Surviving The Mask

13

Comments

  • phrannie51
    phrannie51 Member Posts: 4,716
    cadharose said:

    They cut eye holes in mine as

    They cut eye holes in mine as well as a mouth hole and they also stretched out the neck area for me because I freaked out so badly about the mask the first time they went to put it on me. They tried to put it on me three times and each time I ripped it off and bolted upright. The tech was scared I was going to fling myself off the table. Fortunately, that was just for the PET scan and so they let me do it without the mask on that occasion. After that I went home and resolved in my mind that I would deal with it. I practiced putting my son's ski mask on and then lying down on my bed and pulling it tight around my head. I thought if I can deal with this I can deal with that. One is cloth, one is plastic and a little stiffer and that's the only real difference. And it worked! But the eye holes might as well not be there because I always keep my eyes closed, too, the entire time. I also flush out my sinuses and drink lots of water right before treatment so I don't have thick saliva or junk in my nasal passages. Did they offer to give you Ativan? Every time I have to wear mine I have the Ativan in me, plus I have pain medication and antihistamines in my system, and the combination of it all helps me to really relax when I'm on the table. I bring in my CDs of my favorite relaxing music to listen to. Plus, they scheduled my rad time for late in the afternoon which is the time I'm usually ready for a nap anyway. Now, the mask is no problem at all. In fact, I'm usually dozing and so comfortable by the time it's over and wish I could have a few minutes more.  At this point, I consider wearing the mask for the radiation to be the easiest part of my treatment.

    I had Ativan in me, too

    before the rads would get started....and like you, I'd doze through the time I was on the table.  I still hated radiation....but the reason was really because from the time I got into the dressing room to the time I finally got on the table was so damned cold I would visabley shake.  It's take the first 5 minutes under a warmed set of blankets for me to relax and doze, and in another 7 minutes they were telling me all done. 

    p

  • harold 651947
    harold 651947 Member Posts: 1
    ballonk said:

    Excellent Thread - Very Relevant!
    Oh my, I haven't thought about my mask in a long time. But it still conjures up memories that caught me so off-guard and by surprise. I did well with the fitting and trial run and had no problems. For me, the worse part of having cancer is all the times where you in a holding pattern (waiting for test results, waiting for a treatment decision, waiting for a surgery date, waiting to start radiation, etc, etc, etc). I'm a pretty tough gal and was just ready to get on with the treatments.

    My first treatment reduced me to tears. I am not generally a "crier" so it so surprised me. It didn't hurt at all; but by the time it was over I was an emotional mess. The nurse took one look at me and took me back to see the radiation oncologist who recommended I take a half tablet of Xanax about 1/2 hour before treatment started. I don't like to take medication but he told me "now is not the time to be a hero" so I agreed. He also said he could cut some eyeholes in the mask as that helps some people. I was a bit angry at him for not letting me know this might happen but I think they don't like to tell you a lot about possible reactions so they don't "plant a seed" - so to speak. Because of some childhood abuse issues, I felt trapped in the mask and it just triggered some of those memories and emotions that day. I only took the Xanax for about a week and then I was OK during the remaining treatments.

    I kept my mask with the intent of driving over it with my car one day. It was in my garage when the storm surge from Hurricane Katrina nearly demolished my home. So God only knows where it is now; floating around somewhere in the lake or Gulf of Mexico as the flood waters receded. Should make for an interesting artifact one day!

    For all those who are have started or are getting ready to start your radiation treatments, you are in my prayers. Stay strong and go with God!

    Kathy

    hi i am into my last 2 treatments for vocal cord cancer

    ive seen what people are saying on here and i wish i came here sooner. my throatis sore and my neck is red raw cant wait for wednesday to be over.  I hope this work being honest if i had to do it over with the 29 radiation treatments dont know if i would do it . cant swallowight always feels like there is something stuck in my throat .Iuess i just came in here to vent some ty for listening  HAROLD

  • fishmanpa
    fishmanpa Member Posts: 1,227 Member

    hi i am into my last 2 treatments for vocal cord cancer

    ive seen what people are saying on here and i wish i came here sooner. my throatis sore and my neck is red raw cant wait for wednesday to be over.  I hope this work being honest if i had to do it over with the 29 radiation treatments dont know if i would do it . cant swallowight always feels like there is something stuck in my throat .Iuess i just came in here to vent some ty for listening  HAROLD

    Vent Away!

