If you are not Stage IV but have questions, you may post here
Comments
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I have blocked him!
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Thanks chrissy!!!!
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Scuttlers - great post.
Chrissy - It is a shame that the thread that you started to help others has been interrupted in such a manner. I believe that it will get back on track once the focus comes back to where it began. I too like that I can come here to share and even learn about the various paths of stage iv.
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Well said, scuttlers!
It's a shame that someone feels the continuous need to be a disruption and/or distraction, even after having been asked to cease and desist! Smh. After awhile, it becomes obvious their only objective is to inflict (more) pain upon those who've already had their fair share...and more.
While I've blocked said person, seeing that he's still doing it and upsetting others, possibly pushing people away, makes me further upset. Just leave us the hell alone!
~Cate -
I echo the sentiments above, but let's follow Chrissyb's advice. Block the troll, don't acknowledge him any further. We have responded, commented, now time to move on. Ignore him. Let's get back to business.
Michelle, from what I can understand from your post, you had chemo, followed by surgery. The chemo is to shrink tumors, especially large ones like yours so that lumpectomy is possible. Cancer cells are very sneaky and hide out lots of places, usually found by chemo since those drugs go pretty much everywhere. However, if there were a LOT of those cells in your lymph nodes, they will sometimes still be positive after chemo, so it looks like at that point you went ahead with mastectomy and lymph node dissection. This in and of itself may be curative at this point, but the radiation is one more weapon to eradicate cancer cells in the area they are most likely to be lurking - the breast/chest/axillary region. In most cases, this will take care of it and you will have long-term cancer-free years. It is not a guarantee, there are still some women who progress despite the most aggressive treatment available, but you are doing everything you can to improve your chances. The main thing is winning the battle "between the ears", that is, keeping your brain away from fear and anxiety during this time. Ask good questions, like you did, take each day as it comes, find at least a few moments of beauty and joy, and know that there are many people who love you, no matter what!
Please let us know if you have other questions, there are so many here who are willing to help and support. I try to make sure I have very good medical references to back up anything I post, I don't rely on just my own experience, although I do share my experiences, but I try to make sure people understand the difference. -
Thank you ladies!
Out of respect and boundaries I would never post in your forum, only this one and I still had to really think about re-asking.
Gentle hugs and lots of respect,
Michele -
I think that what they are saying is once it has spread to other places (mets) it doesn't matter how early they detect it. Unless it is one met and tey can blast it. What matters is how you respond to treatment/s. So yes some can live a long time and may get to NED. That has nothing to do with how early they catch it but how well the tumours respond to the treatment options. That being said it does tend to show that those living with only bone mets can manage it longer then those with soft tissue involvement. Mind you everyone responds differently, no matter where the involvement. This disease is so complicated.
I hope that helps.
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Dropping by to thank you and let you know my retest came back Er/Pr + so I'll be jumping on the Letrozole train, bypassing TC. I think I need to keep that puppy in my arsenal. I hope I get a good run with the AI's.
Chrissyb et all you are doing a fantastic job here, please don't let one ..ahem.. person disrupt you. -
I like our ladies here. We know how to deal with difficult people. Tell 'em, block 'em, ignore 'em and then get back to business.
Well said Linda, nicely done. Scuttlers too, you tell 'em!
Michelle, please feel welcome to come back and ask. If no one has the answer they do a great job at finding out and the amount of personal knowledge here is immense. Why not share it and help others, that benefits all of us.
Awesome bunch of women, no messing with us. Have a great day ladies.
Moira
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I have only found this thread last week and started reading bits and pieces. Enjoying this thread as a lurker at the moment as I feel I dont have anything yet to contribute only to let everyone know that I agree, block that person, so that this thread can be used for its purpose.
Hugs and prayers
Mandy
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Just found this thread and just wanted to say I think it's a great idea. I don't have a great deal of experience (yet) so I'm not sure how much I can contribute, but I will be keeping an eye I this. Maybe also the fact that I'm in France and therefore in a different medical system could be interesting from time to time with regard to responses? We'll see. In the meantime, I'm reading away and gaining plenty of information. For myself. Thanks!
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Hi Nicky - welcome. Sorry that you have any experience with this damn disease. However, I am glad that you did find BCO. It is a wonderful place to meet lots of wonderful people who care. Please join us on the stage iv thread also if you haven't already.
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Hi barsco
Thanks for the welcome.
It's tough to have to be here, but I'm very glad to have it! Have posted a few times on the stage IV thread, lurking a bit too. Getting to know the names and how it all works.
