The medical community has not pinpointed the cause(s) of PCF but believes it may be a result of physical changes in the body and/or cells in the body. As fatigue is hard to define, it’s also difficult to determine causes.
Fatigue affects the daily lives of survivors. While mentally you expect to return to normal living, your body has changed and may not be able to find the energy it expected to have. Where the mind says that lifelong living patterns such as sleep and work are well known, the body returns signals that things have changed and the energy is not there when you expect it. Many people who have experienced this fatigue describe it as now having a stored amount of energy that can’t be quickly replenished—when you use up your day’s energy, it’s gone and there aren’t any resources from which to draw more.
Not sure what to do after relapse? Review the Future Treatment Options section regularly for new information on the latest advances in treatment.
Cure: When all signs of disease have disappeared and no cancer can be detected. When there is no evidence of the cancer returning for a long period of time (generally five years or more) doctors may begin to use the word “cure.” Many of the aggressive types of lymphoma are curable, but the indolent varieties may return even after a period of remission lasting many years.
Complete remission: This means that all signs of cancer have disappeared, and no sign of cancer can be detected using current testing methods. Sometimes you will also hear this referred to as “no evidence of disease,” or NED.
Improvement: Tumours have shrunk, but by less than 50%.
Stable disease: The lymphoma is unchanged.
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