer?
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primary and secondary preventions, they decrease death rate and improve quality of life.
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when are most people diagnosed with cancer?
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when they are reporting symptoms of the disease
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what is primary prevention aimed at accomplishing?
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reducing risk factors before the disease occurs. the client should make lifestyle changes such as stop smoking, drinking ETOH in moderation, eat a healthy diet, obtain proper exercise, avoid sun exposure, wear sun blocks. drug therapy low does ASA may help reduce colon cancer risk, Tamoxifen can reduce the risk of breast cancer by 50% when women are at high risk.
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What is secondary prevention aimed at accomplishing?
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prevention involves screening and early detection. many authorities have differing opinions when screen should occur. screening should be based on the patient's history, family history, age, ethnic group, risk factors, and potential exposure to carcinogens.
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What common screenings for cancers?
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breast cancer, colon/rectal cancer, ovarian cancer, prostate cancer, skin cancer, testicular cancer, uterine cancer, cervical cancer, endometrial cancer.
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how is cancer diagnosed?
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history and physical, biopsy of tumor, lab test: CBC, platelet count, liver function tests, BuN, CR. blood markers such as CA125(ovarian cancer), CT, MRI, x-rays, and nuclear medicine scans.
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What do patients often die of from cancer?
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metastasis is one reason that cancer cannot always be cured with surgery.
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What is a biospy?
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surgical removal of a portion of the suspected area to have the lab identify the type of tissue involved.
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what is an excisional biospy?
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is where the entire mass is removed with a small margin for diagnostic purposes.
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what is resconstuctive surgery ?
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to repair previous area of radical surgery such as breast reconstruction.
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what is palliative surgery?
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will help relieve complications of cancer
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what is preventative surgery?
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is where they will remove an area that could develop into cancer.
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what is debulking of a tumor?
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is the removal of the bulk of the tumor often done prior to chemotherapy.
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What is chemotherapy?
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the use of antineoplastic medication to destroy cancer cells by hindering cell function and reproduction. many different kinds of agents are used. the goals of chemotherapy are to try and cure the client, control the tumor or is palliative in nature.
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What does chemotherapy affect?
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affects the fours phases of the cell growth cycle. there are times that cells are not growing and are refractory to chemotherapy.
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What are the stages when giving chemotherapy?
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given to help decrease the likelihood of the cancer returning. chemotherapy given before a surgical intervention to help reduce the tumor and improve surgical success. giver very high doses of chemotherapy agents to suppress growth such as bone marrow suppression.
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What is combination chemotherapy?
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the giving of multiple agents to destroy as many cancer cells as possible. remember that cancer cells can be resistant or acquire resistance to chemotherapy agents.
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how are you suppose to handle chemotherapy agents as the provider of care?
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these medications are cytotoxic and can cause you, your patient, your co-worker, and family harm! proper handling of chemotherapy agents is a must. you must be certified to give chemotherapy in many venues. Wear: latex gloves for getting rid of body waste and handling soiled linens for 48 hours of patient receiving chemotherapy agents, wear gown, gloves, and goggles.
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What are side effects of chemotherapy?
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alopecia, anorexia, fatigue, nausea and vomiting, mucositis, anemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia(increased risk for bleeding)
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What are nursing interventions for the cancer patient?
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assessment of the patient includes assessing for side effects from chemotherapy. helping to decrease infection by patient education and good nursing care. provide a safe environment to decrease bleeding. monitor stools and assess for bleeding. minimize fatigue by monitoring for anemia, providing a restful environment, and maintaining nutritional status, and good patient education. promote nutrition. give antiemetic prior to chemotherapy. help to decrease patient's anxiety by providing proper environment and medication. minimize stomatitis with good oral care, antiinfective therapy, and treating the pain in their mouth. help the client cope with body image. patient and family education is important
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What is radiation?
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the use of high-energy ionizing beams to treat cancer and some benign disorders. causes cell death. attempts to localize cell death to the tumor. the presence of O2 is important for radiation to function properly. often requires multiple doses. radiation therapy: Teletherapy (proton).
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What are acute side affects of radiation?
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include fatigue, malaise, erythema at the site, nausea and vomiting diarrhea, esophagitis, mucositis, dryness of mouth, dyspnea, cough, and cystitis.
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what are chronic side effects of radiation?
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include changes to the skin such as fibrosis, permanent darkening of the skin and atrophy, GI problems such as adhesions, obstruction, ulceration and strictures, permanent taste alteration, dental caries, pulmonary fibrosis, nephritis, increased risk of leukemia.
