How much time off from work taken for a Lumpectomy w/Rad?
Trying to plan ahead.....thinking about the average time that ended up being needed off from work. I know everyone is different and heals differently but...thinking on getting an average.
FYI...I work at a desk, answer phones and work a computer all day.
I have yet to make the choice between a lumpectomy and a BMX. I already posted about the time off for a BMX now I am wondering about this.
Comments
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For the lumpectomy, I only needed the surgery day off work. I work from home (at a desk), but the BS indicated that for those with desk jobs in an office she would have recommended an additional day off. I did not take any time off for radiation.....just the time it took me to go to the appointments each day and come back home. My work schedule is flexible enough that I could work around that. (I only had 5 days of radiation (2x per day) because I was having the partial breast radiation.)
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SO hard to say! I've had three lumpectomies. The first two were a breeze, the third (last fall) was miserable. I lost over 1/3 of my breast. I was so frustrated why I wasn't bouncing back so quick and the surgeon kept reminding me of the amount of tissue that was taken. I aslo developed a huge seroma.
I'm a nurse and went back after 3 weeks but only 8 hour days. Even that was a bit much because my seroma would be out of control after a day on the floor. I was back to my normal 12 hour shifts by 5 weeks.
Really depends on the type of work you do, the size of your lumpectomy and where it is.
Best wishes! You have a lot of thinking on your plate. Choices are so hard. I'm in that mode right now myself. Best wishes and prayers to you!
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I work from home - was back at my desk for part of the next day. Also had chemo but that's another story. For rads, I worked straight through. Never noticed any fatigue and had no serious burning or complications. Just went over to the center every morning, got my 5 min treatment (more like 30 seconds, really) and then got dressed and went about my day.
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tjp1071
Hi there,
I had my 2 lumpectomies (of them two areas of concern) on a friday and was bak to work on Monday. Didn't get clean margins on one and had to have another surgery but then had lymph nodes taken also. i ended up taken 1 week for that procedure. now in RADS and working through it 5 done 29 to go
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Like earlier posters, just the day off -- I had lump. on a Friday and was driving on Sunday and back at work on Monday. If you are also having a sentinel node biopsy (not standard for dcis), then allow for that recovery, which was actually more painful to me.
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WOW! I expected way more time! At least a week! Thanks for the info! I have approx. 6 cm to take out if they get clean margins!
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I had lump and SNB at one surgery and lump on another surgery. both on a Thursday and back at work on Monday. Rads I had at the end of the day so would leave work early to go have treatments. I had a pretty rough time with rads and probably should have taken the last week off from work because I was so miserable but I didn't and made it taking pain pills. Everyone is different and not everyone has a hard time with it.
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I agree with the ladies who have already posted about physical recovery time, but keep in mind the emotional impact that this type of surgery, radiation and all the decisions that have to be made around your diagnosis. I took a few days off of work after my partial mastectomy and SNB. I went back full time for about 3 weeks, then started rads. I had whole breast radiation and experienced horrible fatigue and terrible burns. I worked through rads, but I worked mainly from home. The amount of energy that it took me to get ready to go into the office for just two mornings a week was even too much. Physically, i got over it, but I had some PTSD from not allowing myself time to heal emotionally AND physically.
Keep in mind that although you have a desk job that doesn't seem to take much at all, consider what getting ready and travel time to and from work may take more energy now than when you aren't going through radiation. Most of all, give yourself breaks. Lots of them.
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Barbie is right I had fatigue very bad. My rads facility was an hour drive one way. By week 5 I had to have people drive me because I found myself falling asleep driving home. Did not want to die in a car wreck trying to escape death from cancer.
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I took a week off after the lumpectomy (Probably could have gone back sooner, but the surgeon wanted me to take off 2 weeks, so we compromised). I only took off at the end of the day during radiation, so I could get my treatment done. If I had it to do over again, though, I would have taken more time off. It is not just about healing physically, but about healing psychologically, and I really could have used more time to just process the whole thing. I was really dragging by about week four of radiation.
Karen
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I could have worked the day after my lumpectomy, but I needed time to tell everyone I was OK etc. I had someone staying with me for a few days, so we went to the Aquarium the day afterward. I looked so fine that I scared people.
I was dragging a bit towards the end of radiation, but kept up the work I was doing. I mean, no worse that dragging through a couple of days towards the end of a flu. I did not have anything serious in the way of skin damage.
I trained for summer cycling events all the way through radiation and did two 45 mile cycling events immediately following.
My take is that you will need some time off work for a lumpectomy, but nothing like you would need for a mastectomy + reconstruction.
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I am also a desk jockey and I had a lumpectomy, reexcission and then radiation.
I think I had my surgeries on Thursday and was back at work on Monday. I let myself be there only part of the day because I know my tendancy to overdo.
I worked all through radiation. I did my zaps at lunch and tried to walk to and from zaps (but at least walk from) since I was told by the radiation oncologist that I needed to exercise. I left 1-1.5 hrs early every day and was typically in bed by 10pm.
Until the very end I was doing pretty darned well--tired but I don't recall it being too overwhelming. The last weeks I did have "owie nipple" from the zaps but that was dealt with by wearing nothing but underwear tshirts under everything.
I agree that you need to give yourself the time you need to give yourself. I was diagnosised in November but didn't have surgery until February. Perfectly safe per my oncologist but gave me the time I needed --for a large part--to process stuff. Still I found it VERY helpful that my cancer team included a psychologist who I saw on a weekly basis during zaps and for a while after. I also took time to go to a weekly cancer support group.
I think the support system I set up for myself really helped me come through my zaps with basically flying colors.
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