Welcome to Womens Health!
Type of Cancer
- Adult Brain Tumors
- Anal Cancer
- Bladder Cancer
- Bone Cancer
- Brain Cancer
- Brain Tumor
- Blood Cancer
- Breast Cancer
- Breast Cancer during Pregnancy
- Breast Cancer in Young Women
- Cancer
- Cervical Cancer
- Colon Cancer
- Esophageal Cancer
- Gardner Syndrome
- Inflammatory Breast Cancer
- Kidney Cancer
- Larynx Cancer
- Leukemia
- Liver Cancer
- Lung Cancer
- Male Breast Cancer
- Melanoma
- Mesothelioma
- Multiple Myeloma
- Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma
- Oral Cancer
- Ovarian Cancer
- Paget's disease of the Nipple
- Pancreatic Cancer
- Penis Cancer
- Prostate Cancer
- Skin Cancer
- Stomach Cancer
- Testicular Cancer
- Thyroid Cancer
- Uterine Cancer
- Vaginal Cancer
Cancer Symptoms & Treatment
- Ovarian Cancer Survival Rate
- Breast Cancer Survival
- Breast Cancer Prognosis
- Breast Cancer Detection
- Colon Cancer Survivors
- Breast Cancer Recurrence
- Colon Cancer Symptoms
- Metastatic Colon Cancer
- Colon Cancer Stages
- Ovarian Cancer Stages
- Colon Cancer Pictures
- Breast Cancer Treatment
- Breast Cancer Diagnosis
- Colon Cancer Treatment
- Colon Cancer Prevention
- Colon Cancer Stage
- Colon Cancer Recurrence
- Colon Cancer Symtoms
- Colon Cancer Statistics
- Colon Cancer Metastasis
- Prostate Cancer Survival
- Ovarian Cancer Diagnosis
- Breast Cancer Survivors
What are the treatments for the disease?
Treatment depends on factors found when the tumor was diagnosed and how advanced the cancer is at that time. Early stage cancers can be cured. Advanced stage cancers can often be controlled for long periods. Except for very small ducal carcinomas in situ, or DCIS, most cancers will be treated with additional surgery after diagnosis.
Younger women generally do not consider themselves to be at risk for breast cancer. Only 5 percent of all breast cancer cases occur in women under 40 years old. However, breast cancer can strike at any age, and all women should be aware of their personal risk factors for breast cancer. [A risk factor is a condition or behavior that puts a person at risk for developing a disease.]
What Is Different About Breast Cancer in Younger Women?
Diagnosing breast cancer in younger women [under 40 years old] is more difficult because their breast tissue is generally denser than the breast tissue in older women. By the time a lump in a younger woman's breast can be felt, the cancer often is advanced.