Cording Pain

Sallyellen
Sallyellen Member Posts: 7
edited August 2016 in Pain

Hi, I am new to this board and would greatly appreciate any suggestions. I live in Maryland and had bilateral mastectomy in June(for small stage one invasive breast cancer, not in lymph nodes) with reconstruction at end of September. No chemo or radiation needed thankfully. However, I have cording issues which cause me great pain and reduce my range of motion. I have been going to physical therapy 3x a week at a lymphadema center for 4 months and do exercises on my own on the other days. The cording won't break up. I have been uncomfortable like this since June and am getting somewhat discouraged(although I realize I am very lucky in comparison with many other people).

I am finally back at work and doing a little bit better. But I am still on small doses of pain meds, advil, valium. I am wondering if there is anything else I can do for the cording or any other experts to see. I just keep thinking to myself that there must be a procedure or injection that can help this. My oncologist gave me a prescription for lidocaine patches which actually help. But I really want to get rid of the cording itself.

My ps and therapist just say it will break up in time. But it is deep, runs from armpit probably to my chest and is driving me crazy. I don't go out much on the weekends and it gets a bit depressing. Thanks in advance for any help.

Comments

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2015

    Hi Sallyellen, sorry you had to join this amazing group of people but glad you found a place to experience comfort and answers.

    I cannot respond to your question as I have not had your experience but bumping here hoping someone with an answer/suggestion will be along either here on on the other thread where you posted.

    {{ HUGS }}

  • MomOfTwins98
    MomOfTwins98 Member Posts: 69
    edited November 2015

    Hello

    I had bad cording in my left armpit and down through my arm, sometimes felt like into my wrist. Thankfully, I pursued it as I kept telling the Drs my arm was not getting better. I spoke with a care navigation nurse at our cancer center who connected me to a PT. she was wonderful. It did take several visits and, to be honest, I do not know when it actually got better but suddenly, it was. I still get stiffness and a bit of pain but 99% better. Maybe ask for a PT who has seen cording before and knows what to do..I understand that many do not know how to care for it. My great PT moved away and now I have one who is not as god but, at this point, it is more maintenance. I had lumpectomy with re-excision and 4 nodes removed so was told this is rare but it did happen. I wish you well!



  • danielmusza
    danielmusza Member Posts: 2
    edited November 2015

    Hi, I'm new to the forum and I want to ask a question about my wife. Both are doctors in Argentina but around here we do not have much information on the subject that we want to consult. She has "Cording Sindrom", but unlike as described by the books, the process began after nearly a year of sentinel node surgery. I can not find anywhere that the problem starts so late ... Someone can help us ?? Thank you. Daniel

  • Moderators
    Moderators Member Posts: 25,912
    edited November 2015

    Hi Daniel, and welcome to Breastcancer.org.

    We're sorry your wife is dealing with this terrible side effect of surgery! According to the main Breastcancer.org site, although it usually occurs shortly after surgery, it does sometimes happen later [see: When & Where Lymphedema Can Occur, and scroll down to A Note About Axillary Web Syndrome (Cording)].

    There's also some great info on the Axillary Web Syndrome (Cording) side effect page, too!

    We're sure there will be many others stopping by to welcome you and weigh in soon. Thanks for posting and we look forward to hearing more from you!

    --The Mods

  • Denise-G
    Denise-G Member Posts: 1,777
    edited November 2015

    DanielMusza-  I had cording about a year after surgery.  It went down my arm and was also in my

    mastectomy scar, which was rather unusual.  The doctors thought it was scar tissue, but my Lymphedema

    therapist thought it was cording.  Sure enough, she kept working on that area and my arm, and it got better!


  • danielmusza
    danielmusza Member Posts: 2
    edited November 2015

    Denise, thanks for your reply. We read in medical articles that you happened to you there. And this was confirmed by the good response to treatment. There are many things that are not frequent and that patients care about much. Why such forums help find other people who will do the same and also helps doctors to think that diseases do not always behave the same way. Sorry for my poor English.

