Breast cancer at 25, no BC history in family?

Options
jsn1904
jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
edited May 2017 in Waiting for Test Results

Hi everyone..this is my first time in any sort of group like this but I read some of the posts and you all are so kind and wonderful I couldn't resist. So..my dad was diagnosed with cancer last year. Stomach. In between stage 2 and 3. To say that this traumatized me would be an understatement. Ever since, I dream about cancer every night. Every week I assume that I have some form of it. This went on for months..since August last year. And then..my worst nightmare happened. I found a lump in the upper left size of my left breast. I cried for 3 days, went to the doctor who did a fine needle aspiration (yesterday) and now I wait...everything on the internet tells me that I have cancer, My mind and gut feeling says the same. My left boob always gets sore and has more hard lumpy bits whereas my right boob is perfectly fine. My left boob has also always had a lightly inverted nipple. This has been that way my whole life basically. When the doctor did the aspiration I felt pain from the injection site all the way to my nipple and is was really really sore. SO here I am..not worried about myself. More worried about how to tell my family I have breast cancer after just turning 25 and with my dad going through all that he's going through with stomach cancer...I cannot stop crying.

Comments

  • MelissaDallas
    MelissaDallas Member Posts: 7,268
    edited May 2017

    jsn1904, I'm sorry your dad has cancer.

    That said, most cancer is not related to a known genetic syndrome as far as we know now, Lumpy breasts are very common in young women and breast cancer is not, so everything on the internet tells ME that you most likely do not have cancer. I hope I'm correct and youget a benign result soon.

  • Sjacobs146
    Sjacobs146 Member Posts: 770
    edited May 2017

    The chances of you having BC is extremely small. Try to relax. It's most likely a cyst, sounds like you may have fibrocyctic breasts.

  • jsn1904
    jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2017

    Thanks for the encouragement. It helps when someone actually tells you factually that it might not be breast cancer and that person has a legitimate alternative. I just assumed that if it was a fibroedenoma, the doctor wouldn't have immediately got concerned and done the fine needle aspiration. This lump is very deeply rooted and hard. Although it does have a smooth, oval surface. It is in quite the awkward location and deep so hard to say if it moves much. It's nearly under my armpit but not quite. On the edge of my breas

  • mustlovepoodles
    mustlovepoodles Member Posts: 2,825
    edited May 2017

    jsn, at your age the risk of breast cancer is extremely small. They don't even keep statistics on women who have breast cancer in their twenties, it's that rare. I'm sorry to hear your father has stomach cancer. That's a low blow. However, breast cancer and stomach cancer are not generally linked, so I think you're safe there.

    I think your doctor is acting out of an abundance of caution. Rather than just assuming that this lump is fibroadenoma, he wants to know exactly what this is. I wouldn't read a lot into his decision. In fact I think his decision was a good one. Just remember this: It's not cancer until they it's say it's cancer. Stay off Dr Google -- there's a lot of scary misinformation out there and none of it is going to do you any good. Breastcancer.org is the only place I would recommend to get factual information. Right now try to not focus on breast cancer. Do not grieve something that has not and may not even happen to you.

  • glowgene
    glowgene Member Posts: 37
    edited May 2017

    Hey jsn1904,

    I feel I might be doing more harm than good by posting, but it really is /very/ unlikely that this is cancer. There are so many benign lumps and bumps in boobs at our age (and any age really). I just wanted to offer to be an ear (eye) if you need to talk (write). Hopefully the fear you're currently feeling will be the worst of this experience.

    Sending you long distance hugs!

  • jsn1904
    jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2017

    Dear mustlovepoodles,

    Thank you so much for taking the time to reply to me. This is by far the most comforting thing I've heard all week. I am so happy I found this site because since my dad's diagnosis I have had issues with my mental stability (anxiety, depression, etc.) I feel like if I had been a part of this group at that stage, it would have changed my quality of life in these last few months. I feel like I have another hard lump with irregular edges next to my nipple. It doesn't move. Feels like an arrow and that's where I felt pain during the biopsy. I had something similar before that simply went away. What could it be? My lump was painless. Doesn't painless and deeply rootedmean cancer?

  • jsn1904
    jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2017

    thank you glowgene! You are truly an angel. Sending prayers and positivity to all who post

  • jsn1904
    jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2017

    glowgene, if it's not too much trouble, I am interested to know how you got diagnosed at such a young age. What happened

  • glowgene
    glowgene Member Posts: 37
    edited May 2017

    jsn1904: I found a lump; some crumbs fell on my shirt and I went to brush them off and went "oh...that wasn't there before". Several of my friends also found lumps and had biopsies. We're all biomedical grad students and, being aware of all the bad things that can happen, we tend to overreact to any changes in our bodies that we can't explain. Theirs all came back benign: either cysts or fibroadenomas.

