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If your doctor thinks you might have laryngeal cancer, you'll need certain exams and tests to be sure. Diagnosing laryngeal cancer starts with your doctor asking you questions. You'll be asked about your health history, your symptoms, risk factors, and family history of disease. A physical exam will be done. You may also see an ear, nose, and throat (ENT) specialist, called an otolaryngologist. Or you may see a head and neck surgeon.
You may have one or more of these tests:
These are the main tests your doctor may do to diagnose laryngeal cancer:
This test is like a direct laryngoscopy. But many different parts of the head are checked for cancer. These include the nose, nasal cavity, mouth, throat, windpipe (trachea), and food pipe (esophagus). General anesthesia is used to do this test. So you're asleep and do not feel pain. If any changes are seen, tissue may be taken out for testing (biopsied).
This is a series of X-rays taken while you swallow a chalky substance called barium. The barium coats the inside of your throat so that any swallowing changes can be seen on the X-rays.
In this test, X-rays come from many angles to take a series of pictures of the inside of your body. These images are then combined by a computer, giving a detailed 3-D picture of your insides. A CT scan can be used to check your head and neck. It's sometimes used to check the chest for signs that cancer has spread to the lungs.
This test uses radio waves, large magnets, and a computer to take detailed pictures of the inside of your body. This test may be used to look for cancer in your neck.
If your doctor finds changed (abnormal) tissue, you'll need a biopsy. A biopsy is the only way to know if you have cancer in your larynx. During a biopsy, your doctor takes out a tiny piece of the abnormal tissue while you are under local or general anesthesia. A doctor called a pathologist then tests the tissue for cancer cells. Some of the tests described above can be used to do a biopsy.
It usually takes a few days for biopsy results to come back. A biopsy can sometimes be done in your doctor's office. Or it may need to be done in the hospital with surgery. In that case, you will have general anesthesia so that you're asleep and don't feel pain during the procedure.
If you have a lump in your neck, it may be a swollen lymph node, also called a lymph gland. Your doctor might use a type of biopsy called a fine needle aspiration to see if there are cancer cells in your lymph node. A thin needle is put through your skin into the swollen node and used to pull out some cells. Your skin may be numbed first. This is often done as an outpatient procedure in your doctor's office or a clinic. That means you can go home the same day.
Your doctor will do tests to check blood counts and make sure your liver and kidneys are working well. The levels of certain substances, such as calcium, sodium, potassium, and magnesium, will also be checked.
When the results of your tests are ready, your doctor will contact you. They will talk with you about other tests you may need if cancer is found. Ask questions if you don't understand the results and make sure you know what your next steps should be.