How many of you actually had a palpable lump?
Comments
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I felt a large lump while in the bathroom. A lumpectomy showed it to be DCIS but they also found very small tumours of ILC with a lot of lymph channel involvement. A following mastectomy revealed more small ILC tumors and two positive nodes. So if I hadn't felt the larger tumor there could have been a lot more postive nodes of ILC when the surgery was done.
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i had a large palpable lumpy mass, turned out to be PILC & PLCIS! Grade 2 with 2 nodes cancer positive. I had mastectomy and node clearance last month and see onco 8 days time. Am very scared as i'm 36 with young children and PILC is very aggresive. I am starting FEC chemo withing next couple of weeks for 24 weeks then radio. Am preparing myself for the worst now as I have not had any decent news since December, it gets worse every time i go to clinic!
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Mine was discovered in an unusual way. I had decided, at the age of 59, to finally have a breast reduction. I had considered it many times over the years, but for some reason I decided to do it this time. Now mind you I have faithfully had mammograms and a yearly physical exam since I was 40 years old. So my plastic surgeon called 4 days after surgery with the news that the pathology report indicated breast cancer. You could have blown me over right there and then. The last thing I ever expected, especially since I had had a mammo just 2 months before. I know that this was God's hand in my life - how else do I explain deciding to have the breast reduction, when I had thought about it for so long, and finally it felt like the right thing to do? I am blessed that the ILC was found, and we will never know how much longer it would have stayed in my body before it was discovered. As my surgeon said - you just had the largest lympectomy I know of.
I am presently in the middle of radiation, no chemo. My onco score was 18 and I have become part of the TailorX Clinical Trial. My randomization was "no chemo" -- and I will admit I was glad!!!
If anyone else discovered their BC this way, I would love to hear your story.
May God bless you all.
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Hi! I palpated a small (pea-sized) lump in the left axillary tail 18 months ago. It was followed by ultrasound and mammo every six months as it was thought to be benign. Last Ultrasound in Dec. 2009 we decided to do fine needle aspiration biopsy which was suspicious for malignancy. Had lumpectomy and sentinel node biopsy which confirmed classic ILC and associated LCIS. Evaluating what treatments I should have now.
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My tumor was discovered on a routine mammogram. I can't stress enough: GET YOUR ANNUAL MAMMOGRAMS. I was very lucky that it showed up as my understanding is that lobular carcinomas often don't show on a mammogram. I never did feel it - even with the ultrasound tech trying to help me find it at my request. I wish MRI's were more routine as I believe that procedure would pick up all lobular carcinomas.
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Hello, I am 24 and found a lump under my arm near my left breast a few days ago. I went to my doctor and she said its probably nothing but Im going to send you to have an ultrasound done asap. Then she said that she wants me to follow up with the best surgeon asap. I'm not quite sure what to think. She said it was a papable lump that measures about two to three figertips wide... Has anyone else had an experience like this and what was the outcome? Im trying not to get too concerned but I am very nervous and a little scared..
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This is an interesting issue for me. Especially as I see the promotion on this website that yoga can assist cancer survivors. Yoga and Thai yoga massage [a vigorous form of massage where you are moved through an intense yoga class/poses by masseuse] helped me feel the problem in my right breast. In yoga there are contorted positions we would never get into in normal life such as King Pigeon pose where if you are able to flatten out, there is some pressure on either the right or left breast - depending on which leg you have curled up. Similarly, there is a position in Thai yoga massage where you are on your stomach with one leg or the other bent and in the massause's lap - which means a lot of body weight is posited on one breast or the other. It was during these activities that I felt a discomfort in my right breast - I call it a "spikiness" but it was more like a grisle or tough bit of internal breast flesh which had not been there before [I has been doing these exercises for 2 years] and which meant I had to pick up and move my right breast into a position where the spikiness was not felt. No such problems on left side. Two GP's felt right breast and said "no palpable lump" so I took myself off to Australia's excellent free mammogram screening service. Had a mammogram and was then recalled. Had many more mammograms on the recall day, then an ultrasound same day, then 6 core biopsies same day then met surgeon the same day. That was a Tuesday - I met surgeon on his surgery on the Thursday and received the formal diagnosis and had lumpectomy and one sentinel node removal the following Thursday. Everything paid for by Australia's public health system except for AUS$76. If it were not for the weird yoga poses I would never have detected the breast anomoly.
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MC86 Sounds like your doctor is doing all she can so go with it and very good luck go with you.
