Adenocarcinoma of the colon blocking the intestine is a mechanical obstruction, and if the patient is in good health, surgery to relieve the obstruction needs to be considered.
Colon adenocarcinoma, a malignant tumor of the colon, has a family history of previous conditions such as colon polyps, which are not detected early enough to take appropriate treatment, resulting in extreme tumor growth and obstruction of the intestine.
With prolonged malignant tumors blocking the intestine and affecting the digestion and absorption of the diet, patients are often in poor health or have distant metastases, which can make surgery difficult. Prompt correction of anemia is needed to enhance physical fitness and increase the patient’s tolerance for surgery. After a period of adjustment, the patient can be evaluated systemically and considered for early surgery if it can be tolerated.
Post-operative recovery can be resumed with a normal diet. The patient also needs to be given chemotherapy medication after surgery to help kill any remaining cancer cells. The patient also needs to pay attention to increasing nutrition and eating more high-quality protein foods to help strengthen the body’s resistance and thus stimulate its own immune defenses, which helps the disease recover, and to pay attention to dynamic review.