Poll on Sentinel Node Biopsy Pain
Comments
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I am sorry to hear how painful this procedure was for so many. I felt absolutely nothing. I had been given so many shots of local numbing medication to put in the wires to locate the mass that I felt nothing. I did however almost collapse while they hooked me up like a marionette trying to locate the mass and titanium clip using a mammogram machine. They had to flip me almost upside down to get the blood back to my brain. By the time I was wheeled down to surgery, I was so thankful to be put out and get some needed rest.
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The snb injection was the worst for me as well. I didnt know there was a cream that could be put on to help. Luckily I had a bmx so I wont have to go through that again. I was lucky that my surgeon only did 2 injections and she did them very quick but I definitely saw stars. The core bx I had a week prior wasnt that bad and it took a lot longer. I also had a xanax that morning which helped to keep me calm. I cant imagine anybody saying that it didnt hurt. But Im glad that it didnt cause pain to some.
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My SNB was done while I was under general anesthesia for my lumpectomy. It think its barbaric to do it any other way. I can't believe its not done as part of the surgery after all everyone goes through with breast cancer. I am so sorry you have to go through this.
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I felt compelled to write on this topic. I've had many different procedures for colon cancer about 10 years ago and then for BC this year. I am not easily affected by pain. I've done a number of procedures and walked away not even remembering the what we did.....but the SNB procedure was the absolute worst pain I've ever experienced. It was done the morning of my BMX. My doctor was very honest and said it was "not pleasant". I asked why they couldn't give me something, or wait until I was under for the surgery and was told that the test results were not reliable unless it was done awake. I had an incredible nurse who held my hand the entire time. Her name was Cathy, the only name I remember from that day. I had 4 shots around the nipple. I cried, bawled really. The pain was excruciating. Once it was done, it was done, but after I got wheeled back into pre-op, EVERYONE came to check on me to ask how bad it was. Ok, so everyone knows how bad it is, but they CONTINUE to do it? I'm sorry for all the women reading this, who have to endure it. It is the worst memory from my BC diagnosis, and I truly beleive how they do it HAS to change. I'm the proud mother of two dogs, and I would NEVER allow a vet to hurt my dogs the way I was hurt that day.
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I totally agree. I was spared the pain. Personally I don't believe that part about they can't reliable test. I think they are outdated. It is really shameful.
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I have heard that my hospital COULD do it under general anesthesia. But they do not want you to be under for that long. I was under for over 13 hours with my DIEP. Another 30 minutes to spare me that pain I so would have done. Just FYI, hospitals are competitive for a profit. As much as I love my PS I would never ever go to the hospital I used again only because they are horrible at pain management. I will tell anyone in DFW area to find another hospital that cares about women and the pain they must endure. Medical City Dallas truly does not care about it either before surgery or after while in the hospital recovery. I seriously doubt any man in the hospital would ever suffer as much.
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Here's an article on using lidocaine mixed into the solution.....http://www.breastcancer.org/treatment/surgery/new_research/20090806.jsp
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Hi everyone. Two of us here in central FL are trying to get hospitals and physicians to acknowledge the extreme pain
that many of us experienced when our nipples were injected prior to the slnb mapping. We did contact Dr. Rick Bosshardt, a local plastic surgeon. Dr. Bosshardt writes weekly articles on medical problems of all kinds for the Orlando Sentinel and he has written an article based on your discussion blogs, which he took the time to read. It will appear in the Sentinel this coming Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012. If you are in agreement that physicians need to hear our pleas, then please respond to his article with your own thoughts. His email will appear underneath the article. On this site, we've been "preaching to the choir"; this is a chance to push for a protocol change so that more women will get pain medication before this procedure.
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I am not sure that I should have read all these posts. I was not really nervous before but now I am scared. I have to have my injection at a different hospital at 0630 the morning of my surgery and then go to the other hospital for my surgery. I guess if it turns out to be a terrible experience, my friend who is doing the driving, will get an ear full! But I intend to call and find out the protocol. I read somewhere that Ativan might be an option too. I certainly don't want to have anything used that could potentially screw up the procedure and diagnosis.
