Lumpectomy Lounge....let's talk!

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  • MLP3
    MLP3 Member Posts: 534
    edited February 2016

    Mabeljo- the waiting is THE WORST part. It's so unfair. But try and live as close to normal as possible and with a positive attitude. If you start with positivity now, it will make everything else easier to deal with. Although I'm hoping benign for you;) But if it isn't, you will get tons of great support right here in the lounge💃🏻

  • brithael
    brithael Member Posts: 224
    edited February 2016

    #3 of 4 chemo is in the books! Now just to get through the next two weeks of SE's - maybe I won't have any!

    I am being even more pro-active on the constipation issue - started taking Mirralax and colace this morning, and I'm taking it every day while I'm taking Zofran. My MO approves.

    My last session, I had two really bad days (days 4 &5) then the week of worrying about low blood counts, but only one day of "flu-like symptoms" - then feeling good right up to today . Good, of course is a relative term, since I still deal with lower GI issues as in "not normal" which my MO says I will probably deal with until I finish chemo. Starting to notice some nail changes, but nothing bad yet. Fatigue is always around. Tonight I have a really bad taste in my mouth, so sucking on lemon drops. "Dex" got me up at 1:30 a.m. today, and I could not go back to sleep, so hoping tonight will be better.

    Got my appointment with my RO the day after my last infusion, so I'll find out then how much radiation I'll have to go through. Have to make an appointment with my LE therapist for a check on the arms before radiation starts. All in all, a pretty good day.

  • MLP3
    MLP3 Member Posts: 534
    edited February 2016
  • MLP3
    MLP3 Member Posts: 534
    edited February 2016

    A friend sent this to me today... As I believe in Kharma, I'm not into the chain letters but "why not?" After all of this😉

    Thought of you and I do believe in Karma. Hope u get something good out of it.

    This is for u & Read till the end! I sent an angel to watch over you last night, but it came back and asked "why?" The angel said, "angels don't watch over angels!" twenty angels are in your world. Ten are sleeping, nine of them are playing and one is reading this message. The universe has seen you struggling with some things and says it over. a blessing is coming your way. If you believe in Karma send this message to 14 friends including me, if I don't get it back I guess I'm not one of them. As soon as you get 5 replies, someone you love will quietly surprise you... Not joking. Pass this message on. Please don't ignore it. you are being tested and Karma is going to fix two big things tonight in your favor. If you believe in Karma drop everything and pass it on TOMORROW WILL BE THE BEST DAY OF YOUR LIFE. DON'T BREAK THIS. SEND THIS TO 14 FRIENDS IN 10 MINUTES IT'S NOT THAT HARD. WHOEVER SENT THIS TO YOU MUST CARE ABOUT YOU

    Just hold your finger on it n it should say forward

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

    Yay, Brit...glad to hear from you...there are some ginger hard "candies" that I got from our EarthFare here...helped with nausea/funky taste/etc....no sugar or sweeteners. Might look or something along that line in your area.....you are a hero- keep on fighting...this will all be in your rearview mirror soon! kICKIN CANCER TO THE CURB ONE DAY/TREATMENT AT A TIME!!!

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

    imagePosting a couple of pics of my hair...finished chemo end of Sept....still doing Herceptin infusions every 3 weeks and started Arimidex 3 days ago. Hair is certainly a bit more coarse and would need coloring but am going au natural....have earned every crazy white/gray hair.


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

    imageFirst pic of back of head...this is of course the top...crazy that the hair is growing in all directions but am planning for wash and dry hair and it seems to be cooperating haha!

  • MLP3
    MLP3 Member Posts: 534
    edited February 2016

    Looking good HH;)

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

    MLP= thanks! DH and I went to Savannah in mid Jan- did not wear a hat-(Hated the VERY expensive wig I bought last summer and NEVER wore it) so, did not care as much since we weren't at home. Got back home and in the next few weeks wore the hat(s) less and less and NOW- nothing. YES- folks stare or take notice but I DO NOT CARE! I have fought a war and it is OK if the hair comes in later. If I do not keep eye contact with folk- they look and move on...me, too.....me, too!

    How are you doing with the cord?

