Most common side effects?

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etnasgrl
etnasgrl Member Posts: 650

I'm starting rads next Tuesday, the 19th and I'm trying to get as prepared mentally as possible. (I wasn't anxious about rads before, but now that it's so close, I'm really getting nervous!)

For those who have gone through this or are currently going through this, can you share with me your most common side effects?
Thanks so much!

Comments

  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 57,235
    edited January 2016

    One side effect many people complain of is fatigue (although that was not a problem for me). A couple things you can do to combat that is to make sure you eat lots of protein & get some exercise (which would seem contradictory but getting exercise actually reduces fatigue. You will almost certainly end up with some degree of redness or burn (near the end my breast felt hot & was red....like a second degree sunburn from the inside out. I never blistered or anything though). The best thing to do about that is to use whatever salve they recommend right from the start (don't wait until you feel like you are burning). Don't put any on before your 'zaps' (because that could intensify the burn), but I brought a small tube with me to the clinic and lathered it on right after I was done, and again at bedtime. I had several fans, and once it started feeling hot, I would sit around with the fan trained right on the area. Another thing to remember is that the radiation is still in your system for about two weeks after your final treatment, so don't be upset or worried if it seems to get worse before it gets better.There is no way to predict how one's own body will react. Some people have lots of problems, whereas for me it was the easiest part of the whole experience. So I think you have to go in expecting that things will go okay and then deal with whatever comes up. The treatment itself is very short, one thing that helped me relax was to visualize myself lying on a dock with the water lapping on the shore; when the machine came overhead, I pretended it was a cloud temporarily blocking out the sun. Best of luck!

  • ORknitter
    ORknitter Member Posts: 119
    edited January 2016

    Etnasgrl, I agree with Ruth. My routine was to get up and immediately put on lotion that I was given at the center, get dressed in loose fitting clothes, have a good, protein filled breakfast, go for a walk, home to shower to wash off any lotion and sweat (especially since deodorant was not used) then go to radiation. I also put on lotion again immediately after rads and again during the afternoon plus before bed. It worked for me as I had little reaction to the radiation even after 30 sessions. There were a couple of days that I needed a short, 20 minute nap but other than that rads were easy. Truthfully the worst part was getting the tattoos!

  • etnasgrl
    etnasgrl Member Posts: 650
    edited January 2016

    Thanks guys!

    I guess I'm as prepared as I can be. I have my Aloe and Aquafor, cooling towel, several cheap cami's to wear under my shirts and/or bra, and non-stick gauze pads to stick inside my bra to keep the lotions/creams from getting all over it.

    ruthbru....I love the idea of visualizing myself on a dock and the machine a cloud blocking out the sun. What a great idea, I think I might try that!

    ORknitter....If the tats are the worst part, (and they did really sting!), than that would be fantastic! It means the worst is behind me! LOL!

  • Sjacobs146
    Sjacobs146 Member Posts: 770
    edited January 2016

    your RO will watch your skin carefully, mine saw a red spot on my armpit before I did. I did have some raw skin which I bandaged and slathered with Aquaphor. I had just finished chemo prior to starting rads, so I didn't notice any unusual fatigue, I certainly didn't feel worse than I did while on chemo

  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 57,235
    edited January 2016

    I did chemo first too, so could actually FEEL my energy returning during radiation.

  • Brutersmom
    Brutersmom Member Posts: 563
    edited January 2016

    I agree with Ruthgru. Many people breeze right through. I found a cooling cloth to be very helpful after the 2nd week to cool my breast down. I hit a fatigue wall at the end of the 3rd week. Was wiped out for about 3 days but kept right on working after resting for those 3 days. I did accelerated radiation so is was done a week later. As for skin. I got a pink area and a rash which I treated with cortisone. No skin break down. I have a tan area now which is fading. Use whatever creams they recommend it helps a lot. Check out the winter rads group. I was in the fall group and the information I learned there was very helpful.

  • chef127
    chef127 Member Posts: 891
    edited January 2016

    I breezed through rads with no ill effects to my skin although the rad nurse felt I needed a week off before the boost. I went to see my PCP after my last boost and the dr checked my BG. Over 400. Apparently radiation can raise your BG level but my RO never mentioned it to me. I have type 2 diabetes and he had my medical records. If I knew this was possible I would have adjusted my medications. So I likely spent the 6 weeks with high levels. My diet was very carefully planned so I didn't check my levels. my bad. If your diabetic, make sure you check your BG.

