Search results for "Lip cancer"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
A case-control study on lip cancer risk factors in Ragusa (Sicily).
1984
Incidence rates of lip cancer in males in Ragusa (Sicily) are amongst the highest in Europe [age-standardized rate (world) for 1980-82: 7.5 per 100,000]. A case-control study was conducted on 53 male cases and 106 controls matched for sex, age (+/- 2 1/2 years), residence and hospital from which cases had been drawn. Individual interviews were carried out for the evaluation of ethnic, environmental, pathologic and occupational risk factors. Lip cancer was significantly associated with: fair, brown, or red hair (relative odds = 2.3), blue eyes (r.o. = 5.3), fair skin (r.o. = 8.0), sensitivity to sunburns (r.o. = 4.1), working outdoors (r.o. = 4.9), coexistence of non-specific lesions of expo…
Braquiterapia en el cáncer de labio
2006
El cáncer de labio es de los más prevalentes entre los tumores cutáneos de cabeza y cuello. Las características del tumor, por su crecimiento exofítico en una zona de fácil acceso visual, permite un diagnóstico en estadios incipientes y, por tanto, un mejor pronóstico con los actuales tratamientos. En estadios iniciales se puede realizar tratamiento con cirugía o braquiterapia, siendo los resultados similares en cuanto al control local; sin embargo la braquiterapia ofrece mejores resultados estéticos y funcionales. Presentamos un trabajo de revisión bibliográfica al respecto de de las indicaciones, técnicas y resultados de la braquiterapia en el cáncer de labio. Lip cancer is one of the mos…
FLiGS Score: A New Method of Outcome Assessment for Lip Carcinoma–Treated Patients
2015
Lip cancer represents 25% of all oral cavity carcinomas; it peaks in the sixth and seventh decades, with males predominating by 3 to 1. The lower lip is approximately 12 times more likely to be affected, owing to its greater exposure to the sunlight. Surgical oncologic and reconstructive treatment of lip cancer has advanced dramatically, but lip distortion or loss resulting from neoplasms or from their surgical treatment has considerable functional and cosmetic effects with resultant nutritional, physical, and psychological detriments.1–8 Traditional indicators, such as survival rate and disease-free interval, are no longer adequate for answering questions on outcome not considering the phy…