New here, need some advice please

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JanJan63
JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member

Hello everyone! I really need some help and I'm hoping I'm not bringing up something that's already been addressed but I probably am. I was diagnosed with colorectal cancer on Dec 31, 2013. I had an ostemy done at the end of January and a port-a-cath inserted in February. The tumour was advanced enough that my surgeon wanted bigger margins to work with so I had radiation and chemo for 8 weeks in March and April.

I had the tumour removed on June 12 and then had two complications which prevented my having the follow up chemo within the three months they like to start it within. One was two abcesses and the other was my incison bursting open from infection five weeks after the surgery. My cancer was class three due to three lymph nodes being involved. When he resected it the bowel had already torn from the size of the tumour. My tumour was situated very low and close to the rectum. They took out 14 inches of bowel.

So I'm finally staring follow up chemo on Oct 6 which will be almost four months port operative. I'll be getting Fulfox (sp?) every two weeks for four months so I guess that's sixteen treatments. The last time I saw my chemo oncologist I asked how effective the chemo would be after this long as I've read that the effectiveness reduces monthly and ideally would have been started at twelve weeks after surgery. She gave me a non commital answer and then said that I 'might as well go ahead with it'.

That's my dilemma. It's a strong chemo and I don't want to have to go on it unless I'm confident that it'll make a difference. From what I read it sound like the chance of recurrence will be about the same as if I hadn't gone on follow up chemo. I can't seem to find any real evidence to tell me what to do. I really don't want to poison my body for no good reason and I'm feeling good right now and need to get back to work. My brother is on the exact same chemo right now and he ended up in the hospital.

Can someone give me some advice or direct me to where I can get some good information that isn't out of date? I find it interesting that my brother is on the same chemo to try to cure his cancer of the esophagus and has a good sized tumour yet I might have some loose cancer cells and will be on the same chemo and I 'might as well'?  Most likely I won't back out of having the chemo but if I'm going to be sick as a dog and risk permanent damage to my body I want to know that I'm not doing it because I 'might as well'. If I don't do it and it comes back I'll really be kicking myself.

For the record, I'm adopted so my brother's cancer and mine have no genetic link.

Thank you so much, I've talked to my friends and family about this but nobody has had colon cancer, they've had breast cancer and my family is scared for me not to do it. I should add that I'm fifty-one years old and in pretty good shape. I don't drink and have never smoked. I'm active and am not much heavier than my ideal weight. I've had IBS as long as I can remember. 

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Comments

  • danker
    danker Member Posts: 1,276 Member
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    chemo

    I had a chemo pump for the 5 weeks i was getting radiation .  Then after the resection and an iliostomy which was reversed 6 weeks later, my  oncologist wanted more chemo.  

    The surgeon said not necessary.  my colonoscopy the the following year was NED.  A second colonoscopy  this year , almost 5 years after diagnosis,was also  NED.  As i am 82. 

    I believe I have had my last colonoscopy!!! We are all different, but I thought you might like to hear my history with chemo.  Best of luck to you whatever you decide.

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    danker said:

    chemo

    I had a chemo pump for the 5 weeks i was getting radiation .  Then after the resection and an iliostomy which was reversed 6 weeks later, my  oncologist wanted more chemo.  

    The surgeon said not necessary.  my colonoscopy the the following year was NED.  A second colonoscopy  this year , almost 5 years after diagnosis,was also  NED.  As i am 82. 

    I believe I have had my last colonoscopy!!! We are all different, but I thought you might like to hear my history with chemo.  Best of luck to you whatever you decide.

    Danker

    Danker, thank you. I was thinking about calling my surgeo's office tomorrow to ask if there's anyone I can talk to about this.

    I'm scared that it will come back and I'll regret not doing the chemo. I'm unhappy with my chemo doctor for making me not feel confident. The main thing we need to have is hope and she made me feel like there wasn't. I have to admit that I don't like her and haven't since day one. She's not nasty but she's got a very 'oh well' type of attitude. My port was badly done and every healthcare practitioner from nurses to other doctors have comented on how badly it was done- badly placed near the centre of my chest, the scar runs right across the surface where they put the needle in and it sits on a bone and the slightest pressure makes it hurt- but when I mention it to her and show her she always says it's fine. Which I find dishonest. They hit a nerve when they inserted the port and the pain afterwards and for days was unbelievable but when I told her she was unruffled as usual.

    I told my surgeon last time that I wasn't happy with the chemo oncologist and he said he could refer me to a new one but the situation wasn't so bad that I wanted to do that. Now that she's being so casual about the upcoming chemo I wish I had. But there's not time to change doctors now. 

