lymphedema after snb
Comments
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I would love to participate and read everyone's post, but in the meantime, can we PM you our stories, Carol? Once you have gathered your posts, you could post it as a Resource. Actually, any info that's gathered can be considered a resource or bibliography, no? Given that our stories often highlight the lack of info and treatment, the material could be considered in reverse, as in, "Questions and Info about LE that every woman with BC should know". Call it something here and title it whatever you want for your personal use in advocacy. Goodness knows we all have shared our personal stories with LE, and there's no crime against that, is there?
I remember when one of our LE gals was going to have recon at NOLA, she gathered info from us to give the doctors there. I actually used it when I consulted with PS's about my deconstruction surgery.
It's not a survey any more than those lists we have made about preparing for surgery, things you will need when you have a mastectomy, implants, or DIEP and other tissue/flap surgeries.
Actually, the more I think about this, the madder I get. There are countless threads where people request very specific info, such as the brand of bras they wear with implants, doctors that perform specific surgeries and procedures, or who is happy with their implants. Those sure sound like "surveys" to me. I consider this a bias against the LE community, just another example of the limited support we receive. -
I just realized that Binney more eloquently and calmly addressed how to handle this. Maybe I am grumpity tonight! :-)
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Tina, think about the "survey" about mammogram screening--they asked for your actual name, diagnosis--all sorts of personal stuff.
And the oncotype dx survey.
Lots and lots of this on other threads.
Also grumpy about this
Kira
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After reading some of the comments, I am re-thinking what my BS said. I thought she told me she only had one patient get LE, and she was obese which puts you at higher risk, so she thought I'd be okay. I thought I must have misheard about only one patient having LE. Now I am sure she HAD had more than one patient get LE, but I think I am correct about what she said to me. I can't really complain about not getting precautions though. I saw an LE therapist before surgery and got some stretches to do. Was told about no bp's or IV's in the arm, also to be careful of bug bites and hurting the arm. I don't think I was careless, just one of the lucky ones. However, I have a level 2 ALND, if I had only had a sentinal node biopsy, I am not sure if they would have given me the info they did.
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I have been traveling and working these past two days, so a bit out of touch. I teach seminars and even though my heart has been in this discussion thread, well..probably not a good idea to be working the Internet instead of teaching my classes!
Anyway, regarding the tell-your-story thread, I do really understand the moderators' concern. If there are surveys or research, and especially if the stated intent is to gather ammunition for some kind of advocacy or lobbying, it's really not fair to open the door to anyone stating or even implying that BC.org has sponsored the effort. To keep BC.org a place of free expression, I think they do need to make sure no unauthorized ulterior motives surface--no matter how well intentioned.
Starting a website is a good idea. Happens that my son is a web designer, and he has a very big heart, so I will be discussing this with him this weekend. When it's ready, I hope we can post links to the site from here, and I'll take time very soon to reach out to the moderators to verify that. The intent really will be simply to collect LE stories all in one place, similar to the stories we find here scattered through all the threads.
So, more soon! I have learned so much from everyone's stories--the true meaning of 'lessons learned'--ranging from the earliest realization that what I was feeling has a name, to the stress buster of discovering that I have plenty of company in being angry about information being withheld or downplayed. Gotta put the stories all in one place!
Carol
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I'm just thinking out loud here and I'm not technologically savvy and this might be a dumb suggestion... but is it possible to do something on the stepup/speakout website? Is there a way we could all post our stories on there?
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Hi Dawne-Hope,
Step Up-Speak Out is such a wonderful place, full of polished but so very approachable information. I can't speak for those folks, but I wonder if it would be better to house the stories elsewhere, because the stories might risk becoming a bit of a free for all, whereas SU-SO is so very professional in both content and organization. But of course, I would ask our SU-SO friends to place a prominent notice that LE stories are available on the story site, and can be contributed there, as well.
And...to that end (this was really too easy!) I just purchased two websites: lymphedemaspeaks.com and lymphedemaspeaks.org. I will set it up as .org and make sure there's a redirect if someone goes to .com. It will take me a week or so to get a simple site up, and then I'll post a link to it--inviting stories.
So, stay tuned!
Carol 57
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Carol, when we have "borrowed" the wisdom from these boards to use on stepupspeakout, we ask permission, and we only use screen names.
