Anal carcinoma - causes, symptoms, diagnosis & treatment

1) What is anal carcinoma?

The Anal carcinoma is a rather rare cancer of the anal canal or anal verge. In most cases, the histological diagnosis is a Squamous cell carcinoma (squamous cell carcinoma). A crucial point: HPV (human papillomavirus) are detectable in the vast majority of these tumors and are considered a central trigger.


2) Connection with HPV: why this is so important

HPV is usually caused by Skin-to-skin contact (often during sexual contact). Many HPV infections heal spontaneously - if there is still a High-risk HPV infection However, if it persists for years, it can promote cell changes that can develop into cancer. Particularly common in anal tissue HPV-16 found; also HPV-18 plays a role.


3) Symptoms: what to look out for

Early symptoms can be non-specific and are sometimes mistaken for hemorrhoids. Common warning signs:

  • Blood in the stool or bleeding from the anus
  • Pain, burning or pressure sensation
  • Itching, oozing, eczema-like irritation
  • Knots/hardening or palpable change
  • Stool irregularities (e.g. „pencil chair“)
  • Swollen lymph nodes in the bar

If such symptoms longer than 2-3 weeks stop: please seek medical advice.


4) Risk factors

The most important risk factors include

  • Persistent HPV infection (high-risk types)
  • Immunosuppression (e.g. HIV, immunosuppressive therapy)
  • Smoking
  • Prehistory of HPV-associated lesions/cancers (e.g. cervix, vulva)

5) Diagnosis: how is anal carcinoma diagnosed?

Typical components of diagnostics:

  • Clinical examination incl. digital rectal examination
  • (Procto-/)anoscopy for visual inspection
  • Biopsy (tissue sample) to confirm the diagnosis
  • Imaging to determine the stage (e.g. MRI/CT/PET-CT depending on the situation)

6) Therapy (conventional medical standard)

In the case of localized anal carcinoma, the standard is often a Combined chemoradiotherapy (simultaneous radiotherapy and chemotherapy), with the aim of treating the tumor curatively and preserving the sphincter muscle.
Depending on the findings, localization and response, surgery may also be necessary (e.g. in the case of residual tumor or relapse).

Important: Treatment decisions should always be made by an experienced oncology team.


7) Prevention: HPV vaccination & risk reduction

Since HPV plays such a major role in anal carcinomas, it is Prevention particularly relevant:

  • HPV vaccination (protection against high-risk types such as HPV-16/18)
  • Stop smoking
  • Safer sex strategies and early clarification of complaints

8) Supplementary frequency therapy: focus on HPV (concomitant)

Many people look for complementary approaches in addition to medical treatment. In the practice of information medicine, the concept is often used, biological systems via resonance/frequency patterns to accompany them.

HPV frequency list according to ETDFL (requested by you)

In the ETDFL 2023 „Human Papilloma Virus [HPV]“ is listed with the following frequencies:
The ETDFL frequencies are usually in kHz (1 kHz = 1000 Hz).

a) Original specification (kHz)
0.08 | 0.49 | 0.65 | 7.53 | 12.85 | 17.5 | 72.5 | 226.07 | 475.47 | 527

b) Conversion to Hz
80 | 490 | 650 | 7 530 | 12 850 | 17 500 | 72 500 | 226 070 | 475 470 | 527 000

Practical note: Which unit you enter (Hz or kHz) depends on the device/program. If your system requires „Hz“, use the converted values.


9) Next step: find a suitable therapist

If you are looking for support in the area of frequency therapy, you will find suitable contact points here:
https://frequenztherapeuten-suchen.com/listing/
(Platform: Frequency therapist search)


Disclaimer

Frequency therapy is not recognized by conventional medicine and replaces none Diagnosis or treatment by doctors or alternative practitioners. If you suspect you have cancer or are currently undergoing cancer treatment, please always seek close medical supervision.


Author: NLS Informationsmedizin GmbH, Herbert Eder

#HerbertEder #NLSInformation medicine #Anal carcinoma #HPV #Frequency therapy #Cancer #Oncology #Pprevention #HPVIvaccination

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Herbert Eder

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