I've only been here for a short while, but logging in to see how everyone is doing is becoming an integral part of my day.
Thanks everyone! -
Hi, have decided to stop Tamoxifen because of bad SE, waiting for US on pelvis because of pain and lump.
Have decided I need to live a normal life as long as possible so no more drugs. -
I know the question of mets to hips has come up before, but when I search it I can't find any posts that say what it feels like - is it actual pain, soreness like you would feel from over exercising or pulling muscles, or something else? Also, if a bone scan is clear, could mets to hip come about within months of the bone scan or would it have been picked up at that point? I'm thinking my hip is sore due to spinning, but of course I'm worried now because its been sore for a few weeks. Bone scan in November was ok, and MRI of lumbar spine showed some degenerative/bulging discs. I wouldn't descibe it as "pain" but more like a soreness. Thanks for any replies & to Chrissy for starting this thread.
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Shore1, I was just getting ready to post the same question.
I have had mild pain, more of a sore feeling in both hips, but a tingling runs down my right leg to my foot at the same time. I have not done anything overly physical that I can think of to pull muscles. When I push on my hips and a couple spots on my lower back they are very sore. However, it seems that ever since chemo (last one Dec. 2010) I tend to be tender all over.
Any thoughts would be appreciated. I see my MO on the 25th for my usual 4 month follow up. I was just curious if anyone presented these symptoms before a bone mets diagnosis. Thank you!
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In answer to the "could mets feel like this" question: mine feel like a pulled muscle in the area. I have cervical spine mets, and it feels like something a good muscle rub would take care of, except it doesn't
. If your ache is symetrical (both hips, etc.), I'd point the finger at osteoarthritis or SEs from anti-hormonal therapy.
As always, if the pain persists for more than two weeks, go get it checked out.
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My hip mets felt like I had pulled something. It did not hurt a whole lot, but it was consistent. It showed on a bone scan, but not on an X-ray. The pain did not respond to ibuprofen, heat, rubbing, etc. It was found when my tumor makers became elevated. At that point, the pain had only been there for a week maybe. I was just starting to pay attention to it. From that point on, the pain got progressively worse until the Arimidex started to work.
It was not tender to the touch. Sore spots sound like trigger points more than mets, and pain down the leg sounds like a sciatica issue. There are a lot of things that can cause pain issues after tx.
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My met in the spine didn't hurt at all. Onc was surprised by that but it never did hurt. When I got my mets in the hip it felt deep and achy and over the counter pain meds did little to help and it stayed there all the time for over a month. Funnily enough while I was having rads for mets in my right hip I slipped getting off the table and landed badly and my left hip really hurt and yes small mets found there. Hadn't had any pain before the fall. Don't think there had been anything there in the bone scan 2 months earlier for the right hip. Mets have to be a certain size before they show up so maybe they were just big enough to see by then.
Usual advice is to get any thing that has not cleared up or improved in 2-3 week checked out.
One of the hardest things I have found with this is that for every time one symptom is true for someone, it is not true for others. If only BC would behave in a certain way it would be much easier to know what was going on.
If in doubt, check it out. Using the 3 week wait check so you are not at the docs all the time!!
Moira
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Hi my MO refuses to do tumor markers. Do youll think they are valuable tool.
And i have been having pressure pain behind my eyes sort of. Itstarted on left part of front top sinus area few months ago. Did round of antibiotic. It would hurt when i bend over. Can brain cancer feel like this? I can feel pressure some when i move my head. Have never had migraines. My sinuses seem clear. Just feels weird -
Hi Fredntan, tumor maker tests are not always reliable.........for some like me they stay in the normal range always so are not a good diagnostic tool. There are some where they are a very good pointer as to what's happening. Each onc has their own way of looking at this particular test but if you really want to know, you can insist that it be included in your next blood panel.
As for your sinus pressure/pain, there is no way to tell if your problem is mets other than to have a CT/MRI for confirmation but in reality it could be any number of things causing it even your Tamoxifen. If it continues unabated, ask you doc to check further.
Love n hugs. Chrissy -
My MO does not do tumor markers either. She is a research oncologist, and I would expect her to use the latest and best approaches for monitoring; I asked her about tumor markers and she said the same thing Chrissy said: they are not all that good at predicting or prognosticating overall, but may be helpful in some individuals. I don't know how much they cost, and am not sure all insurance plans pay for them.