  • Italychick
    Italychick Member Posts: 2,343
    edited February 2016

    HappyHammer your hair looks right on track. I had so many crazy swirls and cow licks I thought if my hair stays like this it's gonna be crazy! But then they settled down. Also had a bald spot right in front forever. But that went away too

  • 1step
    1step Member Posts: 110
    edited February 2016

    Yay, Brit for being so close to end of a step!

    Yay, HH for hair!

    I managed to work almost all day today (had to go in late because I got my pre-op labs drawn). I also managed to get past my 'step-block.' It seemed I couldn't get past ~7800 steps. Today I got over 9K. And made dinner (nothing special, but it was hot and comforting). And did laundry.

    Can someone please explain cording? I've tried looking around a bit, but can't tell what it's supposed to be.

  • mustlovepoodles
    mustlovepoodles Member Posts: 2,825
    edited February 2016

    MabelJo, I had pretty much the same reaction to finding out I had BC. I have been surprised at how well I have handled this. At every turn I'm kinda thought, "Well, this is one more obstacle in the road of my life. Let's pick up and walk on, then." I think other people were more upset than I was. My mother was VERY upset (understandably.) My sister who had BC 3 years ago was pretty pragmatic about it--she was reassuring and supportive from the get-go. I shared with my Sunday School class and they have been fantastic. They jumped right in the fray by providing meals 2-3 times a week the entire duration of chemo (4 months.) Other than close family, SS class, and boss, I have been very selective in who I tell. I really don't need people to feel sorry for me or bring up anything pink (I love pink, but I don't love all the Ta-Ta crap.)

    ......................................................

    Sooooo, I'm gradually feeling better. This is the first day that I haven't had to take a narcotic all day, just Tylenol. I'll probably need one before bedtime, though. I'm finding that sleeping on my back hasn't been as hard a I thought it was. DH took me out to eat for lunch today and that was just about enough activity for one day. I came home, got a shower (heaven) and jumped into my PJs for the rest of the day.

    The only problem I've really had is running a fever 101 every evening/night since surgery 2/2/16. I called the doctor's office today and they had me come in. There is a good bit of redness and inflammation on both sides and a lot of bruising on the right side. This is the side that has been so troublesome from the beginning (huge hematoma after lx, huge infected seroma ,out of work for 3 weeks.) She drew a line around the area of redness with a marker and she's gonna see me again in 3 days. I'm really hoping this won't cause the tissue to die, but that's a distinct possibility.

    The Goldilocks recon looks pretty good. The first time I looked at it, I was a leetle bit disappointed that the booblets were rather small. Of course, the big advantage of the Goldilocks recon is it's a one-shot recon, generally, so it all depends on how much left-over skin and fat is left after the MX. Looking at it now, 4 days later, I'm getting used to the new look and I'm feeling better about it. The one great thing about it is that for the first time in 44 years I can go braless! They even ditched the compression bra today, since there's not much to compress and the bra was so uncomfortable.

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

    Poodles, glad for your progress. Suzanne, you too. Was going to suggest LemonHeads for chemo-tastebuds, since that’s what they give out at Kellogg for chemo patients. Good luck with your LE--I notice that now my good days far outnumber my flares. When I anticipate triggers may come up (like today when I had to carry two heavy guitar cases or there’s a front coming through), I put on compression. Also finding that I rarely need the glove or gauntlet if I’m not doing stuff like scrubbing, grating hard cheeses, opening recalcitrant jars, etc. (My barometer is a ring I wear on my right hand, which usually slips off easily. If I have to twist it off, it’s glove-time). The Juzo sleeve is definitely comfy--I have to look at my arm to realize I’m wearing it. HH, lookin’ good! My dentist’s receptionist had chemo 25 yrs. ago--and she decided she looks so good with very short hair that she wears it in nearly a buzz-cut. Don’t think I’ve ever seen her with longer hair.