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Looking forward to that article. Definitely saving it. Talked to BS yesterday and got some bs about it being uncomfortable and they don't use any anesthetic. She said it would mean 2 shots which obviously it doesn't and I don't care if I have 2 shots. Want to just say no but I know the results are more important than my temporary well being. Although I may end up hitting whoever gets to do the injection. :-/ Wasnt worried about UMX but horrified over this.
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Add my name to the list of ladies who experienced excruciating pain during the isotope injection. I was given two shots, but IF the first one was lidocaine, the doctor did not wait at all for it to take effect. I have a low pain tolerance level, but had two babies with absolutely no pain medication, and I must say this was one of the most barbaric and inhumane procedures I have ever endured. It was weeks before I could think about it without crying. I filed a formal complaint with the hospital and received a letter about how they would take a look at their protocols....blah blah blah. There HAS to be a better way...hopefully Dr. Bosshardt will make inroads!
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Hello ladies
I had the blue dye with the radio tracer injected in February 2012 for the SNB.
Can't remember feeling any pain at all except for a tiny sting. Just closed my eyes, almost fell asleep and then it was over.
Good luck to you!
Best wishes
Alice
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I talked to my nurse navigator today and she was pretty insistent that as far as she knows, pain is not an issue. I was pretty insistent that due to the number of women who have written about it being painful may just mean that it could be a problem. In the end I just asked for the number of the nuclear med dept. at the hospital where it will be done on Friday and talked to reception who got me a technician who does the injections to talk to. That was much more helpful and she did listen. However she said that she thinks it is possible that other hospitals may do it differently, deeper and possibly with a larger bore needle. I am going to go with the flow and if it is terrible then I will try to make a difference for others following at this hospital. But one thing that did occur to me is that on this thread it is more likley that people who have had bad experiences will voice their opinion rather than those who found it to be like a "bee sting." What I am really looking forward to regardless, is having the surgery over and done with so I can move on to the next step.
Marian
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I had this procedure done in 2004 and it was one shot and not in the nipple...no worse than any other shot. Had not read these posts and have had a recurrence in the other breast. So I went for the snb August 30th...probably glad I did not read ahead...as I do agree very, very, painful. They had me take an ativan before I left the house, rubbed some cream on the area to numb it, but honestly do not think either helped.
But I do have a question now...it has been 8 days and my nipple area is very, very sensitive and has a burning feeling....anyone else experience this??? And how long did it last??
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As I said above, I think most people who did not have a bad experience would not post. My injection yesterday was a tiny sting and last only a couple of seconds. I hope this helps for those who are experiencing anxiety. The first IV attempt yesterday pre op was much worse though thankfully the second went better.
Marian
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I am one of those that felt the bee sting. Remember that before they did the SNB they removed all the lymph nodes. Since I honestly cannot put myself in your place, what would you prefer? That is an honest question. For me I am grateful that they only removed 4 to biopsy and not all.
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The bee sting and SNB! However my surgeon did say a couple of the nodes looked "pearly" and I don't think in this case pearly is a good thing! 10 business days minimum until path is in.
Marian
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The radio isotope injections were like bee stings. The blue dye was done under anaesthetic at surgery time. After, the pain was mainly burning from the dye. My breast was still swollen and patchy 3 weeks later when I had BMX.
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I had two injections. Both at the site of the lump (under my arm where the underwire of your bra is). I believe that my doctor did the nipple injection after I was out because I can feel a little pain in my nipple. My experience was not bad.
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I so appreciate all of your input! On Wednesday I will go for the radio isotope injection. I called the BS's office today and requested some numbing cream. I was told that women react so differently to the injection that they don't prescribe a numbing agent as protocol. Well, they never offered it or told me anything about the proceedure - thank goodness for these boards so I knew at least to ask for something! The office told me to please report back regarding the creme so they have more input for future proceedures. This is scary!
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I had a bi-lateral mastectomy 10/18/12. I am still upset about the SNB procedure and the excrutiating pain. I was prescribed 6 injections and was given no info about the procedure. I had so much anxiety about the upcoming surgery I learned the hard way about the SNB. I cried so hard after the first injection that I hyperventilated and almost passed out. This is barbaric and inhumane and FAR worse than the surgery itself. I have my follow-up tomorrow and it is the first item on my list to discuss. I need to find the Orlando Sentinel article and get involved to find some logical measure of pain management protocol.