    Hi Harold and welcome to the forum. 

    Congrats on finishing treatment! I know what you're going through having recently finished treatment myself (30 rads, 6 chemos - finished 4-24). FYI...it's going to about the same or probably a worse for the first 2-3 weeks post treatment. You still "cook" afterwards for several weeks as the treatment is cumulative. Hang in there! It will get better. Stay ahead of the pain and nausea.

    Positive thoughts and prayers

    "T"

     

  • Skiffin16
    Skiffin16 Member Posts: 8,305 Member

    Non-verbal Stroke Patient
    Hi, my dad had is first radiation treatment today. They did the "dry run" and then treatment immediately following. My dad is non-verbal due to a stroke in 2006, but he communicated to me that it was very scary. The nurse and tech would not let me go back there with him... Do you think that they would let me go back until the radiation began? I would like to make sure that he is not panicking under there, and that he is not in pain. Do you think he should have a half of ativan before he goes? The other issue is that he can not make himself cough, it is only a reflex if it is necessary. I will see if he would like the nose spray... Any other suggestions of questions that I should ask him, since he cannot tell me? Thanks for all of this info, I found it extremely helpful!!

    Xanax...
    Welcome Dancin....

    If he has anxiety, Xanax definitely took the edge off for me. After the first week I was OK with it.

    A few things that helped me;
    Comfy clothes, shorts a t-shirts..what ever is comfy for him.
    Music, I took a CD and left it there..they'd have it playing for me everyday. Plus it gives you a reference of time.... 3- 4 songs and you were done for the day.

    Here is a link to the SuperThread...search it, there is a lot of info on surviving the mask, and tons of other.

    SuperThread

    Others will chime in their welcomes and suggestions...

    Best, John
  • Johnboy6265
    Johnboy6265 Member Posts: 4
    MASK

    Just about everything has been said about the dreaded MASK.I just wanted to say that I was prescribed Lorazepam1mg 30 min before treatment.It helped a lot.You're not a sissy if you ask for it.

  • mkwalters88
    mkwalters88 Member Posts: 12
    Fire34 said:

    The mask
    Marine my experience was similar to yours. I was fitted back in July of 09 and started rad treatments in Sep 09. When I got on that table and they placed the mask on and locked it down I told them that no way was that the mask I was fitted for. They were able to schim it up to 6 mm for a little looser fit but that was the max. I was refitted in the middle of my third week due to weight loss and it didnt seem any better but by that time i was used to it. My fit was so tight that i was unable to breathe thru my mouth luckily I hgad not problem thru my nose. Mucous buildup was my biggest problem and was worse during the last week of treatment. But being able to see the light made it a lot easier. Iwas an inpatient during my rad treatment as I had concurrent chemo/rad
    Good luck to everyone and keep a positive attitude. as I noticed there are always people that have it worse than you

    concurrent treatment

    Hey there, I am brand new to the site and diagnosed in January of this year. The doctor at the cancer hospital said I will have to have multimodal therapy, 3 neck nodes and "probable" ECS. I was just wondering what you meant when you said you were "impatient"? Were you in the hospital for the entire length of treatment? I apologize I have so many questions and trying to research the best i can without having to ask people. I'm finally at the cancer center, getting close to starting treatment I think. My primary so far has been occult and having tonsils removed and pandescopy and think after that  depending on what they find or don't find I will be starting after that. Thank you for our time and hope you are well.

    -Michael 

  • AnotherSurvivor
    AnotherSurvivor Member Posts: 383 Member
    I got a pair of small

    I got a pair of small portable speakers, attached them to my everything bag, and did a series of playlists for my iPod (yes, I'm old - no smart phone).  Mostly jazz And blues.  My tech got feisty after I hassled her, so she started turning mine off and playing pandora.

  • rsp
    rsp Member Posts: 103 Member
    edited March 2017 #49

    concurrent treatment

    Hey there, I am brand new to the site and diagnosed in January of this year. The doctor at the cancer hospital said I will have to have multimodal therapy, 3 neck nodes and "probable" ECS. I was just wondering what you meant when you said you were "impatient"? Were you in the hospital for the entire length of treatment? I apologize I have so many questions and trying to research the best i can without having to ask people. I'm finally at the cancer center, getting close to starting treatment I think. My primary so far has been occult and having tonsils removed and pandescopy and think after that  depending on what they find or don't find I will be starting after that. Thank you for our time and hope you are well.

