TODAY is World Brain Tumour Day. There are more than 120 types of brain tumours and the warning signs for these can be as diverse as the brain’s endless list of responsibilities.
However, luckily, for most people the odds of developing a cancerous brain tumour are fairly low.
Over your lifetime, the odds of developing a cancerous tumour of the brain are less than one per cent. Usually, symptoms like a headache or confusion are just your body’s way of telling you to hydrate or sleep more.
There is no specific sign for a brain tumour and one can present with many different signs and symptoms, depending on where the tumour is located.
Only about a third of the more than 120 types of brain tumours are cancerous.
But, whether they are cancerous or not, brain tumours can impair brain function if they grow large enough to press on surrounding nerves, blood vessels and tissue.
With so many types of brain tumours, symptoms run the gamut from none at all to major red flags. Ultimately, how the body sounds the alarm depends on three things:
* Where the tumour forms.
* What part of the body the affected area of the brain controls.
* How big the tumour is.
To know when a symptom really spells trouble, you need to know your own body. Changes in your health can be just as telling as the symptom itself.
If you experience one or several of the following signs, you should seek medical advice:
Seizures: A tumour can make the brain’s neurons fire wildly, leading to seizures.
Changes in mental status: Perhaps a person has experienced confusion, one too many “senior moments” or more trouble than usual figuring out a restaurant bill. Mental abilities are personal to each individual – and so are any changes to them.
Personality or behavioural changes: “Frontal lobe tumours, in particular, can cause happy, bubbly people to develop a flat affect or cause some normally quiet people to become more talkative. They can also cause a loss of inhibition.
Clumsiness: Brain stem tumours may lead to a loss of balance or clumsy movements.
Visual problems: A tumour in the brain area that controls eyesight may affect vision. Blurred, double or even loss of vision can be signs of a brain tumour.
Limb weakness: Losing strength or weakness in an arm or leg may be a brain tumour symptom.
Headaches: Most headaches are not the result of a brain tumour. Brain tumour headaches tend to persist for more than a few days, are associated with nausea or vomiting or occur early in the morning.
Surprisingly, most common brain tumours do not actually start in the brain. Brain metastases, or metastatic brain tumours, spread to the brain from other parts of the body – most often from lungs, breasts, skin, kidneys or colon.
A person with a known history of these cancers who develops any of these neurological symptoms should be evaluated.