Who else knows your environment is the primary cause of cancer?Reading Barbara’s cancer story about her father having bone cancer and liver cancer at the same time, I googled to find bone cancer early symptoms. Because when you detect can... Reading Barbara’s cancer story about her father having bone cancer and liver cancer at the same time, I googled to find bone cancer early symptoms. Because when you detect cancer at an early stage, chances of having a successful treatment do exist. Sadly, primary bone cancer is relatively uncommon in comparison with secondary or metastatic bone cancer. And just like father’s metastatic liver cancer had an unknown primary, it seems that in a lot of cases the primary cancer is not yet recognized at the time when the early metastatic cancer in the bone becomes Cancer that begins is the bone is called a primary bone cancer. But when you or your loved one has cancer, you will hear a lot of terms and it feels that "everybody has his own idea what kind of cancer you are dealing with". With primary bone cancer, the word sarcoma will often be heard. Sarcoma is a malignant tumor (which is another way of saying a cancerous tumor or bad tumor) arising in the bone, cartilage, fibrous tissue or muscle. Most people will now criticize my idea that we have cancer due to living in an unhealthy environment, breathing in unhealthy air and eating food filled with pesticide residues. Why criticize? Because children and young people are more likely to have bone cancer than adults. So my theory that an accumulation of bad residues over the years will cause cancer in older people holds, but how does it explain cancer in younger people? For this you have to go back to the best pesticide ever DDT: it killed everything and was "oh so practical". What DDT also did was killing the embryo in the eggs of bald eagles after the Second World War: %26hellip;Along with the passage of the Endangered Species Act, the US ban on DDT is cited by scientists as a major factor in the comeback of the bald eagle in the contiguous US%26hellip; So as long as adults have to bear living in a sick environment, %26hellip;as long asadults have to bear living in a sick environment, Barbara left her cancer story in a comment at love your parents you only have 1 pair of them. I am so sorry for your loss. I just learned last night that I am facing the same with my father. His cancer spread to his bones and his liver. I am trying to learn what he will face in this last year or so of his life and none of it looks good. I know this will be the most difficult thing I have ever faced, but I pray that I can stay strong for him and my mother. They just celebrated their 54th anniversary and have had many honeymoons. He says he is okay with the end of his life, but I don’t think I am. Oh well, I guess I don’t have any choice in this. Our father seemed to be a bit younger than Barbara’s father when he got diagnosed with metastatic liver cancer. Father kept a stiff upper lip saying that he did live a good life, but the tears in his eyes didn’t really say the same. You do need to be strong for your mother, because she will be the one loosing her partner for more than 54 years. Loosing a father is bad, but cannot be compared with loosing a partner of 54 years, so try to keep that in perspective. Mom could really become angry to people coming with a story like: oh, when my husband had a terrible flu I also thought he was going to die and felt so afraid blablabla%26hellip; Of course you feel afraid, but with a flu you have hope for a better outcome, with terminal cancer you have no other options%26hellip; If you have more news about bone cancer early symptoms, or you have a cancer story to share: please leave a comment here! Technorati Tags: bone cancer early symptoms, Cancer, cancer story, metastatic bone cancer, metastatic cancer, Metastatic Liver CancerWho else knows your environment is the primary cause of cancer?
painful and people go see their doctor.Primary bone cancer
adults will bear sick children.
adults will bear sick children%26hellip;Barbara’s liver cancer story
Metastatic liver cancer story