    -Michael 

    new forum post

    Hi Michael,

    I noticed you posted your first post to an old (2010) conversation.  I did the same thing when I joined and wondered why I wasn't hearing back from anyone.  You might want to click at the top of the discussion list and start a new forum.  You may get more responses that way.

     

    Best of luck to you and your journey.  You will love this site.  People are wonderful, and you will get answers to whatever it is you want to know. 

  • bebo12249
    bebo12249 Member Posts: 181 Member
    My radiation oncologist

    My radiation oncologist insisted the I have a mouth piece made by my dentist to prevent radiation scatter from crowns. He also said that some RO don't require this mouth piece but it is a relatively cheap way to prevent some mouth burns/ulcers..

  • Andy13460
    Andy13460 Member Posts: 115
    edited April 2017 #51
    The Mask fitting and CT simulation

    I assume I don’t suffer from claustrophobia, as I didn’t find any part of the mask making/fitting unpleasant. There was 3 or 4 working on me most of the time and talking all the while, first the moulding under the neck and then the warm plastic straight over my face moulded and left to set. I went out to fill some forms in and sign consent forms, back in about 20 minutes later where I was fastened down to the table (It does feel quite tight once it has cooled and set completely) they marked the mask up and did the CT simulations plus the little dot tattoo on the chest. I just kept my eyes closed they didn’t make any cut-outs anywhere.

     

  • Bobby_Lee
    Bobby_Lee Member Posts: 25
    edited May 2017 #52
    When they made my Mask I felt

    When they made my Mask I felt like screaming. Placing that hot plastic mesh over my face burned like hell. They didnt make any holes in mine. I can remember them asking me what type of music I liked. I told them classic Rock and what do you know, they played stairway to heaven on my first session. Listening to the words of the song made me tear up.

     

     

  • Sprint Car Dude
    Sprint Car Dude Member Posts: 181
    Yep

    Distrubed and Five Finger Death Punch got me through 37 treatments. Luckily my Rad Techs where awesome and just plugged my I-Tunes into the kick **** speaker system in the room. We let it rip and 15 minutes was done before a knew it. About 5 songs worth. My mask was super tight and I did the walk of shame with waffle prints all over my face and forehead every day for seven weeks. It did start to loosen up by the end. Mine was also a closed mask with no real openings.

    Good Luck, the first few are the worst.

  • Bionicguy
    Bionicguy Member Posts: 22
    MarineE5 said:

    Good Post
    Scambuster,

    Very good post, allot of good information shared there. I am a person that usaully has no problem with tight areas, but that Mask messed with my mind the first 2 times. Once on the fitting of it. Just for a few minutes and I calmed down, put my mind in a different place altogether.

    The other time was the first Radiation treatment. As nice as the Tech's are, I just couldn't get my breathing to calm down. Felt terrible, but toward the end of the treatment got my mind together. The rest of the treatments, I would imagine back to the times I was a kid running outside with my brother flying our kites. Anything to get my mind elsewhere.

    When I would get up off the table after the Mask was removed. I always felt as if I was from a Batman movie as a character named Snakeman as the mask was that tight and the criss-cross pattern was on my face walking out to my car : )

    My Best to Everyone Here

    Not Fun

    Marine, I have a friend that is retired military that went through the same thing. He was in a Army unit that actually practiced water boarding on each other. The first time they put the mask on him he started having flash backs and went into a dead panic. I think they ended up sedating him to get through the first couple of sessions.

    I had 40 rad treatments and was about the same way the first couple of times. Finally learned to go somewhere else mentally. And I prayed a lot. I think it was about 100,000 Hail Marys! Whatever gets you through.

  • Bionicguy
    Bionicguy Member Posts: 22
    Greend said:

    Mask after treatment
    I remember when they fitted me. The mask was very snug however towards the end of my treatments I had lost so much weight it started to be very loose. When I was done they asked if I wanted to keep it and I personally thought "why would I want a reminder" and told them to trash it. To this day I still get a knot in my stomach when I hear that x-ray sound. I am proud of my one tattoo :>)

    Killed It

    I took mine to the range and blew it to pieces with a shotgun.