Dont let anyone tell you you are too young- be cautious and be suspicious and heres hoping that all your tests are negative
Anna
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Hello Anna,
Thank you very much for the positive thoughts. I went in to the doctors on tuesday and my ultrasound is this tuesday and the meeting with my surgeon is on thursday. Waiting for these appointments seems like torture. Do you know if they will tell me anything during the ultrasound? Or do I have to wait until I meet with the surgeon on thursday?
Jess~
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My lump was found on mammo. OBGYN didn't even feel it.
Surgeon told me that likely hood of me feeling a lump would have been 6-9 months down the road.
I have shared my dx with friends, my starbucks girls, neighbours and do far 7 people have gone for mammo's.
if anything I'm glad I am paying it forward.
I am British and live in the US. Routine mammos do not start until you are 50 unless there is a history.
I am 42 with no history.
Hugs to all
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Hello All, This is my first post. I was one of those lucky people who had a 'clear' mammogram in Aug 09. On Oct12, 2009 I was getting dressed for work when I felt a hard lump in my left breast. You all know the words that came out of my mouth. I am an OR nurse and have felt many tumors over the years. This one had 'that' feel. Fortunately I was able to see a good breast surgeon that day. Over the next three weeks I had sonogram, needle bx. MRI x2 and surgery x2. SNB was clean but margins needed to be adjusted. Since then I have completed chemo (cytoxan/ taxotere x4) and rads x30. In fact yesterday was my last rad tx.
Besides checking my own breasts I also had breast check earlier that spring by my GYN. Nothing was hard at any time. My husband didn't notice anything either. One day it just turned into a rock.
I have been lurking here for some time. Time to dive in. I want to tell you all how grateful I am for this forum. I am awestruck and humbled by how much there is to learn. Thank you all.
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I never felt a lump or any thickening. My ILC was found on mammograms. I four mammograms in one year because the first two, they thought it was just breast tissue but were cautious enough to keep checking. I had very dense breasts so I was very fortunate that someone picked on "something" because they could have missed it. It wasn't until my biopsy that they determined that I had ILC. I had a total of 3 lumps in my left breast, two of which never showed until I had an MRI. My right breast was thought to be "clean". I chose to have a BMX and have the right breast removed just to be on the safe-side and my right breast was found to have precancerous cells at the time of surgery. ILC is one sneaky cancer.
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Just diagnosed after two years. Found the area myself 2 years ago - was told it was nothing - very high up on my chest wall on the edge of my breast tissue. They have done 3 biopsies over the past 2 years on every other suspicious area and finally after my last call back I insisted they check it - the biopsy came back with a IDC diagnosis. Just had surgery and the pathology report says it is ILC. The radiologist kept insisting it was just a thickening of the skin and wasn't anything to worry about and it was too high to be seen in the mammogram machine.
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I've never been good about self - exams; my Gyn found the lump at annual check up and sent me for mammo and ultrasound - thank goodness - it didn't show well on mammo - I've been told that's not unusual for ILC. Confirmed by biopsy and MRI, followed by lumpectomy. Now have to make decision on Mammosite vs. traditional radiation. Any thoughts?
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Hello all!
I had a palpable lump in the left breast in the 1st dx AND the 2nd dx!! Lucky me!
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I had a palpable lump; wasn't even doing a formal BSE, just getting dressed to go out to lunch. Mine also showed up on 3D mammogram and ultrasound; I didn't know at the time how lucky I was! But yes, found the lump while dressing and immediately e-mailed both doctors with whom I'd had upcoming appointments with other issues.
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My mother also had a palpable lump -- she just had an itch and then...hmm...freaked out bc she felt a lump. She called the doctor and was seen the next day. We also didn't realize how lucky she was finding it (sneaky ILC). She no longer has mammograms -- her doctor said she didn't need to at her age (I don't understand that, especially since women in my family live well into their 90s).
hugs xox
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Nope, felt nothing. Routine 3d mammo clean. Ultrasound showed a 7-9mm area that looked just like normal breast tissue but in the end was biopsied. ILC.
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I had a lump. But clear mamos and us. But my nipple inverted and I had a dent. Still told it wasn't anything. Finally got an mri. Tumor was 7.3 cm when found. But we still think that lump was coincidental cyst.
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No lump. Just an area of thickening which was not that different than what I had felt for years. But every year I had clear mammograms so nothing to worry about, right? Then last winter an inverted nipple which I just thought was a sagging breast.Finally mammogram in spring showed nothing and was identical to March 2016 mammogram. But U/S showed suspicious area and biopsy confirmed ILC.
