Videos

4:33

Erin Youngerberg noticed a small mole, the size of a pencil eraser, on her back. She was told not to worry. But it was stage IV melanoma, an aggressive form of skin cancer. Doctors went on to find tumors all over her body. This is her story.

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3:17

Richard W. Joseph, M.D., medical oncologist at Mayo Clinic in Florida talks about the most deadly form of skin cancer, known as melanoma. Here he explains the differences in the four stages of melanoma.

View all of our "skin cancer" related videos at: http://bit.ly/SkinCancerVideos

Dr. Joseph on twitter: http://twitter.com/RichardWJoseph

2:24

Every day, cancer patients from around the world walk through the doors of The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, with one word on their mind: Hope. Hope that no matter the cancer diagnosis, they will receive the best cancer treatment available from a group of caring and compassionate staff. Hope that they will one day walk back out those doors as a cancer survivor. Statistics and rankings may tell one side of the story of a great hospital, but the real story is told by the patients that experience it firsthand. Listen as some of our patients express their feelings about MD Anderson, the treatment they received and how the employees made a difficult experience as easy and comforting as possible. Read more stories from MD Anderson patients: http://www2.mdanderson.org/cancerwise Request an appointment at MD Anderson: https://www4.mdanderson.org/contact/selfreferral/index.cfm

2:37

Mike tells us how he found his mouth cancer early. Learn about possible symptoms of mouth cancer and why it is important to see your doctor as soon as you have symptoms.

This is a Cancer Research UK video. Learn more about mouth cancer at www.cancerresearchuk.org/cancer-help/type/mouth-cancer/

Video transcript:
Mike: My name is Mike Donahue, I live in County Durham. I’m a professional magician and in 2007 I was diagnosed with mouth cancer.
I was getting shaved for an event early evening to go out and perform at an event and I noticed a lump on my neck.
At first I just thought it was muscle so for a couple of weeks I didn’t do anything and then I thought there’s maybe something not right here.
So I went to the GP and as soon as he looked at it he faxed though to hospital just to get it checked in case it was cancer. And he actually mentioned the word cancer.
I remember going to a Blackpool magic convention which I used to go to every year wondering whether I would have cancer

2:34

Neurosurgeon Sandeep Kunwar discusses the anatomy of the pituitary gland and what happens when pituitary tumors form. The California Center for Pituitary Disorders at UCSF is one of the most comprehensive programs in the world for specialized treatment of pituitary tumors and other types of pituitary disorders: http://ccpd.ucsf.edu.

Sign up for pituitary news here: http://preview.ccpd.ucsf.edu/sign-news-ccpd

4:39

When he learned he had cancer, Stanley turned to Penn’s Abramson Cancer Center. Our proton therapy kept him free from cancer, side effects and taking sick days.

3:30

The Foundation for Women's Cancer thanks Spark Media for creating this educational video that features gynecologic oncologists (all members of the rock band N.E.D.) speaking about vaginal and vulvar cancer. The doctors and their patients speak about the symptoms every woman should know and the importance of early detection. The video is available in English and Spanish.