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When Diagnosing Colon Cancer Might be a Mistake


So much of life depends upon timing.   Sure, we plan, but we know how much of our life’s events are unplanned and unexpected.  So often, our jobs and our mates – two of our most defining accomplishments – are the result of a chance encounter or a random act.  Life does not reliably proceed in an orderly manner.

This is often true in the medical profession.   Here, physicians in our quest to seek out and squelch disease, often discover what would should have been left alone.  For example, is discovering prostate cancer in an older man a true benefit if the tumor would have remained silent throughout the man’s life?  Whenever possible, it is best to ask the question, ‘what will I do with the information?’, before recommending a diagnostic test to a patient.  There is a risk to disturbing the natural order of things.

Are we really just shooting dice?

Sometimes, medical events occur on their own without any prompting from a physician.  I was contacted by a physician regarding an 87-year-old man with rectal bleeding.   He had never had a colonoscopy in his life and had only minimal contact with the medical profession.  (Maybe this is how he reached the age of 87!)   His bleeding developed a few months after he was started on a blood thinner prescribed because of an abnormal heart rhythm, in an effort to reduce his risk of a stroke.  A CAT scan was performed which strongly suggested that the bleeding was coming from a cancer in his colon.

If the patient had not developed a cardiac rhythm disturbance, then he would not have been prescribed a blood thinner.  And, without the blood thinner, he would not not have developed bleeding.   And, his colon cancer would have remained a stealth stowaway in his large intestine, unknown to the patient and the medical profession.  Perhaps, the cancer would have remained quiet and never posed a threat to him.  Now, however, he will undergo a colonoscopy which may be followed by major surgery to remove the invader.   One need not be a trained physician to appreciate that major surgery in a near nonagenarian with heart disease has risks.

I cannot tell readers the denouement as the case is in progress.  But, it reinforces how much in our lives is far beyond our control and comprehension.   An innocent experience can create an opening that leads to a path that reaches a tunnel that connects to a labyrinth that ends by a bridge that crosses a river…

We all think we are such assiduous planners.   We might be, but to me it seems that we are often just shooting dice.  

Comments

  1. I agree. If you're ever around Mentor , Ohio look for the Mentor Hardware store. It's a small family store that caters to their customers. You can take a plumbing part in for example, the owner will spend a half hour preparing the part, which includes, sanding, rethreading, cleaning, etc. All for an extremely moderate charge. You won't find this service at any big box store. Support your small business owners. We need them.

    Larry Maurer

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