How was your BC found? By doctor or you?
Comments
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lago wrote:
Just remember that Mammos are only as good as the radiologist who reads them.I agree! The radiologist who caught mine had 25+ yrs experience. I never thought to ask about that, but got lucky that he had so much experience.
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Odie16-thanx. Have to wait 2 more months for some reason. I'll ask my onco why tomorrow.
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I had found my lump myself about a year ago when I was 35. It was in the lower inner quadrant, and was a visible bump when I was lying flat (I was small chested) about one month after that spot had been very itchy. I had a mammogram, which showed nothing, and Ultrasound that showed a benign looking but solid lesion. My family doc could have chosen to follow up in 6 months but decided to get it biopsied because of a family history.
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I found mine four months after a clear mammogram. I checked my breasts somewhat often due to fibrocystic breasts. They've always been lumpy and I wanted to be familiar with what was normal for me just in case. Good thing I did. Given the aggressive nature of my triple neg. tumor, who knows what it would have looked like by the time my next regular mammo would have rolled around.
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I had a mammogram in December of 2007. I found the lump myself in April of 2008. In my case, I didn't do it on purpose...it was close to the surface, I could see it in the mirror.
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Susan-I never had a mamo before even though I was 44. I had very dense lumpy breasts and noticed a thickening on the side while doing a SBE. I went to my GYN who sent me for a a mammo and ultrasound. The mamo did not show anything! The ultra sound just showed an area of concern and I was told it was probably an infection and that I should return in 6 weeks. Because I knew my body so well and knew that little lump was not there before I didn't wait and made an appointment with a breast specialist who did another ultrasound and then ordered a biopsy. Even while doing the biopsy the Dr said it was probably nothing and all these ultrasounds do is scare women who have false alarms. Wrong,wrong wrong! It was stage one IDC. The rest of the story is history.
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I found mine five months after a normal mammogram. I have done BSE on a not-so-regular basis for quite a few yrs, I was not confidant that I would know if I found something or not. But, as I ran my hand across my breast in the shower, I noticed a thickening. My Dr sent me for a mammogram and an ultra sound. It still did not show on the mammogram (also very dense breast tissue), but did show as a "suspicious mass" on the ultrasound. The tumor was 2-3 cm. BSE is soooo important!
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The first time I was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2002, it was the doctor who found it. I was actually in the process of getting a 2nd opinion from a surgical oncologist for some probable ovarian tumors (I ended up having a bi-lateral oopherectomy and thankfully all the tumors were benign -- my sister had ovarian cancer several years earlier). As a part of the general exam given at Memorial Sloan Kettering in NYC, even for ovarian tumors, the doctor did a breast exam and found a lump quite far up on my chest wall. I was shocked when he said I needed to have an immediate mammogram and u/s and might need a biopsy that day as well. Talk about medical whiplash! I went through all the tests and that afternoon I had a needle biopsy which they said they thought was BC. It was triple negative, 1.7 cm., was palpable and I'd had my annual mammogram just 7 months before and there was no lump to be felt. I figure I didn't find it myself because who the heck feels around for tumors an inch below one's collar bone? I had a new recurrence of TNBC in the same breast this year in Feb. 2011 and this time I was the one to find it. It wasn't a lump but I'd been having pain in that same breast for several weeks and wanted it checked out. But I waited the 4 weeks to see my breast surgeon at our already scheduled annual appointment. I couldn't feel a lump or anything but it felt "different." My surgeon agreed that she felt a little thickening in the area and subsequent mammogram, u/s and biopsy proved it to be my 2nd diagnosis of TNBC. It was weird -- the tumor was actually entwined with the scar tissue from my earlier lumpectomy. But they assure me that it's an entirely new BC since supposedly the same triple negative cancer can't recur after 6 years.
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I had a negative mammo in June 2011. I found a lump less than 2 months later. I waited a few weeks and then went to the doctor who luckily recommended f/u testing which resulted in my dx. My doctor has always pushed for self exams- Thank God I felt it. Otherwise it would have been a year later before having another mammo.
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I found it myself at 35 and let it throw a party until I was 37. Ah, DeNile...
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My BC was found on my yearly mammogram. Surgeon told me I never would have found it with a self exam as she couldn't either. So glad the reccomendation for yearly mamograms at 50 instead of 40 had not come out yet. Still unable to find area on the mammogram films which showed the cancer. Thank God for the radiologist who caught it! He saved my life!
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I found mine myself. I lost a lot of weight years ago and about seven years ago had my breasts lifte and implants. I had regular mamos each year since age 40. Over the last few years my left breast implant started getting harder due to encapsulation. I would sometimes get a weird ache. I had been pondering this left breast for over a year, debating when to get them replaced. During my "pondering" times I would compare the difference between the right and left implant, etc. It was during one of those times that I felt the small hard lump in that left breast. The day I went for the mamo and eventual biopsy the lump didn't show on the mamo, but did on the ultrasound. Thanks to the dr at Mills Women's Breast Center that agreed to sqeeze me in for the biopsy that day.
Now I'm sitting here a week out from my left side mastectomy with lat reconstruction. Not the way I would have planned to get that implant replaced. I'm thankful that I found it. I now tell my friends to check themselves.
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Found it myself - in the same area that a cyst had been.
Was 42 when found, and had been doing mammograms since I was 34 due to dense cyst prone breasts. I was two months late on my annual mammogram when it was found. I was actually quite painfull as that sucker was big in such a small breast!
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Found by annual mammogram. Non digital mammogram, so I'm surprised it was found! I was 44, and it was my 5th mammogram. No family history of breast cancer. My Gyn. had me do a baseline mammogram at 38, and I had one at 40-42. I waited about 18 months between the last two mammograms, because we moved and having no family history, you know I did not think it was such a big deal.