    I'd also like to point out how incredibly treatable many breast cancers are. We have so many treatment options and there are a huge number of women who go through treatment and never have to deal with it again. I don't know if that helps, but it made me feel better while I was waiting for my pathology results.

  • MTwoman
    MTwoman Member Posts: 2,704
    edited May 2017

    I agree with MelissaDallas, Sjacobs and Mustlovepoodles. I'll add that your traumatic response to your father's cancer diagnosis and treatment sounds significant. In fact, I would suggest that you give thought to seeing a counselor about it. There are many effective treatments for trauma (like EMDR) that can allow you to process these events as information, instead of a traumatic trigger. It is really helpful, when we have the ability to sort out what are real concerning symptoms and then be able to let go of the fear when a reasonable diagnostic workup has been performed and diagnosis sorted out. Sometimes we do have a feeling in our 'gut' and need to be able to trust that feeling and pursue a second opinion or additional diagnostics. When every twinge is perceived as "red alert, it's cancer"; then you'll live your life in constant fear and not really be able to 'trust your gut' because it will always be saying the same thing. That is really bad for your overall health, not to mention quality of life. Please take this in the spirit in which it was intended. Anxiety sucks!

  • jsn1904
    jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2017

    you're absolutely right. I don't want to spend the rest of my life with this crippling anxiety. However, when your doctor worries about a lump and immediately schedules a thin needle aspiration it can be rather upsetting. Needless to say my mind is still running wild at this stage. I can't imagine what else it could be.

  • MTwoman
    MTwoman Member Posts: 2,704
    edited May 2017

    Getting diagnostic procedures done is absolutely anxiety provoking, you're right. But there is anxiety that responds to distraction/relaxation and then there is crippling anxiety. Your description of "dream(ing) about cancer every night. Every week I assume that I have some form of it. This went on for months" sounds more like the crippling kind to me.

    This forum is an absolute God-send to many women. Absolutely. To some (few), it can exacerbate their fears about getting/having cancer. Because the women here are not the norm. We don't represent a typical group of women. If someone is reading threads here, and using that info as 'research' about what can happen (i.e. to bolster/justify their fear), then they are using a skewed sample, meaning we aren't representative of the general population.

    I'm sorry if my suggestion made it sound as if your anxiety were unfounded, quite the contrary. I do know how anxiety provoking it can be to go through the diagnostic process. I would never intentionally downplay how difficult it can be. I was just thinking about how horrible anxiety is on a daily/weekly/monthly basis. And, for full disclosure, I'm a therapist, and so, biased. :)

    Really wishing for B9 results for you!

  • MelissaDallas
    MelissaDallas Member Posts: 7,268
    edited May 2017

    I agree with MTwoman about the counseling.

    You know something I have been thinking? Why don't we wail and gnash our teeth and bawl for days over pap smears, even "iffy" pap smears that have to be repeated? It's all kind of the same thing. I think a lot of it is "pink-washing."

  • jsn1904
    jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2017

    You're right..my anxiety is most definitely the crippling kind. Funny enough, prior to my dad's diagnosis, I was the most logical, fearless person ever. I don't fear anything for myself really. Not death, not pain, not anything. All I care about is my family. I've been wanting to see a therapist but honestly I just cant afford it. And now with a cancer battle looming I am more sleepless than ever trying to plan how to tell my family. They've been through so much. Does anyone know if pain in surrounding areas is normal after a fine needle aspiration

  • MelissaDallas
    MelissaDallas Member Posts: 7,268
    edited May 2017

    But you more than likely do not have a cancer battle looming. Sure it's normal to be sore after a needle biopsy.

    jsn1904, my sister ate raw broccoli before bed every night for a long time after our grandmother was diagnosed with colon cancer. You might not need to pay a therapist. Ask what family services are associated with your dad's treatment through the hospital. Talk to the hospital social worker. They often have programs to support family members.

  • MTwoman
    MTwoman Member Posts: 2,704
    edited May 2017

    Sorry if it feels like we're ganging up on you, but I'm in agreement with MelissaDallas. "And now with a cancer battle looming I am more sleepless than ever trying to plan how to tell my family" is exactly what I meant by crippling. You likely do not have a cancer battle looming. The odds are very slim that you do, at 25, have breast cancer. And you're already trying to plan how to tell your family? I get it that therapy is expensive. MelissaDallas had some good options to check out. You also may be able to find a local community health center (depending on where you live) that offers lower fee counseling. I hope that you get B9 results and are able to move forward!!

