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Symptoms of Cancer of the bladder

Bladder cancer shows itself by the painless passage of blood in the urine (haematuria), by the frequent need to urinate or by pus in the urine and a burning pain on urination.  These signs are commonly an indication of other less serious conditions, but they should always be taken seriously, especially when occurring for the first time in older people.

They always require proper investigation. Sometimes pain is caused by the retention of blood clots in the bladder from bleeding from the tumour. Pain may also result from spread of the cancer to local nerves.

People with advanced bladder cancer may have symptoms caused by the local and the more distant spread of tumour. There may be pain in the lower back, obstruction of the ureters (the tubes that carry urine down to the bladder from the kidneys), or bone pain from secondary cancer. Rarely, there may be a mass that can be felt in the area of the bladder.