I saw two teams of cancer specialists, one a teaching hospital. At least 10 docs examined me to see if they could find it, or feel it and could not. Not necessarily buried deep, but not palpable.
Mammograms worked for me, but it does seem like 50% of the time, they don't show up. So scary.
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I had a routine analog mamogram that showed microcalcifications. No lump. I could not have found it myself. I am told to have only digital mamograms from now on.
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My cancer was found by my 1st.mammogram.
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Mine was found by an annual mammogram. The radiologist who read my films didn't like the pattern of the calcifications on the film and she said I needed a biopsy. Mine was too small to feel.
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Found by myself and confirmed by GP after mamo, US and FNB.
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My yearly mammogram. I couldn't feel it nor my Doctor.
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I found mine, reg memo failed , dr visit failed.
((((((((((((
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Found it myself, seven months after "normal mammogram" Noticed a dent and pea sized lump underneath.
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Mine was found on a yearly mammogram. It was a call back, then an ultrasound that didn't show anything, so I had more tests and a stereotactic biopsy and there it was. Thank heavens for those yearly mammos. This one was so small and into the breast it could not have been felt until it had really grown, and then maybe more aggressive. BS was able to remove it with clear margins and nodes.
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I had a bloody nipple discharge 6 months ago went for mamo and ultasound showed nothing- My daughter who is a Dr said she was giving me 6 months to get a repeat requardless if negative we needed to do somthing different - went for my 6 month mamo and untrasound showed nothing- my GP and daughter said it gave them a bad feeling in their belly sent me to a surgeon to look at - He ordered an MRI which showed 3 areas of conrcern- abnormal borders- had lumpectomy that came back positive - strong family hystory. so I decided on BMX which was done last Tuesday- on to genetic testing tomorrow-my GP and daughter are keepers !
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Mine was found by my doctor in my annual breast exam...less than an hour after a 'normal' mammogram. I had lost more than 50 lbs in the 6 months prior to my appointment and have dense, fiberous breasts. I don't think that I would have found it myself. I had been having annual mammograms since age 40 (now 51). After my doctor found the lump I had a digital diagnostic mammogram (negative) and ultrasound (suspicious), negative biopsy and suspicious MRI. No diagnosis until lumpectomy was performed.
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Mine was found in microcalcifications on a mammogram. Radiologist recommended a stereotactic biopsy where BC was diagnosed.
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because of having 34B dense breasts had mammos every other year since 35. Had one on November 22, 2009...all clear and nothing on it........as was my history. March 10, 2010, less than 4 months later, I felt the BC. It was aggressive and invasive, the size of a quarter.
No family history, good health, and being a nurse, I did do self-exams, but not every month BUT I know since having just had the mammo in Nov I would of checked in Dec or Jan and then SMACK, now I have one of the most agressive forms of BC!
Good I didn't rely on yearly or every other year mammo's!
SO THANKS FOR MAMMOGRAMS, BUT IT WAS MY SELF EXAM THAT SAVED ME...NOT FROM 5 SURGERIES, INCLUDING CHEMO AND RADS, BUT ALSO THANKS TO THE SPEED IN WHICH MY GP GOT ME INTO THE BREAST SURGEON AND THE BS OPERATED 4 DAYS LATER, ALL HELPED THE BC FROM GETTING TO MY LYMPH NODES!
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I kept having cysts on the mammograms (in the same area of my right breast) and they would send me for an ultrasound. The last US showed I had two complex cysts and the doc offered needle or surgical biopsy. I opted for surgery so they could remove the cysts. Good thing I did because the cysts were benign but they found DCIS. So my cancer didn't show on the mammo or US and wasn't pallable, thanks to dense breasts. It does worry me how they will see a recurrence if there is one.
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Mine was found on routine mammogram (2 1/2 years after my last mammogram). It was not palpable and the BS said it probably would not have been seen if I had had a mammogram done a couple of months earlier (it's about 8 mm).
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I forgot about this poll! Still fascinates me how bc presents itself so differently in people. Young, old, aggressive, slow, palable, hidden....fascinating and scary. There is still no foolproof method that guarantees.. "oh they will catch it early".
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I had clean mammogram in 2008 following problems with cysts which needed to be drained. Nearly a year later I found a lump in the same breast but on the opposite side to the cysts. It turned out to be a 2.4 X 2.0cm tumour TN IDC in the right breast. There was no sign of this cancer on the mammo a year earlier and I have since read that TN cancers are often termed 'interval cancers' as they present themselves between mammograms. I was diagnosed on 8th September 2009. I had neo adjuvant chemo and the tumour was removed on 4th Jan 2010 following little / no response to chemo. I had my first annual mammogram in Jan 2011 and all seemed well. By summer 2011 I found a painful 'ridge' in my left breast this time (opposite breast to original cancer). It DID NOT show up on mammogram, ultrasound or PET! It turned out to be 4CM DCIS grade 3. So ladies, be vigilent! Cancer CAN be painful and it does now always show up on scans. Know your own body check yourself on a regular basis. I caught this early - the pathology was the same as my previous invasive TN tumour (except it had not become invasive on this occasion). By the time this new cancer did show up on mammogram it might have been too late. I would have been due for my second screening mammogram this January - and I suspect I would have been sent away and told all was well. Scary!
Additional info: I have dense breasts and have a BRCA 1 mutation of 'unknown significance'. I have a very strong history of breast , ovarian and pancreatic cancer on mums side. I was 45 when I found my first TN IDC tumour.
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