    Daniel and Annie

  • Sallyellen
    Sallyellen Member Posts: 7
    edited November 2015

    thank you everyone for your replies. I am hoping it will get better soon. It is very frustrating! Appreciate all the advice. Stay well.

  • Jenwith4kids
    Jenwith4kids Member Posts: 635
    edited November 2015

    Sallyellen, I'd try another PT or massage therapist. I had cording as well and I found a massage therapist that helped....the PT didn't help, but this guy did. Maybe I got lucky. Here is is info, maybe you can google some of his certifications and find someone near you? http://www.iyasumassage.com/

  • Stenokim
    Stenokim Member Posts: 172
    edited November 2015

    I'm with Jen. PT didn't help with my cording but massage therapy did. It flares up occasionally for me, but massage usually gets rid of it. I had it from my underarm, down the biceps, forearm and into my fingers. It was pretty bad and was several months after surgery

  • marianelizabeth
    marianelizabeth Member Posts: 1,735
    edited December 2015

    I have been searching and reading but it seems that I am the only one I have found so far who has cording that does not extend beyond the axilla area and into the pectoral major. I am two years post T/E exchange and my cording started just over a year ago. My PT has kept it somewhat at bay but I was away last winter for 10 weeks and the 1 mm cord grew to 10 mm. This summer a small twinning started. This morning I told my PT I though something was worse and he discovered a much bigger cord that leads under the pectoral major and implant. No way we are breaking this one down or stretching it out. He suggested calling my BS who discharged me post mx long ago. I did call and leave a message. I am on wait-list for revision or implant exchange hopefully in the spring and m PT also says ask him if he can deal with it then. So, my cording has never extended out of my axilla area or into the truncal area and never a hint of L/E. Anyone have similar experiences?

  • Flat-tered
    Flat-tered Member Posts: 5
    edited March 2016

    I had double mastectomy February 24, 2016. Cording developed three weeks later and pain became much worse. Couldn't get an appointment with PT for 10 days and was VERY motivated to find relief sooner. Walked four doors down from my office to the massage therapist who specializes in Myofascial release and body work and described what was going on. She was able to give me immediate relief by manipulating and squeezing the cording. She didn't have prior experience with cording. She did some homework online. It was very easy to feel and it responded quickly which pleasantly surprised both of us. I think it responded so well because we started working on it the week it started. Cords were developing down my arm, across my chest, and down the trunk of my body. When they started they were accompanied with swelling and the swelling was slower to go down when they were present so it escalated before I got help. I have been to the PT for the first visit which was diagnostic in nature. She won't start working with me until Friday and she indicated she would be doing similar manipulation of the cords. I know I will ultimately need someone who has experience with lymphodema to avoid progression that direction. One of my arms is already 4cm larger that it was before surgery. I am highly motivated to do everything I can to avoid long-term issues with lymphodema. I would recommend everyone have a PT appointment set up before surgery to happen 3 weeks after surgery so you don't get caught with a 10+ day wait. If you don't need it, cancel it. I felt like the exercises I was doing were hitting a wall. I have had a frozen shoulder before and I knew this was different. It felt like somebody tied a cord inside my body. It is amazing how quickly it can be untied if it is squeezed for 30-40 seconds in the right place. The PT did tell me they can literally appear overnight. I slept wrong on my arm one night last week and woke up in misery. I am looking into the night wear sleeves if that happens frequently. Hope this helps. Glad the cording discussion got started. Hope you have found some relief Sallyellen.

    btw, found a very informative article..... http://www.lymphnet.org/membersOnly/dl/reprint/Vol_25/Vol_25-N2_What_is_cording.pdf

