Lung Cancer Screening (basics for patients)

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  • čas přidán 6. 06. 2024
  • This video is intended for patients who want more information about what lung cancer screening is, the risks and benefits, how it is reported, and other details.
    Links---
    Shared Decision Making:
    effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/...
    LungRADS 1.1 (the reporting system for lung cancer screening):
    www.acr.org/-/media/ACR/Files...
    Smoking Cessation Resources:
    www.cdc.gov/tobacco/quit_smok...

Komentáře • 54

  • @jeffnc
    @jeffnc Před 2 lety +9

    I'm neither a medic nor a patient (I hope!) but a medical researcher working on diagnostics with CT and found this to be a very useful video, thanks!

  • @luzsufficiencia4555
    @luzsufficiencia4555 Před rokem +2

    Thanks for sharing, very educational video. GOD BLESS.

  • @luckypenny4263
    @luckypenny4263 Před 2 lety +4

    Excellent video ! Well explained and I do hope you make more of the chest ct and pet scans on how to read them for the in school medical people along with the types of lung cancer treatments surgeries biopsies what to expect the findings after the LDCT is positive etc … love these series

  • @johnodonnell6030
    @johnodonnell6030 Před rokem +6

    Thank you so much for this video . After angiogram on my artery in my leg I had an incidental finding of a growth on my kidney which has now possibly spread to my lungs .I have a lung biopsy in a weeks time and this has made me feel more positive that I maybe get a better result than I was expecting .

  • @user-ht4fy6we7d
    @user-ht4fy6we7d Před rokem +1

    Amazing lecture! Thank you😊

  • @armnazmulislamfahim1645

    It was helpful.
    Warmth respect from Bangladesh. ❤️

  • @petezegreat
    @petezegreat Před rokem

    Great video, very informative

  • @dannahtaft3108
    @dannahtaft3108 Před rokem

    Excellent video

  • @andreabakas6274
    @andreabakas6274 Před 11 měsíci

    Excellent, thanks! ❤

  • @betsylynn6737
    @betsylynn6737 Před 2 lety +3

    Another great video.This has really helped me. I'm going for a CT scan next week because some pulmonary nodules showed up on my cardiac calcium screening test, result was zero. I've never smoked, so these videos have eased my concerns about it being lung cancer.

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks Betsy. I think most people don't know how common lung nodules are. The overwhelming majority are benign, but we follow them to be on the safe side. Congrats on the "0" calcium score!

    • @Stella20450
      @Stella20450 Před rokem

      Lots of information about nodules are about solitary there are very few on information about multiple.. On the internet it says that more nodules (multiple) the most common cause is metastasis from a cancer. Is this really true?

  • @raymondwalsh7520
    @raymondwalsh7520 Před rokem

    Very informative.

  • @jr.6199
    @jr.6199 Před 10 měsíci

    Most helpful for those looking for preventative health screenings. Somehow 20% of those dying of lung cancer in the US wer non smokers. Current US corporations medical staff cannot have these conversations with Patients, to the detriment of health care. I don't blame the doctors and nurses, this falls on the Corporate executives who create the policy of care for citizens. Keep up this level of videos for us and U.S..

  • @AlecFlackie
    @AlecFlackie Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you for your video, I have my first lung cancer screening appointment on Saturday. iI live in the UK so no need for insurance here and got a triage phone call automatically as I am high risk, but I imagine the medical reasoning is the same. By the by I'm a nurse and work in GI so deal with patients being screened for bowel cancer so understand the concerns for the patient.

  • @josephsybniefski660
    @josephsybniefski660 Před 2 lety

    Sir,i watch your videos and i subscribed so i stay informed about your next videos.
    Please answer me that simple question:
    I have a tickle chest and found 6-7 times last month,blood in my saliva,coming from my neck.
    I did a Ct scan without contrast liquid.how possible is the CT missed a lung or trachea cancer??
    Please.