  • MLP3
    MLP3 Member Posts: 534
    edited February 2016

    I found a couple of healthy and detoxifying recipes that would be great during treatments! And the ginger latte is perfect to help with nausea during chemo;)

    http://goop.com/recipes/surya-spa-dal/

    http://goop.com/recipes/ginger-turmeric-latte/

    http://goop.com/recipes/cucumber-basil-lime-juice/

    image


  • justmaximom15
    justmaximom15 Member Posts: 264
    edited February 2016

    MLP - I also believe in Karma, not so much in the chain letters and I wanted to share a funny little good Karma story that happened to me a couple of weeks ago. I'm doing radiation now and when I began I became friends with the lady who had treatment right before mine. We cheered each other on as we passed in the waiting area. The day of her last treatment I wanted to do something for her and I first decided I was going to bring her a cupcake from a grocery store that sells local specialty cupcakes. For numerous reasons, I couldn't get to that particular grocery that morning so instead I stopped at St. Louis Bread Co, which you probably know as Panera Bread. I bought her a yummy looking pecan caramel roll and they boxed it up really pretty. She almost cried when I gave it to her and we hugged and wished each other the good luck that cancer patients wish. The very next morning, I got an email from Bread Company. I slid my rewards card when I purchased the roll and it must have triggered a random reward, but it's the biggest reward I've ever gotten on that card. A Free "You Pick Two" which is about a $10 lunch. I just smiled and thought what a nice way for the universe to say thanks for being nice to someone!

  • MLP3
    MLP3 Member Posts: 534
    edited February 2016

    That's Kharma! Great story

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

    Poodles- Praying that the red area heals without more complications!

    Sandy- that is awesome about the LE flares are reducing and that you are able to live your life without constantly wearing the sleeve and gauntlet. Am considering keeping the hair short, short but will wait and see how it looks as it fills in. All so weird to even say that as I always have had at least shoulder length hair and often very long hair and had to wash, dry, roll etc. Now none of that seems important at all.

    1Step- sounds like you are healing and doing well- YAY! Great getting those steps in-Just don't overdo it, please.

    Italychick- thanks for the hair help- there are some crazy cowlicks but hey, it's coming in slowly but surely. I see you've been on Herceptin as well. When do you stop taking it?

    Justmaximom- great story!

    MLP- Thanks for sharing the recipes. That Latte looks good- I am taking a turmeric capsule but the recipe sounds god and comforting especially during the cold weather- after the reboot- haha. Do you know where to get coconut sugar- and if I didn't use any sweetener, do you think the latte would be tolerable? :)

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

    Mabeljo- in your pocket til you get your results....waiting stinks! Try to take some really deep breaths- go for a walk, call a friend? Let the stress go through you. Holding on to it makes you sick. Keep us posted.

  • Tami4965
    Tami4965 Member Posts: 8
    edited February 2016

    You ladies are so helpful. I had my post op yesterday. Found they took out FIVE nodes. SO said they were like a cluster of grapes. I am much better now. But my boob feels engorged.. ugh. I was told that will get worse before it gets better... I will have five weeks or rads. I am so thankful no cells in the nodes though. And I have coloidal (one of the lucky 2%...). I also have a RO for hormonal therapy... fun times... LOL. If I can't laugh I might cry.

  • mairew
    mairew Member Posts: 84
    edited February 2016

    Tami, welcome. Great news on the clear nodes. Sorry about the sore boob

  • MLP3
    MLP3 Member Posts: 534
    edited February 2016

    HH- I got mine at whole foods. Coconut sugar is low in calories and has good things like potassium, b vitamins, zinc and amino acids. Maple syrup would work just a well too!

    Keep up the good work Tami! And go easy. I had 6 nodes removed 2.5 weeks ago and I've overdone it a bit with exercise and developed a bit of cording at the SNB area. But I've been resting and massaging and icing and it's helping. I stopped lifting and pulling with that arm too.

    I went to wfs today and stocked up on some immunity boosting foods and chemo SE products. Here's my army of defense;)

    image

  • PontiacPeggy
    PontiacPeggy Member Posts: 6,778
    edited February 2016

    Tami4965, Welcome to the best place you don't want to be. You've already discovered that we are warm, comforting, informative and a bit crazy, but always ready to help out. Please update your profile with all your diagnoses, treatments and proposed treatments and make them PUBLIC. It helps us immensely when we are answering your questions. Most often people with a similar diagnosis or problem will answer. We'd also like to know where you are. Who knows, one of us might live around the corner from you :)

    I suspect you have an MO for your anti-hormonals and an RO for rads. I had 33 rads over 6-1/2 weeks. Very glad for your clear nodes - that's wonderful! When was your surgery? It's possible you'll feel swollen for quite awhile or not. Everyone seems to be very different about this. Most of us find the SLNB site a royal pain. What's a "coloidal"? That's a new one on me. Sounds like something you'd prefer not to have.