Why are wa asked to tell our stories to Stoneyfield yogurt, and this is an issue?
Um, my topic re: LE stories is gone, but no message from moderators.
Kira
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Trinity,
Yes, cellulitis is more likely to happen in tissue with LE; sorry it sounds like I wasn't clear enough. But cellulitis can happen independently in non-LE skin if infectious conditions are just right (or wrong).
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Carol, What a wonderful plan!
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Why are we asked to tell our stories to Stoneyfield Yogurt, and this is an issue?
Hmmm. Stoneyfield has more $$$ than we do?
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Oh, Lunakin, surely you do not suspect there is a financial motive at work!!!
What I'm most sad about, is that when the mods removed my topic, I lost the content I had spent an hour writing, describing the kinds of questions that would be useful to address in anyone's story. If anyone getting email notifications happened to keep an email that had my own story in it--the first post after I put up the topic--I would love to have my story back, because I could use it to back into my story outline suggestions. I think an outline helps, because it will provide some consistency of format in the stories.
Carol
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If you can remember a particular phrase you used, you may be able to recover your post using search engines. Use the advanced search forms from the major search engines, include your phrase, and other details that might be helpful.
Even though the thread has been taken down, if it was indexed before it was removed, you may be able to access a "cached" version from a search engine.
Just a thought.
LisaAlissa
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Opening my package of fine point pens . .
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LisaAlissa, good thought! I gave it a try. I know some of the phrases for certain, and I did get search hits for the topic I had posted. But clicking through got me 'page not available' screen every time, and the various search engines don't have that page in cache. I'll be able to recreate it --just need another cup of coffee to help me think!
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Carol - have you PM'd the mods to see if they still have a copy of that page? Even though it's not publically visible, a copy of it might still reside on the web server. I manage our website at work and we have a lot of old pages that are no longer on public view, but copies of them are still sitting on our server.
I'm so excited about your new website. I'm sensing almost a tipping point here in our battle - there's a growing number of very vocal, very PO'd women with swollen arms and trunks wrapped up like mummies - we're mad as heck that this keeps happening to women and we're not going to take it anymore!!
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NatsFan, I will send a pm to the mods to ask. Funny though, I pm'd to ask for clarification that once the story website is ready, it would be a-ok for me to drop links to that site here. But no answer to my pm on that.
Maybe I should have made the domain name 'PO'd Women Speak' !
Carol
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I just had to look up the rules, and you agree not to participate in polls or surveys without prior permission from bc.org, but they:
By using the Discussion Boards or Chat Rooms, you are granting Breastcancer.org a perpetual, exclusive, royalty-free and irrevocable right and license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, distribute, transmit, publicly display, publicly perform, sublicense, create derivative works from, transfer, and sell any such messages, files or communications.
Maybe our posts will become performance art....
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Fascinating. In any case, a few hours ago, I did receive a pm from one of the moderators saying it's fine to insert links to the stories website. That mod even suggested creating a topic that invites women to tell their LE stories at the outside website. So that's one step in the right direction. --Carol
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And then there's no worry that they'll be performance art--adapted and modified.
Not sure why they don't want the stories here.
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I think the objection was because I stated clearly that the stories would be used to support LE patient education advocacy, i.e. for a purpose not initiated by them.
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Carol, ALL our posts here support LE patient education and advocacy. How many of us consistently take the information we find here to our doctors, nurses, therapists, fitters, neighbors, friends, DHs -- you name it. I'm sitting her compressed to within an inch of my life in garments that I found when women here suggested them, fitted in such a way that they're relatively comfortable because other women had ideas on how to do that, and avoiding cellulitis because of experiences still other women have shared with us here. So I'm not sure where the line is that your post crossed. But if removing it results in a dedicated website for investigating the experiences of LE patients and making that available for educating providers, then we can thank the moderators for that, for sure!
Mary, I'm with you on that sense of a tipping point -- I can't believe the "can do and WILL do, by golly!" attitude that's been emerging lately. It's arisen out of frustration, but it has such a creative and optimistic tone to it. And even a wonderful sense of humor. It's like we're all crawling out from under our beds, leaving the brownies behind and taking up our sharp-tip ink pens and our eye protection!
(Well, wait a minute. Forget the part about the brownies being left behind.
