Introduction Colorectal carcinoma is commonest cancer of gastrointestinal tract. It is represent third cancer in man worldwide beyond lung and prostate cancers. It is fourth cancer in woman beyond breast, lung and uterus cancers. Deaths from colorectal cancer are more in compare with other GIT cancers. Objective The aim is prove epidemiological and clinical data of colorectal cancer. Method Our study conducted in Misan Province, Iraq. The data collected from 2013 to 2016. Seventy one patients that found have colorectal cancer. Gender, age, residency, site of cancer, family history, past history, year of onset, smoking history, alcohol intake, presentation, staging and histopathology pattern are get. Results Prevalence of colon and rectum carcinoma is 3.75%. The most age group affected was 51–60 years as 30.99%. The gender and residency of patients have no effect on cancer percent. Obesity, Family history, cigarette smoking and alcohol consumption risk factors. In 42.25% of patients had family history of cancer. Conclusion Most common site of colorectal carcinoma left colon, which present in 61.97%. There is increase in new cases detection of colorectal carcinoma from 2013 to 2016. Advanced stages cancer were most common stages description as IIIA, IIIB, IIIC and IV in 12.67%, 16.90%, 19.72% and 15.49%. The common histopathological pattern is differentiated adenocarcinoma as 53.52%.
Background: Colorectal carcinoma is commonest cancer of GIT. It is represent third cancer in man worldwide beyond lung and prostate cancers. It is fourth cancer in woman beyond breast, lung and uterus cancers. Deaths from colorectal cancer is more in compare with other GIT cancers. The study aimed to determine epidemiological and clinical data of colorectal cancer in Misan province.Methods: Our study conducted in Misan province, Iraq. The data were collected from 2013 to 2016. Seventy one patients that found have colorectal cancer. An epidemiological, clinical and descriptive study perform which included frequency of gender, age, residency, site of cancer, family history, past history, year of onset, smoking history, alcohol intake, presentation of cancer at time of diagnosis, staging and histopathology pattern in relation to colorectal cancer.Results: Overall prevalence of colon and rectum carcinoma is 3.75%. The most age group affected was 51-60 years as 30.99%. The gender and residency of patients have no effect on cancer percent. Obesity, Family history, cigarette smoking and alcohol consumption represented risk factors for colorectal cancer. In 42.25% of patients had family history of cancer. Most common site of colorectal carcinoma was left colon, which present in 61.97%. Conclusion: There was slight increase in new cases detection of colorectal carcinoma from 2013 to 2016. Advanced stages of colorectal cancer were most common stages description as stage IIIA, IIIB, IIIC and stage IV in 12.67%, 16.90%, 19.72% and 15.49% respectively. The common histopathological pattern of colorectal cancer was moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma as 53.52%.
Background: Migraine is the most common primary headache. This study aimed to describe clinical observations about migraine in outpatients in Iraq, including migraine types and subtypes, duration and frequency of acute attacks, severity, disability, effects on the quality of life, and complications. Methods: This is an outpatient-based prospective cross-sectional study, conducted in the Misan province, Iraq over nine years, and included 1412 patients aged 12 to 50 years. The data was collected from clinical records of patients who attended outpatient clinics. Results: The study included 1100 women (77.9%) and 312 men (22.1%); the women/men ratio being 3.5:1. The median age and standard deviation (SD) was 21 ± 5.42 years. The mean age at first attack of migraine was 17 ± 4.91 years. Migraine without aura was the most common type, accounting for 68% of the cases. The mean frequency of the attacks was (2 ± 4.63) days/month. In general, acute attacks were moderate to severe. Conclusions: In our study, we observed that migraine causes a headache resulting in episodes of temporary functional disability and women suffered more than men (ratio of 3.5:1). The mean age at first attack was a young age, and a family history of migraine highly altered distribution. Migraine without aura was the most common type, and symptoms including nausea and vomiting and photophobia were experienced by patients, which were used to diagnose migraines. Experienced aura was the most common migraine with aura, but also aura without a headache and aura with migraine were prevalent; therefore, it is important to differentiate between migraine subtypes. Visual aura was the most common aura, while motor symptoms were very rare. Chronic persistent headaches were a common complication recorded. These features provide evidence for the creation of screening tools in migraine prevention migraine.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.