How long can you live with mid-stage malignant liver cancer?

Conservative estimates of mid-stage malignant liver cancer may have a two-year survival period, because it takes two years from the time liver cancer cells begin to settle to the time they split liver cancer dies. Nowadays, health checkups are becoming more and more popular, and patients with liver cancer are often detected early and treated in a timely manner, which basically increases the survival rate significantly, some up to five years and get a high quality of life, and some can even survive for up to several decades.

In fact, whether and how long malignant liver cancer can survive in the late stage depends on many factors, not only on the timing, but also on the treatment method, which has a lot to do with the degree of development of the disease, generally the symptoms of early liver cancer are mostly non-specific, and in the middle and late stages of liver cancer there are more symptoms, patients often feel pain in the liver area, abdominal distension, weakness, lethargy, loss of appetite, and some patients in severe cases also have low fever, jaundice, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, etc. The patient often feels pain in the liver area, abdominal distension, weakness, weight loss, loss of appetite, and in some severe cases, low fever, jaundice, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and other symptoms.

Liver cancer actually has a lot to do with our living and eating habits, so liver cancer patients should pay attention to the balance of nutrients in their daily diet, usually eat more vegetables, fruits and coarse grains, and avoid spicy and stimulating foods that are easily allergic, etc. If the patient has low weight and loss of appetite, usually take a small number of meals, and must pay attention to nutritional supplements during the illness, and if the patient is severely malnourished, he should immediately go to the hospital. If the patient is seriously malnourished, he or she should immediately go to the hospital and receive professional treatment with the doctor.