  • Easyflip
    Easyflip Member Posts: 588 Member
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    JanJan

    Sorry you are in this situation but I'm glad you found this board, there are good people here with sound advice. I assume the chemo you did earlier was not Folfox. I had 12 rounds and it was not that bad for me. I didn't lose my hair and I used emend as an anti nausea and it worked like a charm. I had all the reported side effects but they were all tolerable, I did it because it gave me my best chance. The doctor watched me very closely and adjusted the dosage each week as needed. It's harsh because it's killing cells, unfortunately good and bad ones.  Maybe you could start it first and see how it goes, your reluctance is the fear of a bad reaction that might not even happen. It could be what cures you. That brings me to my second point. You must have faith in your doctors and trust in their judgement! The negativity when you talk about them is not good.  I believe attitude makes a big difference in outcome and at a minimum makes this journey were on more tolerable. Talk to your doctors about this, if you feel youre not being heard then switch doctors! you can always come here for support, just plain old cyber hugs : )

    sorry about your brother, 2 unrelated kids with cancer must be hard on your parents

    hope this helps,

    Richard/easyflip

  • Yolllmbs
    Yolllmbs Member Posts: 360 Member
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    JanJan63 said:

    Danker

    Danker, thank you. I was thinking about calling my surgeo's office tomorrow to ask if there's anyone I can talk to about this.

    I'm scared that it will come back and I'll regret not doing the chemo. I'm unhappy with my chemo doctor for making me not feel confident. The main thing we need to have is hope and she made me feel like there wasn't. I have to admit that I don't like her and haven't since day one. She's not nasty but she's got a very 'oh well' type of attitude. My port was badly done and every healthcare practitioner from nurses to other doctors have comented on how badly it was done- badly placed near the centre of my chest, the scar runs right across the surface where they put the needle in and it sits on a bone and the slightest pressure makes it hurt- but when I mention it to her and show her she always says it's fine. Which I find dishonest. They hit a nerve when they inserted the port and the pain afterwards and for days was unbelievable but when I told her she was unruffled as usual.

    I told my surgeon last time that I wasn't happy with the chemo oncologist and he said he could refer me to a new one but the situation wasn't so bad that I wanted to do that. Now that she's being so casual about the upcoming chemo I wish I had. But there's not time to change doctors now. 

    I am also stage 3

    I had a resection where they removed 4 1/2 feet of colic but they had clear margins and were able to close up without a ostomy. My surgeon told me she felt they had gotten all of the cancer. She checked my liver and kidneys during surgery and found nothing. I had two lymph nodes come back positive. She referred me to the oncology dept. I was told that  rogue cancer cella could still be present in my body so they suggested folfox to be preventative. I am scheduled for 12 treatments one every two weeks for 6 months. I've completed nine of the twelve. It sounds like they want to put you on 8 treatments. I love my team and think it's very important that you have that comfort zone as well. The normal seems to follow resection with folfox. I didn't qualify for the trial which was 6 treatments. It's not easy but it is doable. Welcome to the board. it's a great place to ask questions. 

     

    Yolanda

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    Easyflip said:

    JanJan

    Sorry you are in this situation but I'm glad you found this board, there are good people here with sound advice. I assume the chemo you did earlier was not Folfox. I had 12 rounds and it was not that bad for me. I didn't lose my hair and I used emend as an anti nausea and it worked like a charm. I had all the reported side effects but they were all tolerable, I did it because it gave me my best chance. The doctor watched me very closely and adjusted the dosage each week as needed. It's harsh because it's killing cells, unfortunately good and bad ones.  Maybe you could start it first and see how it goes, your reluctance is the fear of a bad reaction that might not even happen. It could be what cures you. That brings me to my second point. You must have faith in your doctors and trust in their judgement! The negativity when you talk about them is not good.  I believe attitude makes a big difference in outcome and at a minimum makes this journey were on more tolerable. Talk to your doctors about this, if you feel youre not being heard then switch doctors! you can always come here for support, just plain old cyber hugs : )

    sorry about your brother, 2 unrelated kids with cancer must be hard on your parents

    hope this helps,

    Richard/easyflip

    Thank you!

    Thank you both for the replies. Apparently, I'm not very good with math because I'd be having 8 treatments over 4 months, not 16. The basic chemo in the folfox, which I can't remember the name of, is the one I was on before but I didn't have the two additional ones I'll have now. And I'm not sure what side effects came from that and what was from the radiation I was on at the same time. I found that the anti-nauseants didn't help much and nobody warned me that my sense of smell would be heightened to the point where I had the smelling ability of a dog. It made the nausea much worse, too. I didn't have the mouth sores so that was lucky. I had it full time in the baby bottle last time, not for two days every two weeks.

    I'm happy with the rest of my team, it's just my chemo doctor that is so bland that I don't feel confident with her. I know two people who suffer long term effects from having chemo and that scares me, too. I just so don't want to go through the chemo again. I didn't even finish it last time, they gave me the last week off because I couldn't tolerate it anymore.

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    JanJan63 said:

    Thank you!

