Cervical Cancer
What is Cervical
Cancer?
You don’t know what you got till it’s gone; you don’t appreciate
it until it happens to you … blah, blah, blah. Such are the
clichés and sentiments of those of us who get into a major accident
and the insurance company of the offending driver, the drunk who
slammed into you, refuses full retribution.
Those are the tunes played by those of us who lose a partner or
spouse to another because we were too demanding, too difficult, too
different. And those are the hackneyed statements, the only
trite and obvious things we can come up with to utter when we find
out our best friend of twenty-nine years has a unique form of
cervical cancer that might allow her to live, oh, another year at
most.
Yes, my friend has cervical cancer, what is less familiarly
known as invasive endometrial adenocarcinoma. You understand
“invasive” and from human sexuality class way back you get the
“endometrial” part. But what you cannot seem to wrap your
brain around is carcinoma…cancer. She is your age, which, last
time you knew, was NOT old, was not dying time. But the
condition she is in is that of what 5% of all other cervical cancer
patients have survived. The other 95% had lesser
complications: the cancer had not spread to the lymph nodes, which
are very soft, very fleshy, very vulnerable to a corrosive agent
chomping its way through human tissue.
Cervical Cancer Statistics
If you are smart or have a strong stomach, you do a search for
the causes, effects, symptoms, treatments, outcomes, support
groups, and residual fallout of cervical cancer. You might
find statistics: 500,000 cases worldwide; 300,000 die. 10,370
in US will be diagnosed with it; 3,710 will die. Mortality rates
have declined by 50% over the last three decades.
Cervical Cancer Treatments
Treatment includes cryogenics—freezing of the dysplasia, which
is the culprit in its earliest stages (which was in your best
friend when she was 20). Treatment might be preceded by a
colposcopy—the use of a special scope (with a 40X magnifying power)
that allows for examination of the cervix. It might mean laser
surgery—wherein the offending growth (also called metastasis) is
burned off/out. Treatment might include early
conization—meaning a biopsy is done by taking a cone of the
cervical canal. It might also require or point to the need for
radiation therapy and/or chemotherapy, depending upon the severity,
urgency, and choices the cervical cancer patient makes.
Cervical Cancer Stages
Cervical cancer works its way in stages, or exists in areas that
are measured in stages: in stage I, the cancer invades the cervix
beneath the top layer of cells. In stage II, the cancer
extends beyond the cervix into nearby tissues, to the upper part of
the vagina, and/or to the pelvic wall. In stage III, the
cancer extends to the lower part of the vagina, and may be
spreading into the pelvic wall and nearby lymph nodes. And in
stage IV, the cancer has extended to the least protected or
defensible parts of the body—the bladder, rectum, and/or other
organs and parts of the body.
My friend has been found to have stage III cervical cancer,
which may have reached the lymph nodes in the lungs. If this
is the case, which we will know in six days, when the latest tests
come back to her brilliant staff of oncologists and
specialists. In some respects, she is lucky. She has been
a health care provider to the elderly (as she is a clinical nurse
specialist in the top of her field) for twenty years. So she
will have that Florence Nightingale Clara Barton karma returned
tenfold. At the same time, the numbers are not good for her
stage of cervical cancel, despite what I think is a shockingly
young age—45. In other respects, then, she aint so “lucky” and
I am reeling from the surreality of our friendship coming to an end
in the corporeal sense after we have been through so much worse it
seemed at the time, and after we have used survival humor through
it all. What else can you do?
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