That was just a figure of speech.)
Looking forward to your new website!
Binney -
Binney and all you other can-do-WILL-do women,
I'll be putting some welcome material, including brief factual info about LE on the site's home page, so that anyone finding it who knows little of LE will find a bit of background and a good list of resource links to learn what they need to. I'd prefer to get that part right the first time. If anyone can help out with some accuracy review, can you pm me? I'm not ready with it yet, but it would be good to know who might be willing to take a look and offer comments, for when I am ready.
Carol
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Carol, Jane Armer wrote the LE handout for Livestrong, and I've always thought it had great info
They put so much other stuff on the site, I really had to search for it:
Also, we had gotten permission to use JoAnn Rovig's what is lymphedema page:
http://www.nwlymphedemacenter.org/lymphedema.php
I think she'd be receptive if you asked.
Suzy once called herself, in her amazing Suzy way, "a board hogger"--but a little more graphic, and that is surely what I'm doing lately, so I'll back off, but I can review stuff (I think she said a board ho, but I'd have to search....)
Kira
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Kira, thank you so much for all this help to get the site launched with proper information. I will get in touch with JoAnn Rovig to ask about capturing her 'what is lymphedema', with attribution of course, and I will also check on LiveStrong to see if there are any protocol requests for placing a link to that piece.
Don't back off on my account, although at just under 3,000 posts, your typin' fingers must be getting weary!
Carol
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Oh Kira, please board-hog all you want!
That goes for the rest of you, too. Makes me feel better reading all the energy and caring expressed here -- and the good, factual information and personal experiences we can all learn from.
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I haven't gone through all the posts, but the early ones did catch me attn. I had SNB /bmx wed - 2 nodes removed. No sooner had they gotten me to my room than the aide whips a bp cuff on my right arm (the snb side). I tried to protest but she said if there was a problem they'd have put a pink bracelet on... well, a few minutes later they were back with a pink bracelet and a sign above my bed.
My BS and the nurses have said not to worry, but I'm numb right just past my underarm on that arm. I had been enouraged to move - in fact, I have almost full movement in my arm and used it extensively to get myself up and about and squirming in bed. I hope this doesn't cause problems. I had even seen Trinity's post before surgery and went into this 'aware,' but it doesn't mean much of everyone else thinks it's not a problem.
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rachelvk,
ARGHHHHH!
I had the exact experience! Also had microsurgical reconstruction, where it's absolutely critical to avoid pinching newly connected blood vessels post surgery, and I was in intensive care for about five hours when a team of two RN's (not nurse aids!!!) decided it was somehow critical to change the sheets on my bed. I was still feeling pretty zoned out and didn't understand what that meant until the proceeded to roll my entire body weight on top of an arm...big no-no that did not dawn on me at that moment, but fortunately it was so painful that I screamed at them to stop it already--clean sheets were not worth the pain.
Only later, when I was more lucid, did I realize that these nurses were essentially clueless; that's also about when I realized there were no arm precautions posted. When I spoke to the BS about it, she informed me that with 5 nodes removed, I did not really need arm precautions, but I insisted and they humored me.
Why on earth would we NOT want to take precautions even with just one node removed...when these precautions are really simple if nodes were removed from only one arm, and only a bit challenging if both arms are affected and bp/needle sticks need to go elsewhere.
I was at a major, big-city, university teaching hospital. Your story, my story, and lots of similar stories are simply inexcusable.
I'll be pm-ing you in a week or so when the new 'tell your LE story' website is up, to ask you to post your story there.
I thought my coffee this morning woke me up, but no...your story has given me a huge jolt of indignancy and I'm super awake now!
In your post did you say you just had surgery on Wednesday? If I understand that correctly, of course I send wishes for a speedy recovery, and wish you all fiestiness in continuing to push back and advocate for yourself.