  • canceredkitten
    canceredkitten Member Posts: 1
    edited June 2016

    Hi, everyone... I was diagnosed, near the beginning of March 2016, with stage 2 breast cancer as it had spread from my right breast into the lymph nodes under my right arm. I had biopsies done on March 22, 2016. Many other tests were also done and I was told the cancer did not appear to have moved any further than to those right underarm lymph nodes. My HER2 was not positive, although the estrogen and progesterone tests were positive. My surgery took place on April 20th. I just went to see the surgeon for follow-up today. I told him that I was in pain...not due to the surgery, but due to other things that seemed to have gone wrong. I had done some online research concerning the pain I was having before this appointment. I told the doc that I thought that my two surgery sites for the breast tumor and the lymph nodes under my arm were healing (6 nodes were removed--three cancerous and three not), but I had several other areas in my arm and the back of my shoulder blade that was now screaming in pain. I was concerned about cording (which I could see in the mirror as being the cause of a great deal of pain when I tried to straighten my arm). I was very disappointed to find out that the surgeon had no idea what cording was when I drew his attention to it today. He was either lying (not likely) or does not know what kinds of problems the surgery he performs can cause :( I am having a lot of pain and I asked for more pain-killing drugs while I am trying to heal. He had given me hydrocodone 5/325 after the surgery. I told him it had helped with the pain due to surgery but it had not been helpful for the other pain that was growing as a response to surgery. He refused to up the dosage since the surgery part had gone well and this was something past where he could be comfortable prescribing medication for. He did agree to switch me from hydrocodone 5/325 to oxycodone 5 without the acetaminophen for 10 more days to see if the drug change would help, but refused to up the amount otherwise. I told him that I was very afraid of lymphedema but he just said very few people actually get lymphedema (Actually, 10 million people deal with lymphedema daily). This doc removed my cancerous growths, for which I am grateful. But he has no idea how to handle anything outside his field of surgery (Protection position 101) I was all upset and crying, but eventually the nurse navigator and the social worker convinced me to go to see the docs they have there who understand lymphedema. I will do that next Tuesday. Does anyone have any thoughts on this as I continue to move forward? Stress is not good. Please help if you have ideas that might help... Thank you! :)

  • KillTheCancer
    KillTheCancer Member Posts: 37
    edited June 2016

    canceredkitten, I have cording and had what they call "stage 0" Lymphedema. My surgeon also failed to know what to say to me when I went to her regarding the problem within the first week after surgery. She basically told me to stretch. I went to a Lymphedema specialist who did massages and had me do PT. Both helped. I also had a compression sleeve which I really did not wear often because it was very uncomfortable for me. Most of my lymphedema is gone now but I continue to have the cording. Stretching helps a lot, start early but start slow. If you over stretch, you can make it worse. So far I can only imagine that it *might* eventually go back to normal again, but if it doesn't I really wouldn't be surprised. It's a sucky after effect that even if the doctor knew about it, might not have changed things much.

    I recently (I'm 14 months post surgery) started having a lot of pain in my breast/underarm area and I'm not sure if it's from overstretching or another problem.

  • Annie-B-7-14
    Annie-B-7-14 Member Posts: 52
    edited August 2016

    Hi all! experiencing cording to. Signed up for PT soon - any tips on how to get the most out of my PT? Will be going thru chemo at same time

    Thanks!

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

    Another Chicagoan here with intermittent cording and Stage 0 LE. I am moderately obese, and had 4 nodes out (2 sentinels+2 “hitchhikers,” all negative), so the LE was not as big a surprise as one would expect. But I had always heard “slim women get cording, zaftig ones get LE.” Baloney.

    I was very lucky to have my pre-op teaching session with a surgical NP who was very up-to-date with the latest research on LE and therefore took it seriously. She told me that with an SNB the chance was as low as 2% and as high as 20%, that I would probably not get it but would be at lifelong risk. (One out of two...). She measured me for sleeve & gauntlet and advised that on any flight >4hrs I wear them to prevent swelling, but that all else I needed to do to prevent cording was not to start stretching too early and to avoid lifting anything heavier than 5-8 lbs. with that arm; and all I needed to do to prevent LE was to avoid constrictions, sunburn and breaks in the skin on my R hand & arm. I eventually learned that the only provable risk for getting LE was obesity. All those other precautions are essential to prevent infections & cellulitis, and exacerbation of LE.