  • Bionicguy
    Bionicguy Member Posts: 22
    Greend said:

    Mask after treatment
    I remember when they fitted me. The mask was very snug however towards the end of my treatments I had lost so much weight it started to be very loose. When I was done they asked if I wanted to keep it and I personally thought "why would I want a reminder" and told them to trash it. To this day I still get a knot in my stomach when I hear that x-ray sound. I am proud of my one tattoo :>)

    Killed It

    I took mine to the range and blew it to pieces with a shotgun.

  • Hotinhere
    Hotinhere Member Posts: 3
    edited February 2021 #57
    Mask anxiety

    Hi--I was totally unprepared for my reaction to the mask. I just flat couldn't stand it. The fitting was unpleasan, but the trial run really freaked me out. It was the pressure on my throat that I couldn't handle. I felt I was being choked. I'm going to try again tomorrow with Ativan. I see pictures online of masks that aren't fitted tightly around the throat. Is that an option?  My cancer was squamous cell of the naso-labial fold. Thanks so much for sharing your experience. 

  • Hotinhere
    Hotinhere Member Posts: 3
    edited February 2021 #58
    Mask anxiety

    i didn't make it through my trial radiation run yesterday. I felt as if I was being choked By 5he mask.  I'm trying again tomorrow with Ativan. Is there a way they can make the throat area looser?  I saw some pictures online of masks that were loose around the throat. 

  • wbcgaruss
    wbcgaruss Member Posts: 2,274 Member
    edited February 2021 #59
    Hotinhere said:

    Mask anxiety

    i didn't make it through my trial radiation run yesterday. I felt as if I was being choked By 5he mask.  I'm trying again tomorrow with Ativan. Is there a way they can make the throat area looser?  I saw some pictures online of masks that were loose around the throat. 

    Mention To Your

    Radiation doctor of the troubles you are experiencing. Sometimes if it doesn't affect the stability of the mask or risk your head being in a different position every time they may trim it out around the area that is bothering you enough to give you the relief you need. Have them check around your throat area when fastened down to see if it is tight in any area. Some of this is a mind over the situation matter. Take the Ativan it helps and you just have to relax bodily and mentally as much as possible. I think initially when they fasten you down or us for that matter because most or all on here have experienced the mask you get the initial sensation of tightness till you get settled in for the session. Above all please check out the Superthread at the top of the H & N page. It has loads of info in there for anyone going through H & N cancer and treatment and there is a section about 4 steps down entitled "TIPS FOR HANDLING THE MASK" which may be very helpful to you. Also below is the link to the Superthread--

    https://csn.cancer.org/node/261072

    Hang in there Hotinhere, you can do this, Wishing you the Best-Take Care-God Bless-Russ

  • Hotinhere
    Hotinhere Member Posts: 3
    edited February 2021 #60
    It worked

    Thanks to all who have posted about your experience. The posts were very helpful. I did not think I could tolerate the mask for even one minute but I made it through the five-minute trial run. I took the Ativan, used nose spray beforehand, and asked for music. 

  • ricksmithgolfer
    ricksmithgolfer Member Posts: 87 Member
    edited February 2021 #61
    Hotinhere said:

    It worked

    Thanks to all who have posted about your experience. The posts were very helpful. I did not think I could tolerate the mask for even one minute but I made it through the five-minute trial run. I took the Ativan, used nose spray beforehand, and asked for music. 

    Mask

    I had 35 rads for tonsil cancer. I am super super claustophobic and had to do Ativan b4 each session. I also had them play music on the loud side. I was in the mask about 15-20 minutes each session. One other thing I had them do was tell me every 5 minutes how long I had left. A couple times they forgot to tell me and I found it much harder for me. If you do it remind them each time. I also counted to myself to keep my mind busy. Another thing I did was have them aim a fan right at me to keep me cooler.  They had a big portable one in the room. I found I was grtting hot which made me uncomfotable. I never freaked out one time and made it thru all 35 sessions without interuption, If I can do it, anyone can. You can do this. Good luck and God Bless.