By the time of surgery tumour was not small and had started right deep in my breast next to chest. I am sure it had been there for years.
Just wish I had been suspicious earlier!
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There are a couple of polls being taken on the Facebook page,
Lobular Breast Cancer (ILC) invasive lobular carcinoma
It seems many tumours can't be felt and don't show on mammogram or ultrasound so many ILC cancers get to late stages before being discovered. It will be interesting to see if there is a big difference although of course not so many with early stages may be active on forums as those with later stages. I'd like to start some sort of campaign to inform medical organisations and their educators to be more aware of the silent nature of ILC so I don't have to keep reading of women sent home year after year with no referrals and then diagnosed with mets.
All the awareness campaigns every year are wasted when they all talk about lumps and mammograms which mostly don't apply to ILC. Women are dying through lack of knowledge. Please fill in the poll on Facebook if you can. -
Hi everyone...mine was not palpable and it also was not seen on 3D mammo and U/S. It was only picked up on a pre operative MRI for IDC. So if I didn't have IDC, I would never had known I had ILC. Good luck to all.
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I wish the doctors I saw in the years prior to dx had read somewhere that itching was a sign. I told more than one that I would have an itchy spot (yup, right on the 7cm tumor) and it was shrugged off. The growing cyst didn't seem to bother them, nor did they ever hear that dense breasts have a higher incidence of ILC. U/S in May 2016 didn't show anything (and nodes were clear, so the report says), Mammo in May 2017 didn't show it (or the smaller IDC hiding in proximity), but the 3d mammo rang the alarm bell. When I was told that dense breasts were part of aging in some people I was relieved it was nothing --- or so I thought. ....
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Similar story for me. It wasn't till my nipple inverted that I began to peruse a breast specialist since no one including my gyno could explain why that could happen. All mammograms my entire life were negative and here I am dealing with stage 3a ILC. Something needs to be done for women with dense breasts. I wish this was discovered much earlier.
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Mine was seen on a 3D mammogram. Then US, MRI and biopsy. I didn't feel a lump, but did notice a smooth ridge in the area of the cancer a few months before mammo. I started paying the extra few dollars for the 3d mammos a year before diagnosis. Glad I did because regular mammo views didn't show the cancer. I had dense breasts and had been asking my gyno for a couple of years to order US &/or MRIs, and he said they weren't necessary & mammos were enough. Convinced my situation would have been a lot worse w/o the 3D.
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I felt a lump right on the side of my nipple. It felt like a clogged milk duct, but I haven't nursed in almost 4 years. Had an ultrasound, told it was a clogged gland, and waved off. A couple of months later, the whole breast changed - it felt like when I was first breastfeeding and had gone 5 or 6 hours without nursing - hard and painful. And my nipple inverted. Went for another ultrasound at a bigger hospital, they biopsied, told me it was IDC/DCIS, but just had my mammogram and path came back and it is actually ILC.
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No lump. Just a "pulling" sensation in the upper outer quadrant left breast. No one could feel anything. Mammogram and ultrasound negative. I insisted on a biopsy, and it was positive.
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My radiologist also really felt that there was nothing there. He had read my past 4 mammograms, and is considered the premier radiologist here in this very good radiology group: M.D Anderson trained, breast specialist, etc. Providentially, my next routine mammogram was read by a different radiologist who saw an "asymmetry." I forced the biopsy, and found ILC.
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Yes I definitely had a lump. I couldn't feel it unless I put my arm over my head. I had no idea I even had the lump and it was quite large. In the beginning after the biopsy the surgeon was just going to do a lumpectomy . He then did a MRI and found out I had a large area of ILC and the lump was the outcome of the ILC if that makes sense. The plan then changed to a mastectomy . I also had a discharge from my nipple about 4 months before I had my routine mammogram. I passed it off as just not a big deal. I should have gone immediately but I was so use to being called back in after the mammogram for a sonogram and it had been so routine for the past 3 mamos. My surgeon said ILC is very sneaky cancer. Hard to show on mammograms and can suddenly appear.
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I had a lump directly behind my nipple. My husband found it. My nipple also acted differently and began to retract slightly.
It was two years before I found a doc who was willing to biopsy it. everybody thought it was a fibroadenoma. Two mammo's and 3 US showed nothing. Even post-op the doc thought it presented like a fibroadenoma.
Just had my first round of chemo yesterday, as I had lymph involvement
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