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Bladder Cancer Center - Lubbock, TX

Lubbock Oncologist Doctors for Bladder Cancer

Type of Physician: Oncologist

What is a Oncologist?

A subspecialty certification by the Board of Internal Medicine; the oncologist specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of all types of cancer and other benign and malignant tumors. These subspecialists decide on and administer chemotherapy as well as consult with surgeons and radiotherapists on other treatment for cancer.

Specialty: Oncology (Medical)

Common Name: Cancer Doctor

Oncologist Doctors in Lubbock *

Southwest Cancer Center
Fred L Hardwicke
602 Indiana Ave
Lubbock, TX 79415
(806) 775-8600

Joe Arrington Cancer Center
Jose A Figueroa
4101 22nd Pl
Lubbock, TX 79410
(806) 725-8000

Joe Arrington Cancer Center
Isaac Tafur
4101 22nd Pl
Lubbock, TX 79410
(806) 725-8000

Lubbock, Texas

Lubbock is an American city in the state of Texas. Located in the northwestern part of the state, a region known historically as the Llano Estacado, it is the county seat of Lubbock County, and the home of Texas Tech University. Lubbock's nickname is the "Hub City" which derives from being the economic, education, and health care hub of a multi-county region commonly called the South Plains. The area is the largest contiguous cotton-growing region in the world and is heavily dependent on irrigation water drawn from the Ogallala Aquifer.
(Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lubbock,_Texas)

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Bladder Cancer

The bladder

Your bladder is a hollow organ in the lower abdomen. It stores urine, the liquid waste made by the kidneys.

Your bladder is part of the urinary tract. Urine passes from each kidney into the bladder through a long tube called a ureter. Urine leaves the bladder through a shorter tube (the urethra).

The wall of the bladder has layers of tissue:

  • Inner layer: The inner layer of tissue is also called the lining. As your bladder fills up with urine, the transitional cells on the surface stretch. When you empty your bladder, these cells shrink.
  • Middle layer: The middle layer is muscle tissue. When you empty your bladder, the muscle layer in the bladder wall squeezes the urine out of your body.
  • Outer layer: The outer layer covers the bladder. It has fat, fibrous tissue, and blood vessels.

Cancer Cells

Cancer begins in cells, the building blocks that make up tissues. Tissues make up the bladder and the other organs of the body.

Normal cells grow and divide to form new cells as the body needs them. When normal cells grow old or get damaged, they die, and new cells take their place.

Sometimes, this process goes wrong. New cells form when the body doesn't need them, and old or damaged cells don't die as they should. The buildup of extra cells often forms a mass of tissue called a growth or tumor.

Tumors in the bladder can be benign (not cancer) or malignant (cancer). Benign tumors are not as harmful as malignant tumors:

  • Benign tumors:

    • are usually not a threat to life
    • can be treated or removed and usually don't grow back
    • don't invade the tissues around them
    • don't spread to other parts of the body.
  • Malignant growths:

    • may be a...

Recommended Reading Related to Bladder Cancer

Cancer »

What is cancer?

Cancer is the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells anywhere in a body. The abnormal cells are termed cancer cells, malignant cells, or tumor cells. Many cancers and the abnormal cells that compose the cancer tissue are further identified by the name of the tissue that the abnormal cells originated from (for example, breast cancer, lung cancer, colon cancer). Cancer is not confined to humans; animals and other living organisms can get cancer. Below is a schematic that shows normal cell division and how when a cell is damaged or altered without repair to its system, the cell usually dies. Also shown is what can occur when such damaged or unrepaired cells do not die and become cancer cells and proliferate with uncontrolled growth; a mass of cancer cells develop. Frequently, cancer cells can break away from this original mass of cells, travel through the blood and lymph systems, and lodge in other organs where they can again repeat the ...

Emergency Contact for Lubbock

  • In case of Emergency, call 911
  • Police (919) 996-3335
  • Fire (919) 996-6115

Nearby Lubbock Hospitals *

Southwest Regional Medical Complex
1409 9th St
Lubbock, TX 79401
(806)767-9133

University Medical Center
602 Indiana Ave
Lubbock, TX 79415
(806)775-8200

Covenant Health System
3615 19th St
Lubbock, TX 79410
(806)725-1011

Covenant Children's Hospital
3610 21st St
Lubbock, TX 79410
(806)725-0030

Covenant Womens Hospital
4000 24th St
Lubbock, TX 79413
(806)725-6000

Highland Medical Center
2412 50th St
Lubbock, TX 79412
(806)788-4100

Lubbock Heart Hospital
4810 N Loop 289
Lubbock, TX 79416
(806)687-7777

Sunrise Canyon Hospital
1950 Aspen Ave
Lubbock, TX 79404
(806)740-1400

Covenant Hospital Levelland
1900 S College Ave
Levelland, TX 79336
(806)894-4963

Lynn County Hospital District
2600 Lockwood Hwy
Tahoka, TX 79373
(806)998-4533

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