Научная статья на тему 'X-RAYS IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF CANCER'

X-RAYS IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF CANCER Текст научной статьи по специальности «Медицинские технологии»

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Scientific progress
Ключевые слова
X-rays / chest cancer / doses / cancer.

Аннотация научной статьи по медицинским технологиям, автор научной работы — Ulmas Djumabayevich Alaberdiev, Kamoliddin Otamurodovich Pardaev

Chest X-rays can be used to diagnose, treat, and cure lung cancer. Using X-rays at low doses, images of structures in the body can be constructed to identify the tumor and carry it out step by step. Using high doses of X-rays helps to destroy cancer cells in the body.

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Текст научной работы на тему «X-RAYS IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF CANCER»

SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS

VOLUME 2 I ISSUE 3 I 2021 ISSN: 2181-1601

X-RAYS IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF CANCER

Ulmas Djumabayevich Alaberdiev Kamoliddin Otamurodovich Pardaev

Clinical Interns at the Department of MedicalRadiation Diagnostics Samarkand State Medical Institute

ABSTRACT

Chest X-rays can be used to diagnose, treat, and cure lung cancer. Using X-rays at low doses, images of structures in the body can be constructed to identify the tumor and carry it out step by step. Using high doses of X-rays helps to destroy cancer cells in the body.

Key words: X-rays, chest cancer, doses, cancer.

Diagnosing cancer is a complex process and there's no one best way to do this. Every person is different, and there are many different kinds of cancer that can cause a lot of different symptoms.

If your doctor thinks you have cancer, a complete work-up will be done. It will likely include a physical exam, asking you about your health history and symptoms, a review of your family history of illness, blood tests, special procedures, and/or imaging tests. Many times, a tiny piece (sample) of the changed cells or tumor must be taken out and tested. This is called a biopsy. Sometimes it's the only way to know for sure that you have cancer.

Multiple biomedical imaging techniques are used in all phases of cancer management. Imaging forms an essential part of cancer clinical protocols and is able to furnish morphological, structural, metabolic and functional information. Integration with other diagnostic tools such as in vitro tissue and fluids analysis assists in clinical decision-making. Hybrid imaging techniques are able to supply complementary information for improved staging and therapy planning. Image guided and targeted minimally invasive therapy has the promise to improve outcome and reduce collateral effects. Early detection of cancer through screening based on imaging is probably the major contributor to a reduction in mortality for certain cancers. Targeted imaging of receptors, gene therapy expression and cancer stem cells are research activities that will translate into clinical use in the next decade. Technological developments will increase imaging speed to match that of physiological processes.

Once a cancer is found, more imaging tests might be done to see if and how far the cancer may have grown or spread. This process is called staging. All of this information is used to make the treatment plan that's best for each person.

Imaging is used to make pictures of the inside of your body. It can help find tumors and other changes, show how much disease is there, and help see if treatment is

SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS

VOLUME 2 I ISSUE 3 I 2021 ISSN: 2181-1601

working. Imaging may also be used to do biopsies and other surgical procedures.Here are some of the common imaging tests that may be used for cancer.

CT scan.this scan uses X-rays and a computer to make 3-D images (often called slices) of your body. A CT scan can show any part of your body, including bones, muscles, fat, and organs. CT scans are a lot more detailed than X-rays.

A mammogram is an X-ray exam of the breast. It's used to find and diagnose breast disease in women who have breast problems such as a lump, pain, or nipple discharge. It's also used to check for breast diseases in women who don't have breast problems. (This is called a screening mammogram.)

A mammogram can't prove that a breast change is cancer. But if it shows something that might be cancer, more testing can be done.

Ultrasound (sonography) uses high-energy sound waves and a computer to make images of blood vessels, tissues, and organs. It can be used to look at how well organs are working and to look at blood flow through vessels. Tumors in the belly (abdomen), liver, and kidneys can often be seen with an ultrasound. (It's not useful in the chest because the ribs block the sound waves.)

Ultrasound can also be used through a probe that can be put into body openings, like the anus, vagina, or esophagus. This puts it closer to the certain internal organs, which can give a clearer picture.

MRI uses a strong magnet, radio waves, and a computer to make detailed images of organs and other structures inside your body. An MRI is often used to look at the heart, brain, liver, pancreas, male and female reproductive organs, and other soft tissues. MRI can show even small changes in tissues. It can assess blood flow, detect tumors, and diagnose many forms of cancer, evaluate infections, and assess injuries to bones and joints.

Various pharmaceutical therapies are under development for cancer that are classed as cytotoxic, antihormonal, molecular targeted and immunotherapeutic. The molecular targeted therapies lend themselves to imaging for control of their effectiveness and include signal transduction inhibitors, angiogenesis inhibitors, apoptosis inducers, cell cycle inhibitors, multi-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors and epigenetic modulators

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3. Aboagye, E.O. , Bhujwalla, Z.M. , Shungu, D.C. , Glickson, J.D. , 1998. Detection of tumour response to chemotherapy by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy: effect of 5-fluorouracil on lactate levels in radiation-induced fibrosarcoma I tumours.

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