Individuals with bone cancer may often experience pain in the bone or swelling around
the affected site, fractures in bones, weakness, fatigue, weight loss, repeated
infections, nausea, vomiting, constipation, problems with urination, weakness or
numbness in the legs, and/or bumps and bruises that do not heal easily.
Brain cancer: Individuals with brain cancer often experience dizziness, drowsiness,
abnormal eye movements or changes in vision, weakness, loss of feeling in arms or legs
or difficulties in walking, fits or convulsions, changes in personality, memory, or
speech, headaches that tend to be worse in the morning and ease during the day, and
headaches that may be accompanied by nausea or vomiting.
Breast cancer: Although most lumps are not cancerous, individuals with breast cancer may
have a lump or thickening of the breast; the most common sign of breast cancer for both
men and women is a lump or thickening in the breast. Often, the lump is painless. Other
symptoms of breast cancer may include: a spontaneous clear or bloody discharge from the
nipple often associated with a breast lump, retraction or indentation of the nipple, a
change in the size or contours of the breast, flattening or indentation of the skin over
the breast, and redness or pitting of the skin over the breast (similar to the skin of
an orange..