Bladder ca.nc.er survivors speak out on ‘most common’ symptom they all experienced before diagnosis

“If it were not for that little bit of blood in my urine, they would have never found the tumour in my pancreas,” he explained.

Likewise, Margo Wickersham also noticed blood in her urine but, for her, it happened one morning, then the next, and then never again.

“It was just a little blood, and it was pink, not red,” she shared. “But I was a 57-year-old woman and post-menopausal, so there were not a lot of reasons to explain it.”

Upon doing a urine sample, which ruled out a urinary tract infection (UTI), Margo decided to see a urologist after a nurse practitioner at her obstetrician’s office said: “We’ll keep an eye on it.”

After having a cystoscopy – a procedure where a thin tube with a camera (cystoscope) is inserted into the urethra and bladder to examine them – done, it was revealed that she had a small tumour in her bladder.

Then, Margo was informed that she had highly aggressive stage 1 bladder cancer with MD Anderson later confirming the diagnosis while also uncovering plasmacytoid cancer, an extremely rare type of bladder cancer known to come back.

“You can’t always go by how you feel. I felt completely fine, but I had blood in my urine,” explained Margo. “If your urine has blood in it, that’s a red flag. See a doctor.”

Other symptoms of bladder ca.nc.er

Although blood in your urine is the ‘most common’ symptom of bladder cancer, it’s important to note that other symptoms include:

– Pain, burning, stinging or itching when you pee
– Getting lots of urinary tract infections
– Needing to pee more often
– Needing to pee very suddenly
– Losing your appetite and losing weight without trying to
– Pain in your back and lower tummy
– Aching, pain or tenderness in your bones
– Feeling very tired for no reason and feeling generally unwell

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