I have a high tolerance for pain so not being a wuss. I am stunned that other women just roll through this unaffected. I'm happy for them but I believe the majority is rising to the other degree and we should do everything we can to find a better way!!!! -
I'm so very sorry Seabear (tears). From the research I've done, the medical folks just don't know or don't seem to care much about the pain from this proceedure. Mine is today and likely another portion tomorrow just before my mastectomy. Thanks for reporting - it does help others to be advocates.
Wendy
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SeaBear--I so agree with you! After reading "50 shades..." I have renamed the nuclear medicine dept "Dr. Ng's Red Room of Pain"! Barbaric indeed! I still haven't gotten over it and I had my lumpectomy in January! I filed a formal complaint, but have no idea if they actually did anything about it. Seems to me if the radiologist can numb a breast in order to do a us guided core biopsy, they ought to be able to do the same before the radio-isotope injection. Just sayin...
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Just writing to report that the radioactive isotope injection proceedure I had today was fine...much easier than my biopsies. The technician held my hand and talked to me while the radiologist did 1 injection. I did have lidocaine cream and I think that helped a great deal. My conclusion is that for me, it was just like a bee sting. Painful, but tolerable and forgettable. Tomorrow (bilateral MX) may include a second blue dye injection but I was told that I likely will be under anesthesia at that time.
Wendy
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Hi
I had the injections about an hour or two before my BMX. I was very nervous because I had read how painful it was. The needle they used on me was very thin. It burned a little but was nothing compared to how bad I thought it would be. I think the node removal site bothered me more than the BMX incision while it was healing. I think a root canal was more painful than Snb for me. -
Hi friends. I had my injection today at UAB in Birmingham , Al. I had one injection on the left side of my breast. Sting lasted about 45 seconds and then it was over. It was less painful than my core biopsy. The nurse and I chatted and she says diff hospitals do things differently. She said they have never done multiple injections or any in or around the nipple. I was prepared for terrible pain and was very surprised. Surgery tomorrow!!!
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So I'm glad I found this thread. I'm due for a BMX on Monday. The hospital called on Friday with the time that I am to check in at the hospital on Monday and added that I'm will have my SNB injection at 9am. I knew that the doctor would be doing a biopsy of the SN while doing my BMX but I have heard nothing about this injection. I asked the nurse if I would already have an IV in and would be given something first. She said they give some Lidocaine (sp?) first so it won't really hurt.
Funny, that's what they said when they did my core biopsy. I also have a high pain threshold and often haven't even needed pain meds after my C-sections after I got home. I think I'm pretty tough. The needle for both the lidocaine and during the core biopsy was incredible painful. So much that I told the doctor he could do one more and I was done. My calcs were apparently in the middle of my breast so they had to go in deep.
Now I'm reading about the SNB injection. I've heard that they try and use the same entry as the biopsy. My breast is still very, very sore from the biopsy and the cut where they went in hasn't even healed yet.
Can I refuse this injection? I'm really not kidding when I say this.
My MRI came back with no enhancements in my nodes (although I understand that only a biopsy will tell 100% if anything has spread).
Has anyone refused this before?
My husband thinks I'm crazy but I am 100% serious. I'm going through enough and they want to put me through one last bit of pain. No way.
I'm very scared and upset and would appreciate honest feedback.
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ShaneOak - First, I'm sorry that you have to be here. Looks like things are moving along quickly for you so I'm sure you're still feeling a bit dazed by all of this. It usually gets somewhat easier once your surgery and treatment plan are firmly in place.
You asked for honest feedback so here goes...
I know this is all overwhelming and scary and unfair and surreal and sometimes painful. It sucks, plain and simple. However, I encourage you to go forward with the sentinel node localization. As you wrote, an MRI can only diagnose nodes if things have advanced to the point where the node is enlarged. Only the pathologist can really examine the nodes for signs of early spread of cancer. This is essential to determine your treatment plan.
There are two ways to localize sentinel nodes: blue dye and nuclear tracer. As with most things in life neither method is perfect and without problems. Many (most?) surgeons use both methods to assure that the right nodes are analyzed.