  • @user-bd4ce9is9x
    @user-bd4ce9is9x Před 2 měsíci

    Thankyou.

  • @elkypmtarot9098
    @elkypmtarot9098 Před rokem

    I’m just home from my second scan one year on from them finding a node. Can I just say that Year was horrendous and I think their planning needs reviewed. Also I would have preferred to get my result then and there instead of the gp knowing first.

  • @philipkreutzer6774
    @philipkreutzer6774 Před 2 lety +1

    Do imaging centers normally have the results forwarded to a family doctor or does the radiologist explain directly with patient ? The reason I ask is that I do not have
    a family doctor . In Orlando Florida AdventHealth Imaging does not have the special designation for lung cancer screening . Is the designation significant ?
    Thank-you for your video .

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před 2 lety +2

      The results usually go to your primary care physician (usually family doctor or internal medicine). I would recommend finding one bc they would need to make referrals if something is found. You can certainly get the report directly from the imaging center but the radiologist does not usually go over the results with you.
      The accreditation thing is good if it is there but if it is not, it does not necessarily mean the center is doing anything wrong. It may be something as simple as not filling out the paperwork to get the accreditation.

  • @blackieratt7170
    @blackieratt7170 Před 3 měsíci

    Great work, very informative! Question, on the "small nodule" section, and on the 1st nodule, you circle a nodule that looks exactly the same coloring or maybe shape as the other white (I assume) vessels in the lung, which are shown as lines or small spots. How can you tell that this is a nodule? Is it steady and in the same spot from picture to picture in a CT, or there's another way to verify? Thanks!

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před 3 měsíci

      Yup, that's right, on the slice right next to it, it is in the same spot and it is not contiguous with the linear structures which are vessels.

  • @cherokeeusdi4363
    @cherokeeusdi4363 Před 2 lety +3

    I need help to stop smoking Dr said I have small cancer on out side wall of my lung got 2 go have removed on June 16 2022 next Thursday can u talk 2 me IAM scared 😨 IAM 61 years old

  • @vivekkumarmishra9778
    @vivekkumarmishra9778 Před 2 lety

    Sir recently i had hrct done what is showing in it plz .how can I share to you

  • @mikemalak2120
    @mikemalak2120 Před rokem

    How can we contact with you?

  • @marinstefanov5270
    @marinstefanov5270 Před 2 lety

    hey i really enjoy your videos can you explain how to read brain tomographys

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks. I don't really do Neuro so prob should find another resource. I'm a chest radiologist.

  • @clepropp5780
    @clepropp5780 Před rokem +1

    Hello and thank you so much for this video. Your soothing voice put me at ease. I am 65, a lifelong smoker, and am having my first scan next week. If nothing shows up in the screening, do you still have to go every year? Or would that be highly unlikely that nothing will show up because of false positives? That happened when I had my first mammogram and after the second one, it was fine. Are false positives the norm rather than the exception regarding lung cancer screenings?

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před rokem +1

      Hi, yes it is recommended that you come back for screening yearly even if nothing is seen. That's bc it is possible to have a cancer grow in the time between 1 year to the next. More often than not, we see small nodules that require a 1 year follow up, but if it is your first study, we might see something that we can't say for sure and recommend a 3 month or 6 month follow up, just like your first mammogram. After your first study (what we call the baseline), false positives are not very common. Good luck to you! 🤞

    • @clepropp5780
      @clepropp5780 Před rokem +1

      @@ThoracicRadiology Hi there and I hope you can give me some clarity. I got the results from my first Low Dose CT lung cancer screening and this is confusing. There is a solid irregular nodule at the right lung apex measuring 10 x 7 mm. A low dose diagnostic CT is Recommended in 3 mos OR a PET-CT can be considered at this time if the solid component is at least .8 cm. Is 10 x 7 mm the same as .85 cm? My doctor said if I got the PET I would know for sure so she thought that would be best but she left it up to me. The cost is the same. Personally, I am leaning toward the CT scan.