    HUGS!

  • LovesToFly
    LovesToFly Member Posts: 1,133
    edited February 2016

    I love that vega smoothie MLP, I have it for breakfast every day (because I am not turned off of oatmeal)

    Good news on the nodes Tami.

    2 months and 1 week after surgery, my incision area is bugging me...feels bruised, achy and itchy (not hot swollen or oozing). What's up with that?????

  • Tami4965
    Tami4965 Member Posts: 8
    edited February 2016

    Oh I didn't realize I hadn't changed the settings... lol. OKay so lets see I had some questions to answer. I have this -


    Mucinous breast cancer, also called colloid breast cancer, is a rare type of invasive ductal breast cancer that accounts for less than 2% of all breast cancers. Like other types of invasive ductal cancer, mucinous breast cancer begins in the milk duct of the breast before spreading to the tissues around the duct.

    I now have three doctors - A RO, A MO, and a SO. My surgery was January 29th. It just happens so fast doesn't it? I was busy being a mom having a routine mammogram and bam, you need to come back, and again.. and then positive. It's a lot to process. So I am so glad to have others who really "get it"!

  • patgreig
    patgreig Member Posts: 2
    edited February 2016

    I am 80 years old and in excellent health with no other known health issues. I am having a Lumpectomy Feb 17 and some lymph nodes removed. I have Grade 2 invasive cancer with a 1.8 cm tumour in my right breast. I am right handed.

    I would love to have any information from anyone over 75 years old regarding recovery, mobility and what ongoing treatment was undertaken. I am a very keen gardener and the thought of not being able to pursue this after surgery is so depressing I am tempted to give up any idea of surgery at all and go for the best alternative care to concentrate on quality instead of quantity of life. My surgeon discussed a full mastectomy with me but suggested at my age this is something I may not like to contemplate. Actually, I believe a full mastectomy may be a better solution but think it will take a lot to recover from such surgery at my age.

  • Tami4965
    Tami4965 Member Posts: 8
    edited February 2016

    Ohhh my boob is so friggin engorged feeling. I asked my doc yesterday. (he was super pleased with the healing and my path report) but he said it will get worse before it gets better. It honestly feels like a torpedo about to burst off my chest. Any thing to help that?

  • LovesToFly
    LovesToFly Member Posts: 1,133
    edited February 2016

    Pat I am not your age, but I did a lumpectomy and sentinel node biopsy two months ago. I recovered very well and I'm back to all my gradual activities. If you are in good health, I see no reason why you would not be able to garden after this!

    My mother-in-law had a lumpectomy as well, she was around 76 at the time, and she is also backed all her normal activities, including Gardening and Pilates!

  • PontiacPeggy
    PontiacPeggy Member Posts: 6,778
    edited February 2016

    PatGreig, welcome! You've found the right place even though you don't want to be here. I'm 70 so not quite up to your age. We have one other 70+ lady here. Why has your SO recommended a mastectomy? On the face of it, a lumpectomy would be the desired choice. I don't know where you live in case that makes a difference. If you continue on with a lumpectomy, there shouldn't be any reason for you not to garden. If you have very many lymph nodes removed that could make a difference. But for most of us with no chemo and just a few nodes removed, there isn't any limitation on gardening. You may find that you should not lift as much with your "bad" arm but that's about it. You DO need to be more careful about cuts and scratches on that side since even a few nodes can make you a bit more vulnerable to infections. Perhaps other ladies have had different experiences.

    I think you should recover just fine from your lumpectomy. Usually it is outpatient surgery. Chemo might be an issue at 80 (though I really don't know) but I think surgery shouldn't be an issue. Most of us here also believe that in most circumstances a lumpectomy is the best first choice. Once you've had a mastectomy you can't get that breast back. Less is better, thus a lumpectomy. Even those ladies who wind up needing a mastectomy usually don't regret starting with a lumpectomy.

    HUGS!

  • Moderators
    Moderators Member Posts: 25,912
    edited February 2016
  • Molly50
    Molly50 Member Posts: 3,773
    edited February 2016

    Welcome Tami. Glad to hear your nodes were negative.

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