Childhood Cancer Careline

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    Donate to Help / Join Childhood Cancer Careline


    Thanks to our friends at Seattle Bike Supply there is more western fun!

    See the Western Torker bike on our auction website www.ccclauction.cmarket.com

    Welcome - Childhood Cancer Careline

    Gala Event

    Roman Holiday

    Saturday, September 13, 2008

    Join our online fundraising event, and send this link to your friends!

    ccclauction.cmarket.com

    We are holding an online auction in conjunction with a live dinner auction.

    Our Gala Event, Roman Holiday will be held on Saturday September 13th, at the Plaxco's outdoor grotto at their residence: 10201 NE 151st, Bothell Washington, 98011. Registration and preview begins at 4:00pm. It will be a wonderful event for everybody.

    Buy your tickets early and Save the Date! September 13th


    Click Here for Details

    Sorry - this event has been postponed until May 2009

    Complete Details

    Gold Bracelet

    Gold Bracelet Donate $10 to us and receive a free Gold bracelet.

    Call today to donate! (425) 870-5622 or (206) 459-5484

    Note: The bracelet is gold colored non-latex rubberized material one size fits all and has printed on it: CONQUER KIDS CANCER.
    Thanks to all our sponsors

    We encourage you to use their services and support their businesses.

    Click Here - for a list.


    The Childhood Cancer Careline Giving from the Heart is recognized by the US Government as a 501(c)(3); IRS Tax ID#: 91-2171599. We are also a non-profit corporation in the State of Washington.

    Childhood Cancer Careline Giving from the Heart provides financial and emotional support to childhood cancer patients and their families undergoing treatment at local care facilities, including all of the regional medical centers, the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Group Health and Mary Bridge Children's Hospital.

    The foundation is endorsed by many local groups and institutions, and by The American Cancer Society. We have worked side by side with all of the regional medical centers in helping improve the lives of family's affected with childhood cancer.

    Beneficiaries of Childhood Cancer Careline Giving from the Heart programs include Puget Sound-area residents, and families from throughout the greater Northwestern US who come to Western Washington seeking the latest treatments for their children. Childhood Cancer Careline Giving from the Heart also provides ongoing support to childhood cancer survivors and their families, and to bereaved families.

    We do not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, age, national origin, political party, language, sex, sexual preference, or physical handicap when delivering vital services to children with cancer.

    Click Here - For more about us.

    Please review our Web Site User Agreement - Click Here

    Click Here to visit their web site

    Empowering people to win in the fight against cancer

  • Memorial wall - Click Here



    The Gold Ribbon™

    The official ribbon of childhood cancer awareness symbol. It is endorsed by families of children with cancer worldwide, the National Childhood Cancer Foundation, support groups, friends, caregivers, and treatment centers. We have them available.

    Click Here - for more.



    Other ways to help

  • Join Childhood Cancer Careline - Click Here
  • Donate at Work - Click Here
  • Donate Your Car - Click Here
  • Coins for Kids - Click Here


    Symptoms Of Childhood Cancer

    Continued, unexplained weight loss
    Headaches, often with early morning vomiting
    Increased swelling or persistent pain in bones, joints, back, or legs
    Lump or mass, especially in the abdomen, neck, chest, pelvis, or armpits
    Development of excessive bruising, bleeding, or rash

    Constant infections
    A whitish color behind the pupil
    Nausea, which persists, or vomiting without nausea
    Constant tiredness or noticeable paleness
    Eye or vision changes, which occur suddenly and persist
    Recurrent or persistent fevers of unknown origin


    Childhood Cancer is Different

    The cancers that attack children are different from the principal cancers of adults.

    Children frequently have a more advanced stage of cancer when they are first diagnosed. Only about 20% of adults with cancer show evidence that the disease has spread at the time of diagnosis, yet 80% of the children who are diagnosed with cancer have disease which has already spread to distant sites in the body.

    Most adult cancers result from lifestyle factors, such as smoking, diet, occupation, and other prolonged exposure to cancer-causing agents. The causes of most childhood cancers are not yet known.

    Adult cancers are primarily those of the lung, colon, breast, prostate and pancreas. Childhood cancers are mostly those of the white blood cells (leukemias), brain, bone, the lymphatic system, and tumors of the muscles, kidneys and nervous system. Each of these behaves differently, but all are characterized by an uncontrolled proliferation of abnormal cells.

