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If there is a reason to suspect you may have mesothelioma,
your doctor will use one or more methods to find out if the disease is
present. The first step in diagnosing mesothelioma is recognizing your
symptoms.
Signs and Symptoms of Mesothelioma
Early symptoms of mesotheliomas are not specific to the
disease. People often ignore them or mistake them for common, minor
ailments. Most people with mesothelioma have symptoms for only 2 to 3 months
before they are diagnosed. About one-fourth of people have symptoms for at
least 6 months before they are diagnosed.
Over half of patients with pleural mesothelioma have pain
in the lower back or at the side of the chest. Many report shortness of
breath. A smaller percentage have trouble swallowing, cough, fever,
sweating, fatigue, and weight loss. Other symptoms include hoarseness,
coughing up blood, swelling of the face and arms, muscle weakness, and
sensory loss.
Symptoms of peritoneal mesothelioma include abdominal
(belly) pain, weight loss, nausea, and vomiting. There may also be fluid or
a mass in the abdomen.
If you have any of these symptoms and have been exposed
to asbestos you should see a doctor right away
Imaging Tests
Chest x-ray: This may show irregular thickening of
the pleura, calcium deposits on the pleura, or fluid in the pleural space.
These findings suggest asbestos exposure leading to the development of a
mesothelioma.
Imaging studies such as x-rays, computed tomography (CT)
scans, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans will help determine the
location, size, and extent of the cancer.
Computed tomography (CT): The CT scan is an X-ray
procedure that produces detailed cross-sectional images of your body.
Instead of taking one picture, like a conventional x-ray, a CT scanner takes
many pictures as it rotates around you. A computer then combines these
pictures into an image of a slice of your body. The machine will take
pictures of multiple slices of the part of your body that is being studied.
CT scans are often used to make the initial diagnosis of
malignant mesothelioma, and are helpful in staging the cancer (determining
the extent of its spread).
Often after the first set of pictures is taken you will
receive an intravenous injection of a "dye" or radiocontrast agent
that helps better outline structures in your body. A second set of pictures
is then taken.
CT scans are more tiring than regular x-rays because they
take longer and you need to lie still on a table while they are being done.
But just like other computerized devices, they are getting faster and your
stay might be pleasantly short. Also, you might feel a bit confined by the
ring you lie within when the pictures are being taken.
You will have an IV (intravenous) line through which the
contrast "dye" is injected. The injection can also cause some flushing
(redness and warm feeling). Some people are allergic and get hives or rarely
more serious reactions like trouble breathing and low blood pressure. Be
sure to tell the doctor if you have ever had a reaction to any contrast
material used for x-rays. You may be asked to drink 1 to 2 pints of a
solution of contrast material. This helps outline the intestine so that it
is not mistaken for tumors.
Positron Emission Tomography (PET Scan): In this
test, radioactive glucose (sugar) is injected into your vein. Because
cancers use sugar much faster than normal tissues, the cancerous tissue
takes up the radioactive material. A scanner can spot the radioactive
deposits. This test, which is still being studied, is useful for telling
whether a thickening of the tissues is cancer or merely scar tissue. It can
also spot spread of the cancer.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI): MRI scans use
radio waves and strong magnets instead of x-rays. The energy from the radio
waves is absorbed and then released in a pattern formed by the type of
tissue and by certain diseases. A computer translates the pattern of radio
waves given off by the tissues into a very detailed image of parts of the
body. Not only does this produce cross sectional slices of the body like a
CT scanner, it can also produce slices that are parallel with the length of
your body. A contrast material might be injected just as with CT scans, but
is used less often. Sometimes MRI scans are useful in looking at the
diaphragm (the thin muscle at the bottom of the lung cage that is
responsible for breathing) where the mesothelioma may spread.
MRI scans are particularly helpful in examining the brain
and spinal cord. MRI scans are a little more uncomfortable than CT scans.
First, they take longer — often up to 1 hour. Also, you have to be placed
inside a tube, which is confining and can upset people with claustrophobia
(fear of enclosed places). The machine also makes a thumping noise that you
may find disturbing. Some places will provide headphones with music to block
this out.
Blood Tests
There are no blood tests that are useful in diagnosing
malignant mesothelioma
Tests of fluid and tissue samples
If you have a pleural effusion (a build up of fluid) a
sample of this fluid can be removed by inserting a needle into the chest
cavity. A similar technique can be used to obtain abdominal fluid and
pericardial fluid. The fluid is then tested to see its chemical make up and
viewed under a microscope by an expert in diagnosing cancer (pathologist) to
determine whether cancer cells are present.
A tissue sample of a pleural or pericardial tumor can be
obtained using a relatively new technique called thoracoscopy. A
thoracoscope (telescope-like instrument connected to a video camera) is
inserted through a small incision into the chest. Your doctor can see the
tumor through the thoracoscope, and can use special forceps to take a
tissue biopsy. Similarly, laparoscopy can be used to see and
obtain a biopsy of a peritoneal tumor. In this procedure, a flexible tube
attached to a video camera is inserted into the abdominal cavity through
small incisions on the front of the abdomen. Fluid can also be collected
during thoracoscopy or laparoscopy. The biopsy specimen will be sent to the
pathology laboratory where the pathologist will examine it to determine if
it is cancer.
Surgery, either a thoracotomy (which opens the chest
cavity) or a laparotomy (which opens the abdominal cavity), allows the
surgeon to remove a larger sample of tumor or, sometimes, to remove the
entire tumor.
If you might have pleural mesothelioma, the doctor may
also do a bronchoscopy. In this procedure a flexible lighted tube is
inserted through your mouth, down the trachea, and into the bronchi to see
if there are other masses in the airway. Small samples of abnormal-appearing
tissue can be removed for testing.
You may also have a mediastinoscopy. A lighted tube is
inserted under the sternum (chest bone) at the level of the neck and moved
down into the chest. Mediastinoscopy allows the surgeon to view the lymph
nodes in this area and remove samples to check for cancer. Lymph nodes are
bean-sized collections of immune system cells that help the body fight
infections and cancers. Cancers in the lung often spread to lymph nodes, but
mesotheliomas do this less often. Tests on lymph nodes can give the doctor
information on whether a cancer is still localized or if it has started to
spread, and can help distinguish lung cancer from mesothelioma.
It is often hard to diagnose mesothelioma by looking at
the cells from the fluid around the lungs, abdomen, or heart. It is even
hard to diagnose mesothelioma with tissue from small needle biopsies. Under
the microscope, mesothelioma can look like several other types of cancer.
For example, pleural mesothelioma may resemble some types of lung cancer and
peritoneal mesothelioma may resemble some cancers of the ovaries. For this
reason, special laboratory tests are often done to help distinguish
mesothelioma from some other cancers.
These tests often use special techniques to recognize
certain markers (types of chemicals) contained in mesotheliomas. One test
called immunohistochemistry looks for different proteins on the surface of
the cells. It can be used to tell if the cancer is a mesothelioma or a lung
cancer, which can appear to start in the lining of the chest cavity. A newer
test is called DNA Microarray analysis. This test actually looks at genes in
the cancers. Mesotheliomas have different gene patterns than other cancers.
The electron microscope can sometimes help diagnose
mesothelioma. This microscope can magnify samples more than 100 times
greater than the light microscope that is generally used in cancer
diagnosis. This more powerful microscope makes it possible to see the small
parts of the cancer cells that distinguish mesothelioma from other types of
cancer. |