Does anyone know what this might be?

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Does anyone know what this might be?

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  • lucky32
    lucky32 Member Posts: 97
    edited May 2008

    Hi, ladies,

    I am trying to identify a thin piece of padding I got a few years ago at a mastectomy shop and determine if it is something that I am going to need (I'm considering PBM). It's a strange and somewhat funny story, so please bear with me.

    About 5 years ago, my husband's grandmother, a BC survivor, asked me to get her "a mastectomy pad." She was in a nursing home and couldn't go herself. I didn't know exactly what she was talking about, and she couldn't really tell me any more than that.

    So I went to a local wig/mastectomy boutique and told the lady there what Grandma had said. The only thing the saleslady could come up with was that maybe Grandma wanted a pad to go in her bra between her prosthesis and her chest. Not knowing very much about prostheses at the time, I said OK and plunked over about $28 for one of these pads. (Grandma had a bilateral but I didn't want to pay that much for another pad until I was sure it was what she wanted.)

    Well, I got back to the nursing home and showed it to her, and it wasn't what she wanted at all. I discovered that she had never been fitted for prostheses. For forty years she'd been wearing foam rubber cups she cut out of old bathing suits, and she wanted me to get her some more. I had to explain to her that they don't make bathing suits with cups like that any more, and that even if they did, you couldn't just buy the cups without buying the whole suit. She wasn't interested in real prostheses, and she couldn't use this pad thing I'd gotten.

    Since I paid so much for it, I kept it, and now I am wondering if it is something that I might need if I have my bilateral PBM. It's thin and flat but has some slight weight to it. The best way to describe what it looks like is this: You know those non-slip pads you can buy to put in shoes, to keep your feet from sliding forward? Well, it looks like that, only bigger. I just can't figure out what it would be used for, as I thought that prostheses just fit in special bra pockets.

    Anyway, if anyone can identify this, I'd be most grateful. If it's something I might need, that's good, but if not and anyone else does need it, please PM me and I'll be glad to send it to you. It has never been used.

    A little inspiration from Grandma: She had her first mastectomy in the early 1960's, before my husband was even born. Then she had a new primary around 2001, had another mastectomy, and died 3 years later at age 85 from unrelated pulmonary disease. She was a 40+ year survivor, and all that time she only used old bathing suit cups!

    Thanks so much for reading all this and for any help you can give.

  • Sassa
    Sassa Member Posts: 1,588
    edited May 2008

    Could it be a partial breast prosthesis that are sold for women who have had a lumpectomy and need some filler to even the two sides out?

    http://www.pointshop.com/Mall/Catalog/Product/ASP/product-id/538400/store-id/1000043933.html

  • lucky32
    lucky32 Member Posts: 97
    edited May 2008

    Thanks for that link, Sassa. No, that isn't it. What I have is perfectly flat and fabric-covered. When I said that it has a little weight, I just mean that it is heavier than you'd think it would be from looking at it. It probably doesn't weigh more than an ounce or two, but it looks like it would be weightless. I wonder if maybe it is something that once was necessary to use with a prosthesis but isn't anymore?

    I just have never heard of anyone using a pad between the prosthesis and the chest wall. Wouldn't the back of the bra pocket keep the prosthesis from actually touching the chest?

    Thanks to anyone who can help solve this mystery!

  • Binney4
    Binney4 Member Posts: 8,609
    edited May 2008

    This reminds me of the "This Old House" guess-the-tool segment -- maybe you should send it to those guys to solve!EmbarassedLaughing

    Is this oval-shaped? About 3" x 5" or so by about 1/2" thick? Cloth covered in a sort of beige-peachy shade? Trying to visualize this thing, so any details would help.

    Thanks! This is a fun puzzle and I can't wait to find out what it is!

