Travel!

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I'm not sure if this is the right forum to post this thread.... but nothing else seems to fit, and I couldn't find any threads addressing this explicitly using the search tool....

In any case, I'm fairly new to BC (diagnosed in July), and next week will be my first trip since diagnosis. I love traveling, but I am a bot anxious about it! Any tips or suggestions?

A bit of backgound... I am 42, and I was diagnosed with de novo stage IV mixed IDC/ILC in July. I have completed whole brain radiation for mets in my brain and skull, and I am currently on Faslodex. I will be starting Ibrance when I return from my trip. No surgery or chemo. I will be traveling with my husband to Italy (by airplane -- with a connection in Paris), where we will stay for a week for my dad's wedding! We'll be in an Airbnb with my brother and his wife.

Thanks!

Comments

  • JoE777
    JoE777 Member Posts: 628
    edited September 2018

    Sorry Twinkle for such a hard DX. Your oncologist should give you directives for air travel. It can be a little trickier. I just made 5 hour road trip. I was instructed to try to move every 30 minutes and stop the car and walk once an hour to prevent blood clots. I had to continue to hydrate the whole trip which forced us to stop and run to the little girls room. Sounds like you're up for a very special trip. Hope all goes as planned. Hugs. J

  • TwinkleCat
    TwinkleCat Member Posts: 85
    edited September 2018

    Thanks, JoE777. My doctor did tell me to get up an walk every hour while flying, which I plan to do -- and I'll wear compression socks, too.

    Any others with advice for traveling, flying, being overseas... etc?

  • ksusan
    ksusan Member Posts: 4,505
    edited September 2018

    Stay very hydrated on planes (this helps you get up every hour as well). Do some manual drainage, fist pumping, etc. on the plane, and leg exercises. Wear compression hose, too.

    For general travel, be good about using insect repellents and sun block. Carry bandaids and a little tube of Neosporin or other antibacterial, plus a prescription for a general antibiotic for infections and a Benadryl (since you're not taking Tamoxifen). That way, if you do get a cut or insect bite, you can reduce the chance of infection (and therefore, of kicking up cellulitis). I keep this stuff in an Altoids tin in my purse.

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