Does anyone know anything about insurance companies no longer required to pay for more than one PET scan per breast cancer patient? My MO said something about that at my last visit, but there was so much other info at that visit that this one kind of slipped by me without me thinking much about it.
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Hi ladies....I had 3 months of TC, then had my mastectomy. They found only 5 nodes left ( they suspected chemo had "melted" the others). I had only 1 positive, but they also found that there was still active disease. It was decided that chemo had killed about 60% of the cancer (less than expected...my MO had it in his mind I was going to be in remission bc my tumor shrunk well). So, tumor board said to do 2 rounds of dose dense AC.
My question is....have any of you had to go through this? Of course we all fear mets, but knowing that this was still so active for the 4 months I was doing 1st chemo round & surgery. Also, did any of you have the overwhelming feeling that it was going to come back....and it did? I'm a nurse & I've learned to listen to my patients when they have "feelings" about this type of a thing. They were usually right.
Thanks! -Andrea -
Andrea, I know my body, and I never thought I would be cured as I went through chemo. I did have recurrence, but after BMX I DID have some optimistic and hopeful thoughts, but never really thought I would be long-term survivor. That remains to be seen; I could still last many more years if we find the right drugs. But Kayb's sister is a great example of having way too much anxiety and worry. The main thing is to take each day, find something in it to enjoy, don't spend time in fear for the future! We cannot change the past, we cannot know the future, but we can enjoy each day for what it is, share love with those who love us.
Because you are Er-/Pr-, chemo is your best option for finding and killing more of those wandering cancer cells, ie the mop-up, and herceptin should provide the longer-term surveillance and protection. Best wishes.
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Hello everyone! For those of you who had shortness of breath with lung mets, was the shortness of breath constant? Was it subtle? Gosh....I don't feel like my shortness of breath is anxiety (I have a lot of experience with that)!
Michelle
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My shortness of breath was only with exercise and was relieved by thoracentesis. If lung mets are causing a pleural effusion (water on the lung), doctors can generally hear it when they listen to your lung, and then it's easily verified by x-ray or ultrasound. In my case, the pleura adhered to the lung on its own and when the lung biopsy that confirmed bc mets was done there was no need for the pleurodesis to create the adhesion artificially. I'm not sure that pleural effusion is the only reason for shortness of breath with lung mets, but even if your problem is intermittent you need to have it checked. Almost three years after my lung problem first showed up (it took almost a year to diagnose) I'm doing well on anastrozole (Arimidex) and exercise has improved my lung capacity even with half the left lung out of commission.
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I had 2 lumpectomies and didn't get clean margin last year., SND 0/4 that time. Before the BMX surgery, we found a enlarged lymph node in MRI. They ask me back to ultrasound, since I will do Mx, and the node was borderline, radiology decide no need biopsy. I went BMX and Diep in Jan. everything goes well. On the pathology report, I notices surgeon got 2 residue tumors. But didn't do Alnd, I'm scared..suddenly I found a lump in my armpit last week. I did biopsy at this Tuesday... Now waiting.. I have no idea this is recurrence or residue. My case is so complicate. I wonder any one have similar experience?
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Hi there,
I have to ask, what do you mean by what will "eventually be down the road for me"?
Do you assume you will eventually be stage lv?
I am IDC st lllc 12/24 nodes and panic stricken. Dx 6/4/12
Thanks, Lisa -
jjl, I also had complicated case. First had lumpectomy, clear margins. Had recurrence a year later, had BMX, clear margins, positive nodes, tried tamoxifen after lumpectomy and also after bmx, couldn't tolerate it. Had another lump which was positive, so am now on AI and afinitor (everolimus), doing pretty well with them, hoping they control it. But I have had so many SEs from so many drugs, so it has been tough to find something that I can tolerate and that will work. Right now, today, I am doing well overall, just not happy with the fatigue that keeps me from doing everything I did before, but I am learning patience (well, sort of ....
). I also had a nodule that turned out to be suture granuloma, so not everything that pops up is cancer. The waiting is the toughest part. Take some deep breaths, try not to hyperventilate with that, know that you are not alone, even though you feel like you are. Let us know how you do.
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Thanks Linda. U made me feel much better. I wonder is that possible my first surgeon got wrong SN. Or I'm the 5%....Because I felt the node after 2 surgery. Also they found it enlarge in ultrasound. But I have no idea thats the same one or not. Anyway so frustrate. After my son told me he cant believe what his friend went through, that kid must be very miss his mom, who passed away 2years ago because BC. I started to cry.. What if one day I'm not here... Sad... He is only 15...
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