Carol
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Rachelvk:
A couple of things--I was looking through articles yesterday and found a recent one out of Australia where the conclusion was:
http://www.bmj.com/content/342/bmj.d3442.full
Women perceive that lymphoedema is not considered as a serious illness by their doctor and other health workers, a finding previously noted in smaller studies.13 19 27 34 While women might have continual review for cancer recurrence by their breast surgeon three to five years after diagnosis, they might not return to them for issues related to lymphoedema. Women will also be under the care of their family doctor, and it is from this doctor they might seek advice regarding their lymphoedema. Because most women will have minimal overt signs of swelling at this stage, the symptoms they experience, including shoulder stiffness and ache, might be dismissed. Yet it is currently believed, although not proved, that intervention at the earliest opportunity is the most effective. To address the needs of women with lymphoedema and perhaps prevent progression, it is important that mild symptoms are not dismissed and that women are referred to the appropriate specialist.
Reguarding using your arms: a couple of very good LE therapists have recommended no stretch through the axilla (arm pit) for 10-14 days to let the lymphatics heal: this may be "medical" but it talks about it:
http://www.stepup-speakout.org/essential%20informat%20for%20healthcare%20providers.htm--
-Consider limiting stretch on the axillary area for 10-14 days post-operatively, as lymphatics have limited time to regenerate: NLN Conference Lecture, 2010, Jodi Winicour PT
From Foldi Textbook of Lymphology: Lymphatic regeneration occurs as the stumps of the afferent or efferent collectors of a removed node connect as the result of proliferation of the endothelium at the terminal portion of the damaged vessel. Regeneration of superficial vessels in dogs takes 4 days, and deep vessels in 8 days.
Have your patients limit their arm movement to shoulder height for the first 10-14 days post-op-to allow the efferent and afferent vessels to connect during the limited time of lymphatic regeneration.
Systematic review of early vs. delayed exercise has shown delayed exercise decreases seroma formation: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15830140
A study in 2008, published in Physiotherapy, showed higher risk of development of lymphedema in women who had axillary node dissection and performed early vs. delayed exercise: http://www.lymphoedemaleeds.co.uk/Pages/Research.aspx
And finally, from the ACS (American Cancer Society)
http://www.cancer.org/Cancer/BreastCancer/MoreInformation/exercises-after-breast-surgery
The week after surgery: make it 2 weeks to be safe
These tips and exercises listed below should be done for the first 3 to 7 days after surgery. Do not do them until you get the OK from your doctor.
Use your affected arm (on the side where your surgery was) as you normally would when you comb your hair, bathe, get dressed, and eat.
Lie down and raise your affected arm above the level of your heart for 45 minutes. Do this 2 or 3 times a day. Put your arm on pillows so that your hand is higher than your wrist and your elbow is a little higher than your shoulder. This will help decrease the swelling that may happen after surgery.
Exercise your affected arm while it is raised above the level of your heart by opening and closing your hand 15 to 25 times. Next, bend and straighten your elbow. Repeat this 3 to 4 times a day. This exercise helps reduce swelling by pumping lymph fluid out of your arm.
Practice deep breathing exercises (using your diaphragm) at least 6 times a day. Lie down on your back and take a slow, deep breath. Breathe in as much air as you can while trying to expand your chest and abdomen (push your belly button away from your spine). Relax and breathe out. Repeat this 4 or 5 times. This exercise will help maintain normal movement of your chest, making it easier for your lungs to work. Do deep breathing exercises often.
Do not sleep on your affected arm or lie on that side.Way too much information, sorry--but good for you to protest the nurse, you clearly can't think for herself--she should have grabbed a pink bracelet.
The short message is: baby yourself, no need to get full range of motion in your arms for a couple of weeks, you do need to move around, but walking is fine. You have to use your arms, just don't stretch overhead for a couple of weeks. My LE therapist just hated "reach for recovery"--as did the physician who trained her.
Kira
(who clearly can't stay away....)
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Kira,
What a wonderful resource you have just posted, for anyone who has just had surgery! (or is about too, of course.)
Have you ever seen a comprehensive patient guide to LE organized such as 'Before Your Breast Surgery: What You Need to Know About Your LE Risks' --then "In the Hospital After Surgery: What You Need to Know about Minimizing Your LE Risks' --then "Home from the Hospital: What You Need to Know about Managing Your LE Risks' --Then "Life After Breast Surgery (and/or Rads)--What You Need to Know About Watching for LE Symptoms, and What to Do About Them"
And ideally, such an LE guide would have a companion piece to hand to health care practitioners, replete with all the research evidence that supports every single bit of advice given in the LE guide for patients.
Does this exist anywhere to your knowledge?
Carol
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