  • jsn1904
    jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2017

    No no..I don't feel like you're ganging up on me. You guys are the first people I've been able to talk to and you've been so kind to me. I want to stay a part of this group even if it's just to pray for others going through it. I don't feel like I'm asking stupid questions because you guys have been so patient and kind by answering them. I'm busy trying my best not to press and prod my lump. It's hard not to. Does anyone know if it's normal that it's still rock hard and not smaller after the aspiration

  • jsn1904
    jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2017

    sorry I didn't mention that I live in South Africa.

  • jsn1904
    jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2017

    MelissaDallas, my family lives in Durban and I live in Johannesburg. I mmostly try to hide my issues from them because in my family, I am the strong one. I am the one everyone relies on. I think what adds to my mental issues is that I am so far away and I have no control over anything..

  • ilos28252193
    ilos28252193 Member Posts: 4
    edited May 2017

    Hi, jsn1904. I'm sorry for your dad. Stomach cancer is a very bad type, but I know a lot of people who have suffered and then they have recoveried. Your father can do it surely.

    Well, I'm 26. I'm a young woman too, but probably because I see this things a lot (people with cancer), sometimes it worries me.

    I had a fibroadenoma when I was 13. It was 7cm (a very big one). It was removed a year later. All of this issue was happened at the same time that my grandma (my mother's mom) was dx with pancreatic cancer. In that time I was a child, and this things didn't bother me (I didn't know about them). In march of 2005, my grandma died of her disease (8 months after she was dx). A month later I had my operation to remove the fibroadenoma (and it was well).

    By the way, I didn't mention that my grandpa (my mother's dad) died in november of 2004 (he died by an ictus). So, you could say that my grandma and my grandpa died with 4-5 months apart.

    Anyway, right now I looked to that years and I think that my mom had to be very worried, and I feel so bad because of her. Not only because of her mother of her father but due to me too.

    And that's not all. My grandma's brothers (my mother's uncles too), died by stomach cancer and by throat cancer. One of my mom's brothers had brain cancer when he was 12. Well... this issue is different, because doctors said that he wouldn't live longer than a few months, and he is 53 right now.

    The last year, in june, the oldest one of my father's siblings, died by lung cancer. The last year, another of my dad's siblings, was dx by lung cancer too, though his tumor was removed and he was treated with chemo and radio. He is "well" now, but his physical condition is bad (he always has been skinny). And, well, right about now my father has told me that another of his siblings has been hospitalized due to a throat cancer (very advanced).

    Actually, about my uncles' cancer, (my father's siblings) the three I mentioned were men. They led a bad life or, how we say where I live, they are "jacosos" or "yonkies". They used to took drugs a lot, used to drink quite alcohol, keep smoking, etc, well, all of that things that doctors say that we shouldn't do. So, it was a matter of time that they reach their limit.


    With all of this, I just want to say that, unfortunately, all of us live surrounded by people with cancer. Someone of them are our relatives, but it doesn't have why bother you. You should live your life, and as much as possible, try to eat a healthy diet and do exercise (this could help you with your fears, especially if you could practice meditation or tai-chi or something like that). Well, that you do this things it doesn't mean that you will never have cancer, but your risk is way lower.

    In spite of my family history, I'm trying it doesn't change my life. I want to live well and I'm going to live well.

  • jsn1904
    jsn1904 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2017

    Thank you so much for taking the time to respond. It really means a lot to me. My fine needle aspiration came back acellular. I have no idea what that means but I still have the sore breast and the lump and the itchiness and it really does upset me. I know that I overthink things a lot but it's really just trauma from seeing what my dad went through. It's not easy to watch someone who never smoked or drank alcohol go through cancer. My dad is a gym goer, sports enthusiast, all around very fit and tries to eat right. Cancer doesn't discriminate.

  • Penzance
    Penzance Member Posts: 101
    edited May 2017

    That's a relief, so glad for you.

    Re the anxiety, before my dx, I had 0 foreshadowing, 0 apprehension: half a dozen doctors had looked at the fibro and thought it was just a big fibro... And it didnt it wasnt a ductal, but they found some lobular ( which does not form lumps). It felt so unreal, I nearly thought it was a practical joke :)

    Best wishes, thinking of your dad.

  • MTwoman
    MTwoman Member Posts: 2,704
    edited May 2017

    jsn1904, if you'd copy and paste the actual language from your report, we can help you better figure out what your report means.

Categories