The blue dye is performed in surgery once the patient is asleep so this method doesn't get much attention on breast cancer threads. It is the method that has been around longer, but requires the surgeon to be able to actually see the nodes to know which is the first/brightest. I would venture a guess that your surgeon plans to use blue dye in addition to the nuclear tracer.
The nuclear medicine method involves injection of a nuclear tracer hours before or the day before surgery to allow time for it to migrate to the lymph system. Sometimes imaging is done to mark the skin over the first/hottest node. Sometimes the injections are done around the areola regardless of the cancer site. Sometimes the injections are done around (not usually into) the biopsy site. Sometimes lidocaine injections or numbing cream are used in an effort to make it less painful. Sometimes nothing is used prior to the nuclear injections. I haven't read of anyone receiving IV sedation, but it might be possible. The surgeon will use a tiny Geiger counter in surgery to locate the "hot" node by a reading on the meter as well as by sound.
The fewer nodes removed the less chance for developing lympedema. Before sentinel node mapping women had full lymph node dissections and lymphedema was quite common. It is an awful thing to live with for the rest of your life. The goal now is to remove one (or two or three if there's any doubt) lymph node to diagnose spread of cancer. I encourage you to do whatever you need to do to allow your surgeon to remove the correct node. If he/she wants the assurance of the nuclear localization I personally wouldn't (and didn't) hesitate to do everything possible to get the most accurate diagnosis possible. Obviously, it's your right as a patient to refuse any test or treatment with which you are not comfortable. You might talk to your surgeon to see if he/she is comfortable with the blue dye only if you really feel strongly about this.
I have experience as both a patient and as a Nuclear Medicine tech who has assisted with the procedure on many women. As the patient, I had the sentinel node study at a facility that uses no numbing cream or lidocaine. For me, it truly was like a bee sting. It hurt, but it was quite tolerable and didn't last long. I was pleased to learn that both the blue dye and nuclear tracer led to the same node so I only had that one removed for pathology.
As far as being on the other end of the procedure, I witnessed some tears but most women tolerate the injections quite well. I'm not suggesting that it's a breeze, just that most are prepared for some discomfort, grit their teeth, and get through it. The pain typically is temporary. That said, everyone is different. Pain tolerance varies. There are doctors who are more skilled at giving injections than others. There is a high stress level going on just before a mastectomy. Lots of variables come into play.
I waffled about commenting here, but I just think refusing a test that can offer such important information based on fear of temorary pain is not a good decision. The pain was not significant for me, but apparently it is for some. I never witnessed tremendous pain assisting in many of these procedures, but obviously it can occur. You asked for honest opinions and that is mine.
Best wishes on Monday. I hope all goes smoothly no matter what you decide!
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Hi ShaneOak,
I had the same experience as you with the core biopsy. It hurt a lot despite a double dose of Lidocaine. I too have a high pain threshold. The node mapping which i had the day before my BMX was done without any lidocaine. I can't say that it was not painful at all, but the pain was nothing like the biopsy, more like a bee sting and lasted for a very short time. The tech helped by massaging my breast during the procedure which lessens the discomfort and helps the radioactive material spread faster. So don't worry, you will do fine, and you do need to have that done if you have even a small DCIS. I too was kicking and screaming and adamant to refuse the SNL, but my surgeon told me the only circumstance when they don't do it is with a prophylactic mastectomy on a breast with no findings. So you will need the mapping to make sure only the nodes that have to be removed are removed. And the cool thing is you will be able to see your nodes mapping on the screen right in front of you when they do the mapping. Take care, and good luck with everything. -
Tinat, thank you for your honest feedback and for sharing your experience. I really don't mean to sound like a baby. I really am a pretty tough cookie and take nearly all kinds of pain in stride. I think I'm just still reeling from my biopsy. The first stick of lidocaine in my breast was a piece of cake, then he went much deeper and it was pain like I've never felt before.
I feel like I've already been through enough and have much more to go through that it honestly just seems unfair to slip in one more horrible procedure.
I will ask a lot of questions about it first, then make a smart decision.
I think I'm just so tired of all of this.
Thanks again for your honesty.
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