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před rokem

      @@clepropp5780 either one would work. the only thing I would say about PET is that it images the whole body, so a lot of times there are other incidental findings on a PET that may pop up but not mean anything. The CT is the same exact test you just had so less likely to see these incidental findings.

  • @HongKongTravelCamView
    @HongKongTravelCamView Před rokem +1

    thank you for the sharing. i have a question. Since plain ct thorax is enough to look for lung nodules, what is the use of contrast media in ct thorax?

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před rokem +1

      It is helpful to make the lymph nodes in the chest more visible. Also if your doctor is concerned about other issues like a blood clot in the lung, then contrast is needed.

    • @HongKongTravelCamView
      @HongKongTravelCamView Před rokem

      @@ThoracicRadiology What phase is the best for contrast CT Thorax for Ca lung? Late arterial phase or Portal Venous phase?

  • @JohnnyCatFitz
    @JohnnyCatFitz Před rokem +2

    Fwiw, my parent is 79y, and had radiation therapy for a small nodule at age 77 ( never even biopsied apparently, so small), and neglected to take charge and schedule a 12 month follow up. The doctor's office had a computer glitch in automatic scheduling for that far out and it is now 2yrs out from that original treatment and now has had to do additional PET scan and has a new, cancerous 3.5cm mass in the opposite lung. PLEASE DO YOUR FOLLOW UP AND DON'T BE BLASE OR EXPECT THE DOCTOR TO SCHEDULE IT. My parent would have a *much, much* smaller tumor if this had been only 1 year and not 2! Now serious surgery is going to be required ( at least lobectomy we think) and the risk of spreading cells is far greater. The worry is greater too. They quit a 2 pk a day habit over 20 years ago.

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před rokem

      Thank you for sharing that story. Hope your parent gets better. Yes, a delay of 1 year can make a big difference in the stage of a lung cancer.

    • @timsolomon8352
      @timsolomon8352 Před 16 dny

      How did the patient turn out?

  • @k.b.9716
    @k.b.9716 Před 2 lety

    🙏

  • @rajwinderkaur8586
    @rajwinderkaur8586 Před 2 lety

    Could anyone explain me what is this?,
    Broncovascular bundles in both the lung fields with fibrotic bands
    Complications are coming like shortness breath,

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před 2 lety

      Sounds like fibrosis but it can be from many causes. Important you see your doctor about it.

  • @samuelwatson291
    @samuelwatson291 Před rokem +2

    I’ve been having slight chest pain in the middle line of my chest and I had to get a CT scan because they seen a spot and when my results came in they think it’s fibrosis but they don’t know for sure so I’m getting another one to see for sure it’s not lung cancer.

  • @normariccobene6932
    @normariccobene6932 Před 8 měsíci

    Ct scans one pet scan then a rushed through bronscopy then opps another pet scan opps your terminal opps get your affairs in order opps stage 4 small cell lung cancer. That's how quickly it went with my late mother.

  • @ferhlouiza7814
    @ferhlouiza7814 Před 2 lety

    How often should we do the screening CT low dose ?

  • @jackryan9711
    @jackryan9711 Před rokem

    can doctors predict the risk of getting lung cancer if person is exposed to high doses of radiation , say 2 cat scans in one year and 4 chest xrays , how long before damage shows up from all this radiation ?

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před rokem

      it is difficult to predict the risk for very small amounts of radiation like 2 CT scans and 4 CXRs. In the US, the radiation dose limit for a person working with radiation is 50 mSv. The radiation from these studies would be far less than that.

  • @gailsullivan5109
    @gailsullivan5109 Před rokem

    That CMS CT LCD is absurd!

  • @rajwinderkaur8586
    @rajwinderkaur8586 Před 2 lety

    Is this cause of cancer?

    • @ThoracicRadiology
      @ThoracicRadiology  Před 2 lety

      It is probably not cancer, but I can't say for sure just based on what you've told me. You should talk to your doctor.