Breast reconstruction for men
Men generally aren't offered reconstruction following their mastectomies and I've always thought this is too bad.
I asked a respected plastic surgeon to write an article on the topic and you can read it HERE
Comments
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Traveltext - very interesting. thanks for posting the link.
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Hello Traveltext,
Interesting article.
Are you interested in reconstruction for yourself, or are you just opening up a dialog? What have you heard from other male breast cancer survivors? I have not met a male breast cancer survivor in person.
I realize that first and foremost, the surgeons are trying to save lives when they are dealing with breast cancer. However, I wonder if surgeons could have more concern for the scar that remains. Would that make lumpectomies and mastectomies less successful in removing all the cancer? Are surgeons less concerned about the scars on their male patients?
I had a skin-sparing, nipple-sparing, prophylactic bilateral mastectomy. My breast surgeon didn't have to worry about margins, although she did need to worry about getting all the breast tissue. My plastic surgeon marked me before surgery because he was concern about the excess skin to be removed and he wanted a good shape for my breasts for reconstruction.
Thank you for keeping us informed.
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Mominator, Really I'm opening up the dialogue. I'm quite content with my surgery scar and a hairless left chest (rads kill chest hair) but I've always wondered why I wasn't offered some plastic surgery to make the job complete. I certainly agree that breast surgeons need to concentrate on removing the cancer rather than trying to leave a tidy site for the PS.
Thanks for sharing your surgery details. You were fortunate to not have a cancer that had to be removed beforehand and therefore get such a good result. With your family history, you've likely made a wise decision. I was 10 when I caught sight of my mum's right chest which had been subjected to an old-style radical mastectomy with stretched skin remaining on her bones. No muscle, no tissue. This was the pre chemo era and massive rads had fried her skin to a dark purple. Without having the availability of Tamoxifen, she died two years later. How much better is treatment today.
I know lots of guys with this disease and they were, like me not offered recon. I have to add that the first thing we do when we meet in compare scars, so we'd be unlikely to do this after arepair job!
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Traveltext, truly I am so sorry for what your mum endured. Those were certainly the dark days for treatment of breast and ovarian cancer.
So many of my mother's friends and colleagues went through those radical mastectomies: breast tissue, muscle, and entire swaths of lymph nodes removed. Many of her friends could no longer lift their arms on the affected sides. Mastectomies and lumpectomies have improved since those disfiguring and disabling surgeries.
In the 1950's, ovarian cancer treatment was in its infancy. Just before my mother's wedding in 1956, my maternal grandmother had a lump on her ovary, and was told not to worry about until her next annual exam. About 6 months later, it was the size of a grapefruit. Her treatment included filling the abdominal cavity with mustard gas. Obviously that didn't work and my grandmother died a few months later.
Don't worry about not being able to compare scars when meeting. If you wanted, you could compare reconstruction stories and results. There's always something to discuss!
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I too was not offered reconstruction. I thought for a while about getting fitted for a concieled carry holster to fill the cavity, but decided against that. A hairless chest might have an advantage, not getting a bunch of hair pulled off for an ekg.
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While they may not offer reconstruction up front (though they should, most probably just assume men won't care how it looks), if you're in the US, you're still usually legally entitled to it if the surgery--which is still a mastectomy--was done due to breast cancer or breast cancer prevention reasons.
Reconstruction can be done after the fact, so you can go back to your surgeon and ask about what they can do to improve scar appearance or to flatten out or re-contour the chest to give it a more pre-surgery look to it if possible.
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