Urinary functioning
For people who had been treated for prostate cancer, colorectal cancer, cervical cancer or penile cancer, having surgery or radiotherapy to the pelvic area can...
Nerve damage can occur in people with cancer as a side effect of certain chemotherapy drugs. The most common type of nerve damage caused by chemotherapy is to the peripheral nerves that carry signals from the body to the brain. This ‘peripheral neuropathy’ occurs in some people who are prescribed certain anti-cancer drugs, such as the vinca alkaloids (including vincristine (Oncovin)), the platinum based drugs (cisplatin, oxaliplatin (Eloxatin) and carboplatin (Paraplatin)), and the taxanes (docetaxel (Taxotere) and paclitaxel (Taxol)). It is most likely to affect the hands, feet and lower legs. People we spoke to used different terms to describe the sensations they still experienced in these areas, many years after their treatment had finished. Some said it was like a tingling, some a numbness, others a burning sensation or a feeling of coldness.
Nerve damage can also occasionally occur as a complication of surgery. A woman who had a hysterectomy for cervical cancer still has numbness around the scar and down her right leg five years later. Sixteen years after having a testicle removed because of cancer one man still has a bit of numbness near the operation site. A woman who had surgery for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma experiences debilitating nerve damage.
For people who had been treated for prostate cancer, colorectal cancer, cervical cancer or penile cancer, having surgery or radiotherapy to the pelvic area can...
Having treatment for cancer can affect a person's ability to feel good about themselves sexually, or their physical ability to give and receive sexual pleasure....