    I was fine until 2 weeks after radiation ended, when while reaching for something in the shower I felt a “catching” sore sensation in my inner R forearm, reproducible by stretching & rotating the arm. I couldn’t see or palpate any cords, but I could feel something was suddenly limiting my mobility (however mildly). I was concerned enough that I made an appt. with the LE specialist at my medical center...a month down the line (he’s very popular, a founder of LANA). I then felt a “popping” sensation and suddenly the “catching” was gone. A day later, a tiny bruise appeared at that very spot.

    I managed to get through an entire Mediterranean cruise--long & short flights to Rome & from Barcelona--and shore excursions with no problem, except a slight feeling of “fullness” of my upper arm after a few hrs. at half a mile above sea level in Sicily near Mt. Etna--the fullness went away w/in a minute of the tour bus descending. (I was not wearing compression on sea & land--was not told I needed it except for long flights). I got home and saw the LE doc. He measured me and found no changes, and said he’d never have prescribed compression for someone with only 4 nodes removed. But because I described having cording & LE symptoms, he decided to stage me at 0 so Medicare would pay for my PT sessions. I lucked out and had a wonderful LANA-certified PT/OT who showed me the cord in my axilla and slowly and deliberately massaged it away. She showed me how to do MLD massage, and told me to wear compression not just on long flights but during any activities that would increase circulation to that arm: repetitive motions (sweeping, raking, chopping, scrubbing) strength activities (scooping hard ice cream & grating hard cheeses) & training, cardiovascular exercise, guitar-playing (I perform, and my arm drapes across the guitar in such a way as to constrict it slightly), and time at altitude. I found that even on a short (2.5-hr.) flight from London-Geneva I got some swelling--as well as during a rapid elevator ascent to the 95th fl. of a skyscraper--so I now wear compression during any flight longer than a short puddle-jumper, rapid ascents in elevators, and time in the mountains.

    I find that if I forget to do my stretches, the axillary cord begins to re-form.

    OTOH, a friend of mine had a BMX at a hospital in a different health system, down in the S.W. suburbs. Her surgeon and NP scoffed at my concern about how she could lower her LE risk. They said, “occasional short needle sticks are fine as long as there’s no long tourniquet time, and since we treat LE with compression, how could a blood pressure cuff cause or worsen it?” So not everyone is fully conversant with LE. Me, I wear a Medic-Alert bracelet with a pink caduceus emblem (pink was the LE doc’s advice, to alert EMTs to LE risk) that has the LE precautions along with my drug allergies and emergency contact on the back. I even managed to find one that takes Pandora charms.

  • tsoebbin
    tsoebbin Member Posts: 474
    edited August 2016

    Sandy... I am also on the obese side. I have a cording question I'm hoping you can answer. I have stage 0 LE and seeing a lymphedema specialist for PT.

    Today my right arm sure hurts. If I move my wrist/forearm it is uncomfortable in my pecs and armpit. It hurts all of the way up the inside of my arm. Could this be cording? Is it similar to your experience?



  • Kiks1
    Kiks1 Member Posts: 254
    edited August 2016

    tsoebbin, that was how my cording felt like. It started about 3 weeks after my bmx. My MO finally wrote a referral to a PT that specislized in breast cancer rehab. I went through PT during chemo and it felt great. She even helped me get rid of the bloating caused by all the chemo drugs. I felt little knots all the way up and down from my armpit to the wrist along my inner arm. It resolved after about 3 or 4 sessions. I am about 8 months out from my bmx and I no longer have any issues. Get to a good PT as soon as you can , they can definitely help.

  • tsoebbin
    tsoebbin Member Posts: 474
    edited August 2016

    Thanks kicks! I'm seeing my lymphedema PT tomorrow... Thank goodness.

    I'm gently stretching tonight. It's helping a bit, but it's sore and tingling in an odd way.

    I appreciate your reply!

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