Ask the Experts: Cutaneous Lymphoma Explained
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- Опубліковано 30 лип 2024
- Cutaneous or skin lymphoma is rare, but treatable - especially in its early stages. Symptoms range from rashes to tumors that look like mushrooms. Learn more about the rare form of non-Hodgkin lymphoma during our chat with Drs. Heather Goff and Syed Rizvi.
- Наука та технологія
Closed caption helps but it's very hard to hear Dr. Rizi and he seems a little nervous - a lot of "ums". Good info, nonetheless.
nice video
Can't hear Dr. Rizi, a pity.
Mycosis Fungoides might be uncommon but it managed to intersect with my life at the advanced stage too,2b,when it was correctly diagnosed having previously before the tumours came been misdiagnosed as ezecma and then psoriasis.I nearly lost my hand to Mycosis Fungoides but in the end lost a finger....so far! Pretty relentless ailment and I don't think that there's much that stops it apart from radiation and you can't keep on having that.
Can’t hear his whispering
Can you please lower your voice, we can hardly hear him 😅
Lymphomas are considered to be systemic
(generalized) diseases in contrast to solid tumors, such as breast or stomach cancer. The majority of lymphomas arise in lymph nodes (topography C77._) or lymphatic tissue, such as tonsils, spleen, Waldeyer ring, Peyer patches in the small intestine, or thymus; these are all called “nodal” lymphomas. Lymphomas can also arise from lymphatic cells in organs, for example stomach or intestine. Lymphomas occurring in specific sites are called extranodal or extralymphatic.Lymphomas are
therefore not assigned a site-specific topography
code. Although the terms extranodal and extralymphatic
are sometimes used interchangeably,
extranodal means that the lymphoma does not arise in a lymph node but may arise in one of the lymphatic tissues mentioned above, while extralymphatic means the lymphoma arises in a nonlymphatic organ or tissue.
Just awful sound quality. Sounds like they're talking into tin cans/echo chamber.