Clinical records: How many times is breast cancer transferred to the armpit?
Ms. Jiang, 56 years old, came to the hospital because of the swelling of her breasts, her armpits, the fall of her nipples, the spilling of fluids, and, after a preliminary assessment, the possibility that breast cancer might be transferred to her armpits. Can it be cured?
Breast cancer is transferred to an armpit for at least two periods, as no armpit transfer occurs for one stage of breast cancer. If the lymphoma transfer in the armpit is integrated and local tumours are larger, it is the third stage of breast cancer. As a rule, the fourth stage of breast cancer is not related to the armpit, and the fourth stage involves other parts of the body, such as lung, liver and bone transfer, which is breast cancer.
Thus, if the armpit is moved, even if it is less so, it is a 2-stage transfer, and if it is integrated, a 3-stage transfer and a 4-phase transfer.
Through active treatment and integrated management, the survival of patients can be prolonged and the quality of life improved. Patients should be optimistic and actively involved in treatment, with a focus on daily care and rehabilitation.
Is breast cancer under the armpit serious? How?
Breast cancer can be cured at an early stage when it is transferred to lymph nodes under the armpit.
1. If treatment is not effective, lymphorate transfer stoves may continue to develop, and cancer cells may spread further to the lymphocytes on the collarbone, or even into the blood system, leading to the transfer of organs from afar, such as brain tissue, lungs, liver and bones, which exacerbates the condition to late breast cancer, thus threatening the life of the patient.
2. When the lymphoma of breast cancer is moved, there is often a cylindrical swelling of the armpit, which is hard, difficult to move, blurred borders, sometimes accompanied by pain or discomfort. In the case of shoulder-back pains, as a result of the lymphatic knots that have increased the pressure on the surrounding tissue, the swelling of the armpit, the obstruction of lymphol discharges, breast swelling and upper limb lymphomy.
3 With regard to lymphocyte transfer of breast cancer, a combination of surgery, chemotherapy, decomposition, endocrinology treatment and target-oriented treatment is required to remove lymphoma lymphocytes with cancer cell transfer and reduce tumour cell proliferation.
This includes the treatment of post-operative cancer cell or armpit areas to reduce local relapse and transfer. Chemical drugs are used to kill or inhibit the growth and spread of cancer cells. For hormonal receptor-positive breast cancer patients, the growth and growth of cancer cells is disrupted by inhibiting hormonal receptor activity.
Breast cancer patients who have symptoms of lymph transfer from armpits should be treated in a timely manner and in a targeted manner, as prescribed by the doctor. Patients need to actively adapt their lifestyles during treatment and rehabilitation, for example by increasing nutritional intake through low-fat diets and high-quality protein diets; by increasing the intake of fresh vegetables and fruits; and by paying attention to improving lifestyles, such as maintaining a proper level of exercise, to promote disease rehabilitation and improve the quality of survival.