This week is Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Week. In this blog, information development nurse Teri explains more about this type of cancer. This includes types and the signs and symptoms.
There are over 30 different places that cancer can develop in the head and neck area. The most common are the:
Cancer can also develop in the:
There were about 62,500 people living with head and neck cancer in the UK in 2010. However, 91 to 93% of cases are preventable. Raising awareness of the risk factors associated with head and neck cancer can help people know how to reduce the risk.
It is also important to know what symptoms to look out for so you can get them checked by your GP as soon as possible. Often, people are not aware of the symptoms of head and neck cancer and may not go to their GP as early as they need to. The earlier it is diagnosed, the more successful treatment is likely to be.
What are the possible causes and risk factors of head of neck cancer?
We don’t know exactly what causes head and neck cancer. But there are risk factors that can increase your chance of developing it. If you have one or more risk factor, it doesn’t mean you will definitely get head and neck cancer. And if you don’t have any risk factors, it doesn’t mean you definitely won’t get it.
Risk factors include:
Having a close relative with head and neck cancer may also slightly increase your risk.
Having poor mouth hygiene or dental disease may slightly increase the risk of mouth cancer.
What are the symptoms?
The symptoms depend on where in the head or neck the cancer is. Although these symptoms can be caused by conditions other than cancer, it’s important to have them checked by your GP or dentist, particularly if they continue.
Symptoms may include one or more of the following:
Pain
Swelling
Breathing problems
Bleeding
Changes to eating and speaking
Other symptoms
Lumps in the neck
If a cancer in the mouth or throat spreads from where it started, the first place it will usually spread to are the lymph nodes in the neck. This can show up as a painless lump in the neck. Lymph nodes are small, bean-shaped glands that are part of the lymphatic system.
Enlarged lymph nodes are much more likely to be due to an infection than cancer. But if you have a lump on your neck that hasn’t gone away within 3 to 6 weeks, it should be looked at by a specialist doctor.
More information
If you would like more information, go to the head and neck cancer section of our website.
We also have booklets about head and neck cancer, managing the late effects of head and neck cancer treatment and cancer of the larynx.
To see what else Macmillan's cancer information team has been blogging about, please visit our blog home page! You can subscribe to receive our blogs by email or RSS too.
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