Categorized under Gastrointestinal

Bentyl (Dicyclomine)

Bentyl (Dicyclomine)


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Other names: Dicycloverine
DIGESTIVE DISEASES: ILLNESS NO ONE TALKS ABOUT
It’s still not considered a subject for polite conversation. Far too many people turn away at the mere mention of the topic – and risk early death from disease of the stomach and bowel.
Digestive tract ailments kill thousands of Americans each year. Few people talk about them; even fewer ask for information about them – information that could save their lives.
Now more than ever, medical science can stop the onslaught of peptic ulcers, irritable bowel, colon and rectal cancer, chronic heartburn, even piles and constipation. But doctors need help: you first have to overcome your embarrassment and tell them where you hurt.
Alice Bull, 66, of Red Bank, New Jersey, owes her life to a simple test that pinpointed a small but deadly cancer lurking in the far reaches of her large intestine. It was the same sort of test that led doctors to find and remove the cancer from President Reagan’s bowel in 1985.
“I heard about the test on TV,” says Mrs. Bull. “I sent for it and took it. The test revealed hidden blood in my stool. And when I had X-rays, there was the cancer.” Surgery removed the growth.
The test was offered in 1979 in the New York area by the American Cancer Society (ACS) in cooperation with WCBS-TV News, for which I was health and science editor (now retired). More than 60,000 people sent in 2 dollars for the test, but only 15,000 (25 percent) returned their specimens. The others, it seems, couldn’t bear to take a tiny sample of their own feces. That squeamishness probably caused more than 100 deaths: the cancers were there, waiting to be detected and treated. But the victims never knew – until it was too late.
Seven years later, after the world had learned all the details of President Reagan’s bowel cancer, the ACS offered the test again. This time, 35 percent sent back specimens.
*3/266/5*

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