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Most people with early colon cancer don't have symptoms.
Symptoms usually are seen with more advanced disease. If something of
concern turns up as a result of screening or if you have symptoms, you
will need more tests.
Signs and symptoms of colorectal cancer
If you have any of the following you should see your doctor:
- a change in bowel habits such as diarrhea, constipation, or
narrow stool that lasts for more than a few days
- a feeling that you need to have a bowel movement that
doesn't go away after doing so
- rectal bleeding, dark stools, or blood in the stool (often,
though, the stool will look normal)
- cramping or stomach pain
- weakness and tiredness
Most of these symptoms are more likely caused by something
other than colorectal cancer. Still, if you have any of these problems,
it's important to see a doctor right away so the cause can be found and
treated, if needed.
If there is any reason to suspect colon or rectal cancer you
will need to have more tests to find out if the disease is really
present and, if so, to see how far it has spread. Some of these tests
are the same ones that are used for screening people who do not have
symptoms. (See "Tests to look for colorectal polyps and cancer" in the
section "How
is colorectal cancer found?")
Medical history and physical exam
Your doctor will ask you questions about your health, your
family history, and do a complete physical exam.
Blood tests
Your doctor may order certain blood tests to help find out if
you have colorectal cancer. People with colorectal cancer often have
low red blood cell counts (become anemic) because of bleeding from the
tumor. You might also have blood tests to check your liver function
because colorectal cancer can spread to the liver. There are other
substances (tumor markers) in the blood that can help tell how well
treatment is working. But these tumor markers are not used to find
cancer in people who have not had cancer and who seem to be healthy.
They are most often used for follow-up of people who have already been
treated for colorectal cancer.
Tests to look for colorectal polyps or
cancer
If symptoms or the results of the physical exam or blood tests
suggest that you might have colorectal cancer, your doctor may want to
do some more tests. These tests might include those described earlier
in "Tests to look for colorectal polyps and cancer" in the section "How
is colorectal cancer found?"
A biopsy will be done on any part of the colon or rectum that
does not look normal. For a biopsy, the doctor removes a small piece of
the tissue from the area of concern. This is done during a colonoscopy.
The tissue is sent to the lab where it is looked at under a microscope
to see if cancer is present. While other tests may suggest colorectal
cancer, a biopsy is the only way to know this for sure.
Imaging tests
The tests described below make pictures of the inside of your
body. Imaging tests may be done for many reasons, such as to help find
out whether a changed area might be cancer, to learn how far cancer may
have spread, and to help learn whether treatment is working.
Computed tomography (CT or CAT) scan
A CT scan uses x-rays to take many pictures of the body that
are then combined by a computer to give a detailed picture. A CT scan
can often show whether the cancer has spread to the liver, lungs, or
other organs. CT scans take longer than regular x-rays. The patient has
to lie still on a table while the CT scan is being done. A contrast
"dye" may be put into a vein or a special drink used to help outline
the area being looked at. The dye can 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
dye used for x-rays.
CT scans can also be used to guide a biopsy needle into a
tumor. For this to be done, the patient remains on the CT table while a
radiologist moves a biopsy needle through the skin and toward the mass.
A tiny piece of tissue or a thin cylinder of tissue about ½
inch long and less than 1/8 inch wide is then removed and looked at
under a microscope.
A new way to use a CT scan is to do a "virtual colonoscopy."
After stool is cleaned from the colon and the colon is filled with air,
a computer can put together a picture of the inside of the colon. This
method requires the same preparation as for a colonoscopy and there is
some discomfort from the bowel being filled with air. If anything looks
like it is not normal, a follow-up colonoscopy will be needed.
Ultrasound
Ultrasound uses sound waves to make a picture of the inside of
the body. Most people know about ultrasound because it is often used to
look at a baby during pregnancy. This is an easy test to have. The
patient simply lies on a table while a kind of wand is moved over the
skin of the belly.
Two special types of ultrasound might be used for people with
colon or rectal cancer. In one, the wand that gives off sound waves is
placed into the rectum to look for cancer there and to see if it has
spread to nearby organs or tissues. In the other test, used during
surgery, the wand is placed against the surface of the liver to see if
the cancer has spread there.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans
Like CT scans, MRIs show a cross-section of the body. But MRI
uses radio waves and strong magnets instead of radiation to take
pictures. As with CT scans, a contrast dye may be used, but this is not
common. MRI scans are sometimes useful in looking at places in the
liver that might have cancer spread. They can also help the doctor
learn the extent of rectal cancers. MRIs take longer than CT scans and
the patient may have to be placed inside a narrow tube for the test.
This can feel confining and upset people with a fear of closed spaces.
The machine also makes a thumping noise, but some places will provide
headphones with music to block this out.
Chest X-ray
This test may be done to see whether colorectal cancer has
spread to the lungs.
Positron emission tomography (PET) scan
In this test, a type of radioactive sugar is put into a vein.
Over a certain amount of time the sugar moves through the body and is
taken in by the cancer cells. Then the patient is put into the PET
machine where a special camera can detect the radioactivity. Because
the cancer cells absorb large amounts of the sugar they show up on the
pictures as dark "hot spots." PET is useful when the doctor thinks the
cancer has spread, but doesn't know where. PET scans are now more
accurate because they can be done along with a CT scan.
Angiography
Angiography is an x-ray done to look at blood vessels. For
this test, a thin tube (called a catheter) is put into a blood vessel
and moved until it reaches the area to be studied. (The skin is numbed
before the tube is put in.) Then a dye is pushed through the catheter
and x-ray pictures are taken. When the pictures are done, the catheter
is taken out. Surgeons sometimes use this test to show blood vessels
next to cancer that has spread to the liver. The cancer can then be
removed without causing a lot of bleeding.
Last Medical Review: 03/05/2008 Last Revised: 05/07/2009
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