    Maureen

  • etnasgrl
    etnasgrl Member Posts: 650
    edited January 2016

    Maureen ....I'm not diabetic, but thanks for the heads up about BG. That's good to know!

  • HappyHammer
    HappyHammer Member Posts: 1,247
    edited January 2016

    Good luck with the start of a new treatment, Etnasgirl. Sounds like you are prepared! So much great info on both the Fall 15 and Winter rads threads! Might want to join them. There are those who have used cabbage leaves to cool the radiated breast as well. Peel leaves, wash and dry the leaves. Keep them in fridge to use as needed. Apparently, there is a chem in the leaves that helps with irritation along with the cooling aspect. I am almost finished with the 6 week plan. 2 more boosts to go! This week, breast and underarm have been very sore, irritated and uncomfortable. Have been taking 2 Ibuprofen as needed for the pain. Have been pretty tired this week as well but those 20-30 minute power naps are the bomb!

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited January 2016

    I never got the fatigue--probably because I’ve been a high-protein low-carb (well, I let the carb discipline slip a bit) eater since early 2013. I started getting pink after the second treatment, and the RO noticed both that and a little bit of flaking/dry skin right away. I began applying the Aquaphor they gave me starting right after that second treatment--always had a couple of small sample tubes in my purse, and would apply some immediately afterwards in the dressing cubicle before putting my bra back on. At bedtime, I experimented with Aquaphor, Boiron calendula cream, Jason’s Aloe Vera Cream and finally Fruit of the Earth 100% Aloe gel (no alcohol, fragrance or dyes--figured if that’s what the cancer center’s outpatient pharmacy sold, they knew best). Settled on the aloe gel and then a layer of Aquaphor or calendula at bedtime. In the morning, showered it all off but didn’t reapply before treatments (which were 3pm). Since I had the partial-breast short protocol, my armpit and SNB incision site were outside the beam field. Never got ANY irritation, not even in the crease beneath my breast. Was able to wear my underwire bras throughout--though my cleavage did distort and skew leftward (see infra). Felt comfier wearing soft bras for sleep rather than going braless. (My instincts were correct--also see infra).

    Eventually, though, the irradiated part of my breast tanned (the only suntan I’ve ever gotten). Also, my breast tumor-cavity seroma enlarged considerably (the RO pointed it out on the mapping CT and did observe how it inexorably grew with each treatment. By the end of treatments it developed some scar encapsulation (radiation fibrosis) beneath the skin. As a result, even though my doctors and LE therapist don’t consider it true LE, they are treating it as such to promote drainage of some of the fluid and possibly speed reduction of its size. Nevertheless, I found myself having to order bras a band size larger (which automatically means a larger cup even though the letter size remains the same). The new bras came today. I’m finding 40 I fits better than my old 38 I or even J--my cleavage is centered and vertical again, rather than skewed to the left. I have also been advised to wear some sort of support--bra, sleep bra, or supportive camisole--at all times and never go braless except in the shower or during sex.

    Because of preexisting obesity and the enlarged breast seroma (and perhaps the rupture before rads of my SNB seroma), I have developed mild intermittent axillary web syndrome (palpable knots rather than visible cords). Had I known before rads what I know now, I’d have started stricter low-carb eating and ramping up exercise IMMEDIATELY after my biopsy came back, even before getting a surgery date; and would have bought those larger bras right away. (For post-op, I ordered and wore soft cup versions of the same--or “sister,” aka larger band/smaller cup--size as those underwires I refrained from wearing until the SNB seroma sutures were removed before my rads). I certainly wouldn’t have comforted myself with those little “reward” visits to Hoosier Mama Pies or Cafe Descartes for pie or pastry en route home from Evanston Hospital after every treatment. I now have a tougher road to hoe, because the letrozole I’m taking is increasing my appetite (beyond even the increase from the Medrol I had to take for the New Year’s bronchitis) and I am not just having trouble losing beyond the 2 lbs I shed after my cruise but also desperately trying not to gain any more--the letrozole also slows metabolism. Fortunately, not getting any bone or joint pain to hinder exercise.

  • marijen
    marijen Member Posts: 3,731
    edited January 2016

    Study of 2448 Letrozole users at Drugs.com - 140 lost weight, 317 gained weight. I lost weight, love it.

  • queenmomcat
    queenmomcat Member Posts: 3,039
    edited January 2016

    Fatigue for me (didn't have chemo). Also reddening in the field of the radiation treatments.

  • etnasgrl
    etnasgrl Member Posts: 650
    edited January 2016

    Thank you all for sharing with me!

    Smile

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