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How should you maintain skin integrity for the client receiving radiation?
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educating the client about skin changes, not applying lotions to site, discouraging rubbing of site, wear loose fitting clothing around site, avoiding overexposure to the sun, not applying adhesive tape to the area, avoid shaving the skin, and bathing with a mild soap and lukewarm water. also need to keep markings in place.
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What kind of diet increases risk for developing cancer?
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diet does have an effect on the risk of developing cancer. high fat diets are associated with development of breast cancer. low fiber diets may increase the risk of developing GI cancer. Obesity has been associated with CA of the breast, colon, uterus, and gallbladder.
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What are recommendations for diets?
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limit saturated fat to no more than 10% of diet. total calories from fats should be no more than 30%. cholesterol should not exceed 300mg/day. salt intake should be no more than 6 g/day, 1 teaspoon.
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What are over all nursing considerations?
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proper pain management. oncology emergencies: septic shock, spinal cord compression, hypercalcemia, superior vena cava syndrome.
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how should you deal with the client with cancer diagnosis?
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support the client: dealing with depression and anxiety, sleep disturbances, body changes, and evaluate social support. spiritual care: chaplains, and religious institutions. Death and Dying: making arrangements, discussing end-of-life issues, quality of life, having client express preferences, advances directives, hospice care, and counseling.
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What are signs that you could have lung cancer?
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fatigue. unsteady gate or episodic memory loss. persistent chest, shoulder or back pain unrelated to pain from coughing.
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What are factors that can lead to lung cancer?
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second hand smoke. exposure to radiation. medical and environmental sources. air pollution. tuberculosis.
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What are common facts about cancer?
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lung cancer ranks as the number 1 cause of cancer related death in the US each year. african americans have the highest incidence of lung cancer, hispanics lowest. signs of lung cancer include: fatigue, unsteady gait, episodic memory loss, persistent chest, shoulder or back pain unrelated from coughing.
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what is the etiology of lung cancer?
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cigarette smoking is responsible for 80-90% of all lung cancers. CO2 and nicotine interfere with normla cell development. lower airway irritant. quit smoking 10 years reduces the mortality rate by 30-50%. directly related to the number of cigarettes smoked in a lifetime.
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What is the pathophysiology of lung cancer?
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arise from bronchial epithelial cells. cells grow slowly taking 8-10 years to reach the size of 1 cm (smallest lesion to be detected on x-ray). inflammation, hypersecretion of mucous, desquamtion of cells, reactive hyperplasia of the basal cells.
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What does TNM stand for?
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T=tumor size, N=lymph node involvement, M=presence or absence of metastases.
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stages of tumor that can be operated on?
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stage I, II, IIIA are good surgical candidates. stages IIIB, or IV non operable & poor prognosis.
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What is leukemia?
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a group of malignant disorders of the blood, and blood forming tissues of the bone marrow, lymph system, and spleen. miscommunication between cells causing a loss of regulation in cell division. normal genes transformed into abnormal genes.
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What are the different types of leukemia?
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AML=acute myelogenous leukemia, increases w/ advancement of age peak incidence between 60-70 y/o. ALL=acute lymphocytic leukemia, childhood. CML=chronic myelogenous leukemia, 25-60 y/o. CLL=chronic lymphocytic leukemia, 50-70 y/o
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What is acute leukemia?
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proliferation of immature hematopoietic cells. rapid onset.
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what is chronic leukemia?
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more mature froms of the white blood cells. gradual onset.
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What are characteristics of acute myelogenous leukemia?
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25% of all leukemia's however 85% of the acute leukemia's in adults. hyperplasia of the bone marrow. low RBC, Hgb, Hct, Low platelets, high WBCs. fatigue, weakness, headache, mouth sores, bleeding, fever, infection. 12,810 will be dx in 2009. abrupt onset. NDX infection.
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What are characteristics of acute lymphocytic leukemia?
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general age of onset less than 14 y/o. children under 14 y/o have best prognosis....poor prognosis for adults with ALL. immature lymphocytes proliferate in the bone marrow and are B-cell in origin. acute onset of fever, pallor, bleeding, progressive weakness, fatigue, bone and joint pain. leukemic meninigitis is common d/t arachnoid infiltration.
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What is the plan of care for the cancer patient?
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subjective and objective data. nursing diagnosis r/t anemia, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia. goals that patient will understand and cooperate with the treatment plan, experience minimal side effects and complications associated with disease and it treatments, fell hopeful and supported during the periods of treatment.