    Binney 

  • otter
    otter Member Posts: 6,099
    edited May 2008

    Could you take a digital photo of it, and post it here?  I'm really curious now.

    otter 

  • nan53
    nan53 Member Posts: 5
    edited May 2008

    i just got my new prosthesis last month.  I don't think you'll need whatever it is you have.  According to the nurse that fitted me, I have the newest model out there.  If you haven't seen one, you should check them.  I was surprised at how heavy the silicon breast was.  It has a nice layer of clear something that can go up against your skin and it somehow, takes the heat away. 

    I was pleasantly surprised by the comfort of the thing.  It can be inserted in a regular bra if you want or you can have a seamstress put in pockets of any bra.  The pocket was confortable too.

    Good luck.   

  • lucky32
    lucky32 Member Posts: 97
    edited May 2008

    Wow! I can almost hear the "Twilight Zone" music!

    This "thing" is light peach in color and measures approximately 5"x5.5" inches. It's 1/4" thick. It's straight across the bottom and more rounded on top (unless I'm looking at it upside down, or sideways, in which case. . . oh, well, you get the idea). It's perfectly flat and filled with some very thin padding. I put it on my kitchen scale; it weighs 1 1/8 ounces.

    Otter, that's a great idea about a picture. My husband is the digital guru, so I will try to get him to do that, although I doubt he can get to it today. But I will work on him!

    Nan, I am so glad you posted about the climate-controlled prosthesis. I have heard of those and wondered how they might be. I do get so hot in the summertime, and was thinking that they'd be worth looking into. Can you post the manufacturer of the one you have? And please forgive me if this is a dumb question, but if it goes in a pocket, how can it rest against your skin? Or does it work though the fabric of the pocket?

    I saw my dermatologist last week and she told me not to get anything that sticks directly to my skin, since I seem to be allergic to medical adhesives. I hope that doesn't mean I couldn't use the prosthesis you're talking about, though.

    Thanks so much for your help, everyone!

  • mthomp2020
    mthomp2020 Member Posts: 1,959
    edited May 2008

    It sounds like it could be sort of a climate-control pad that you can wear between the form and the pocket material to help keep it from getting hot.  My silicone form makes me perspire even during the winter when it's 20 out, even in the pocket.  The pocket fabric is always damp when I take off the bra.  I had a unilateral mastectomy.  Since I'm only an A, I don't need weight - as a matter of fact, my form pulls that side of the bra down lower then my remaining breast does, so I'm uneven with the form.  I bought an unweighted foam form, and no more sweating and sagging! 

    To make a long story short, the pad might come in handy for keeping you cool in the summer with a silicone form.  That really does sound like what you have.

  • Sassa
    Sassa Member Posts: 1,588
    edited May 2008

    When I had my Bosom Buddy prosthesis, a pad similar to what you are describing was included with the prosthesis.

    It was intended to be used along side the cup area of the bra to fill in for any missing tissue taken during lymph node excision.

  • lucky32
    lucky32 Member Posts: 97
    edited May 2008

    That sounds like that could be it, Sassa. I think the lady who sold it to me said it was supposed to go between the prosthesis and the chest, but that was several years ago and I may not be remembering exactly right.

    I had to stop by the mastectomy shop today, so I asked them about it. I didn't know I would be going there, so I didn't have it with me to show them. But no one there had any idea what it was. I think this is destined to be one of those great unsolved mysteries!

    I'll hold on to it for a while, though, just in case. Thanks so much, everyone.

  • Binney4
    Binney4 Member Posts: 8,609
    edited May 2008

    Lucky, if you're having bilateral mastectomies I do think you should hold on to it. Because one of mine was a modified radical and the other was prophylactic, the two sides of my chest are not the same. Of course the chest lymphedema doesn't help even things out either. So I have two prostheses, but they're two different sizes because the radical side is "deeper" (if that makes any senseUndecided). If it turns out that you have the same experience, that handy-dandy little mystery item might just even things out comfortably and prettily. Smile An unlooked-for gift from Grandma. Who knew?!

    Binney 

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