Dieting Terminology
Bowl (Colorectal) Cancer

Bowel cancer can usually be treated successfully if detected in its early stages.

About the Bowel & Bowel Cancer
 
The Bowel & Digestive System:

The bowel is the longest part of the digestive system (the ‘gut’).
The digestive system is the long tube that runs from the back of the mouth, forms the stomach and bowel, then ends at the anus. It winds around inside the body.

Food passes through it and is digested and absorbed. The waste products are passed out as bowel motions.


The bowel is made up of two sections. The small bowel is where food is absorbed. This leads into the large bowel, where only water and salts are absorbed.

The large bowel has two parts: the colon, which is about one and a half metres long, and the rectum, which is about 15 centimetres long.

The rectum leads to the outside of the body through the anus.

The Digestive System
Bowel Cancer

Bowel cancer generally affects the colon or rectum. Cancer of the small bowel is rare.
Bowel cancer starts in the lining of the bowel (the mucosa). If untreated it spreads deeper into the wall of the bowel. From there, it can spread to lymph nodes in the area. Later, bowel cancer can spread to the liver or lungs.
Sometimes bowel cancer starts in polyps, which grow in the lining of the bowel.

Polyps look like small mushrooms. These polyps are quite common in people over the age of 50 and are usually benign. However, some polyps can grow and become cancerous. People with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) have a lot of polyps

Causes of Bowel Cancer

Bowel cancer generally affects the colon or rectum. Cancer of the small bowel is rare.
Bowel cancer starts in the lining of the bowel (the mucosa). If untreated it spreads deeper into the wall of the bowel. From there, it can spread to lymph nodes in the area. Later, bowel cancer can spread to the liver or lungs.
Sometimes bowel cancer starts in polyps, which grow in the lining of the bowel.

Polyps look like small mushrooms. These polyps are quite common in people over the age of 50 and are usually benign. However, some polyps can grow and become cancerous. People with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) have a lot of polyps

How common is bowel cancer?

Bowel cancer is the most common cancer that affects men and women
in Victoria. More than 3400 people are diagnosed each year.

Bowel cancer mainly affects people over the age of 50 but can occur at any age.

   
  Are you at risk? Visit the Lets Beat Bowel Cancer website...Click Here
 
ref:http://cancervic.org.au/downloads/brochures/cancer_types/Bowel_cancer_08.pdf
Bowel Cancer Screening & Home Test Kit
 

CFA

Why screen?
Screening is the broad term used to describe testing for bowel cancer or its precursor (polyps) before symptoms occur. Regular screening is important because bowel cancer can develop without any early warning signs.

Bowel cancer can usually be treated successfully if detected in its early stages.

Cancer and polyps can develop on the inside lining of the bowel for a number of years, and often during this time, minute amounts of blood can leak from the growths, and present in the bowel motion. Screening can detect traces of blood that are invisible to the eye.

There are a number of screening tools used, and your GP can help you determine the best method of screening for you based on your medical history.

All Australian men & women over the age of 50 who do not have symptoms or a family history of bowel cancer are encouraged to undertake screening annually.

Important: if you have had recent changes in your bowel habits, blood in the stool or any direct family history of bowel disease or polyps please see your GP as soon as possible.

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What is a FOBtest?
There is a simple test you can do in the privacy of your own home. Known as a Faecal Occult Blood Test (FOBtest), this test is used to detect invisible bleeding in the lower bowel. Various companies produce these tests, which can be completed in the privacy of your home and posted in the mail. The results will be mailed confidentially to you and your nominated GP.

It is important to remember that a FOBtest detects traces of blood in the bowel motion, but cannot detect bowel cancer itself.

 

Visit the Lets Beat Bowel Cancer website...Click Here

   
  ref: http://www.letsbeatbowelcancer.com
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