Eye cancer :
Eye cancer, also called intraocular cancer, refers to the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells of the eye and surrounding structures. Eye cancers are categorized into several types, depending on the location where the cancer begins, such as intraocular melanomas, eyelid and orbital cancer, intraocular lymphoma (a type of B- cell lymphoma), and retinoblastoma. Intraocular melanomas encompass choroidal melanoma, ciliary body melanoma, and iris melanoma. Eyelid and orbital cancers are further subdivided into various types such as basal cell carcinoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and squamous cell carcinoma. The symptoms of eye cancer are seeing flashes of light, blurry vision, painless vision loss, squiggly lines or spots, bulging eye, eye irritation that doesn't improve, dark spot in the iris that gets better, changes in the eyeball positioning in the socket, and how it moves, and a growing lump on the eyelid or in the eyeball. Eye cancers are treated by various options such as immunotherapy, radiation therapy, surgery, laser therapy, targeted therapy, and chemotherapy.