    The majority of adult cancer sufferers are treated in their local community by their family physician, consulting surgeons, medical oncologists or other cancer specialists. Children with cancer rarely are treated by family physicians or pediatricians. A child with cancer must be diagnosed precisely and treated by teams of clinical and laboratory scientists who have expertise in the management of children with cancer. Such teams are found only in major children's hospitals, university medical centers and cancer centers.

    PRINCIPAL CANCERS OF CHILDREN

    TYPES OF CHILDHOOD CANCER
    Click Here for a larger view
    BONE CANCERS

    The bones may be the site to which other cancers spread, but some types originate in the skeleton. The most common bone cancer is osteogenic sarcoma. Bone cancer in children occurs most often during adolescent growth spurts, and 85% of those teenagers have tumors on their legs or arms, half of them around the knee. Ewing’s sarcoma differs from osteosarcoma in that it affects the bone shaft, and tends to be found in bones other than the long bones of the arm and the leg, such as the ribs. During the period from 1950 to 1980, there was a 50% reduction in deaths in children due to bone sarcoma.

    BRAIN TUMORS

    Tumors of the brain and spinal cord are the most common types of solid tumors in children. Some tumors are benign, and some children can be cured by surgery. But there has been less dramatic progress in treating brain cancer tumors than most other childhood malignancies because they are hard to diagnose and treat. Twenty percent of all primary brain tumors arise in children younger than age 15, somewhat more in boys than girls. There is a peak in incidence between the ages of 5 and 10.

    LEUKEMIAS

    Leukemia is cancer of the tissues of the body which make the blood cells and the bone marrow. When leukemia strikes, the body makes an abundance of abnormal white cells that do not perform their proper functions. They invade the marrow and crowd out the normal healthy blood cells, making the patient susceptible to infection and bruising. The most common form of this disease in young children is Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) which medical science has made remarkable progress in fighting.

    LYMPHOMAS

    Lymphoma is cancer which arises in the lymph system, the body’s circulatory network for filtering out impurities. There are two broad varieties, Hodgkin’s disease, and Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma is more common in children than Hodgkin’s disease. It can arise in the tonsils, thymus, bone, small intestine, spleen, or in lymph glands anywhere in the body. The disease can spread to the central nervous system and the bone marrow. Treatments have been developed that can cure many children, and other promising treatments are coming along.

    NEUROBLASTOMA

    Found only in children, neuroblastoma arises in the adrenal glands, located in the abdominal area near the kidneys, and along the sympathetic nerve chain in the chest and abdomen. It attacks very young children. One-fourth of those affected show initial symptoms during the first year of life. Neuroblastoma spreads quickly, and often is discovered only after the disease is widespread. Early stages are curable by surgery alone. Researchers have discovered new treatments for advanced stages which are increasingly effective.

    RHABDOMYOSARCOMA

    The most common soft tissue sarcoma in children, this extremely malignant neoplasm originates in skeletal muscle. Although it can occur in any muscle tissue, it is generally found in the head and neck area (including the eye socket), the genito-urinary tract, or in the extremities. Although rhabdomyosarcoma tends to grow and spread very rapidly, fortunately its symptoms are quite obvious compared to other forms of childhood cancer. Overall prognosis is improving, with the development of improved chemotherapies.

    WILMS’ TUMOR

    This rapidly-developing tumor of the kidney most often appears in children, usually between the ages of two and four, and is very different from adult kidney cancers. The disease often metastasizes to the lungs, and in the past, the mortality from this cancer was extremely high. However, newer therapies have been very effective in controlling it, combining surgery, radiation therapy and chemotherapy, and cure rates have risen sharply.

    OTHER

    Retinoblastoma -- a malignant eye tumor which occurs in young children and shows a hereditary pattern -- accounts for only 2% of the childhood cancer cases. However, it received a great deal of attention when it was the first cancer for which researchers were able to identify the responsible gene. There are many other childhood cancers that are even more rare, including germ cell tumors, thyroid cancer, malignant melanoma, testicular tumors (usually during puberty,) and primary cancers in the kidney, liver, and lung.

    About Childhood Cancer

    Currently one in every 330 children in the United States develops cancer before the age of nineteen.

    Progress in the development of effective new treatments and cures for children with cancer has been spectacular during the past three decades, but progress is beginning to plateau. Most children now can be cured if they are treated at childhood cancer treatment and research centers by teams of experts in childhood cancer. But many types of childhood cancer have not yet yielded to research progress.



  • Childhood Cancer Careline
    (425) 870-5622 or (206) 459-5484
    FAX (425) 820-9611

    P.O. Box 1138
    Bothell, Washington 98041


    Email: info@childhoodcancercare.org
    Childrens Cancer Care
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