Is Rectal Cancer Mostly “Delayed” into Being? Warning: If You Have These 5 Abnormalities, Be Alert for Bowel Disease
Many people think cancer comes “silently,” but rectal cancer actually gives us enough time to discover it — it normolly takes 5 to 10 years for a polyp to turn into cancer. That’s why doctors often say: Rectal cancer is mostly delayed into being.
But Unfortunately, many people ignore early warning signs because there’s no pain or discomfort. If you or your family experience the following 5 abnormalities, please take them seriously:
1. Change in bowel habits – Frequent diarrhea or constipation lasting more than two weeks without a clear pattern.
2. Blood in stool – Dark red or jam‑colored blood mixed with the stool, rather than just dripping after a bowel movement (hemorrhoids usually show bright red blood on the surface).
3. Narrower stool – If Stool becomes thin, like a pencil or chopstick, that may indicate the intestine is being compressed by a tumor.
4. Tenesmus – A constant feeling of needing to have a bowel movement, but little or only bloody mucus is passed.
5. Unexplained weight loss or anemia – Losing weight without trying, or looking pale and feeling dizzy or tired.
Why are so many people still delayed?
Early‑stage lesions bleed only tiny amounts that are invisible to the naked eye. Without pain, people tend to put off checking.
Early screening is the key to breaking the “delay”.
We Baysen Medical introduces the CAL + FOB + TF Rapid Test* , allowing you to assess bowel disease risk at home:
- FOB (Fecal Occult Blood) – Detects invisible bleeding in the digestive tract.
- TF (Transferrin) – More stable than FOB, especially sensitive to lower gastrointestinal bleeding.
- CAL (Calprotectin) – Differentiates inflammation from tumors and helps decide whether further colonoscopy is needed.
One sample, results in 15 minutes – no more waiting in hospital lines, providing early warning for your bowel health.
Colusion
Rectal cancer is “delayed” into being, but it can also be “screened” out. Especially for people over 40, those with a family history of bowel cancer, or those on a long‑term high‑fat, low‑fiber diet – even without symptoms – regular screening is strongly recommended. One day earlier detection, one less risk.
Xiamen Baysen Medical Committed to IVD, Alert for Health
Post time: May-08-2026