    Thank you both for the replies. Apparently, I'm not very good with math because I'd be having 8 treatments over 4 months, not 16. The basic chemo in the folfox, which I can't remember the name of, is the one I was on before but I didn't have the two additional ones I'll have now. And I'm not sure what side effects came from that and what was from the radiation I was on at the same time. I found that the anti-nauseants didn't help much and nobody warned me that my sense of smell would be heightened to the point where I had the smelling ability of a dog. It made the nausea much worse, too. I didn't have the mouth sores so that was lucky. I had it full time in the baby bottle last time, not for two days every two weeks.

    I'm happy with the rest of my team, it's just my chemo doctor that is so bland that I don't feel confident with her. I know two people who suffer long term effects from having chemo and that scares me, too. I just so don't want to go through the chemo again. I didn't even finish it last time, they gave me the last week off because I couldn't tolerate it anymore.

    Easyflip

    Easyflip, I am glad I found this forum. And our parents are both gone. My dad from enphysema and my mom from pancreatic cancer.

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    Yolllmbs said:

    I am also stage 3

    I had a resection where they removed 4 1/2 feet of colic but they had clear margins and were able to close up without a ostomy. My surgeon told me she felt they had gotten all of the cancer. She checked my liver and kidneys during surgery and found nothing. I had two lymph nodes come back positive. She referred me to the oncology dept. I was told that  rogue cancer cella could still be present in my body so they suggested folfox to be preventative. I am scheduled for 12 treatments one every two weeks for 6 months. I've completed nine of the twelve. It sounds like they want to put you on 8 treatments. I love my team and think it's very important that you have that comfort zone as well. The normal seems to follow resection with folfox. I didn't qualify for the trial which was 6 treatments. It's not easy but it is doable. Welcome to the board. it's a great place to ask questions. 

     

    Yolanda

    Yolanda

    Yolanda, how long after your surgery did you start the follow up chemo? My surgeon also said he'd checked everything while he was in there and things looked good other than the three lymph nodes.

  • Lovekitties
    Lovekitties Member Posts: 3,364 Member
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    Welcome to the board

    The positive and negative sides of chemo are always on the decision scale.  There is no absolute answer unfortunately, as all bodies are different and can respond differently to the same treatment.

    Let's say you start chemo.  You can always stop.  The one thing you should definately do is find a new chemo doc.  You can do this while in treatment so don't let that deter you.  Having a doctor who inspires confidence is very important. 

    Regardless of what you choose to do, you must never look back and say "if only".  We all make decisions based on the best info available at the time.  Always look forward.

    Wishing you the best with what ever you determine to do.  Hang out here for an extra dose of support.

    Hugs,

    Marie who loves kitties

  • Yolllmbs
    Yolllmbs Member Posts: 360 Member
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    JanJan63 said:

    Yolanda

    Yolanda, how long after your surgery did you start the follow up chemo? My surgeon also said he'd checked everything while he was in there and things looked good other than the three lymph nodes.

    Chemo

    Started 8 weeks after the surgery. I did not have chemo or radiation prior to my surgery. It was discovered and they did surgery immediately. I know they have guidelines that they follow. It's preferred to start sooner. Perhaps, the fact that you had chemo before makes the optimum time different. 

     

    Yolanda

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    Welcome to the board

    The positive and negative sides of chemo are always on the decision scale.  There is no absolute answer unfortunately, as all bodies are different and can respond differently to the same treatment.

    Let's say you start chemo.  You can always stop.  The one thing you should definately do is find a new chemo doc.  You can do this while in treatment so don't let that deter you.  Having a doctor who inspires confidence is very important. 

    Regardless of what you choose to do, you must never look back and say "if only".  We all make decisions based on the best info available at the time.  Always look forward.

    Wishing you the best with what ever you determine to do.  Hang out here for an extra dose of support.

    Hugs,

    Marie who loves kitties

    Thank you Marie. I already have to say 'if only' due to the fact that my doctor wanted me to have a colonoscopy two years before I actually did. I probably could have had a polyp lopped off and been fine now. But I didn't want to go through the embarassment of it. Stupid, stupid, stupid. If I were able I'd kick myself in the butt.

  • Trubrit
    Trubrit Member Posts: 5,796 Member
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    JanJan63 said:

    Thank you Marie. I already have to say 'if only' due to the fact that my doctor wanted me to have a colonoscopy two years before I actually did. I probably could have had a polyp lopped off and been fine now. But I didn't want to go through the embarassment of it. Stupid, stupid, stupid. If I were able I'd kick myself in the butt.

    Let it go

    I didn't have a colonoscopy because I was scared of the IV, and now I am Stage IV.  give yourself a good kick and then move on. What is done is done. 

  • Trubrit
    Trubrit Member Posts: 5,796 Member
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    Welcome to the forum

    You are on a long road filled with dilemas. There is no easy answer to your question, and I wish you all the luck in the world. 

    If you are not comfortable with your Oncologist, I would check out a few more, though you are what I would imagine, pushed for time.

    i personally would do the new chemo regime. 

    My history is a Colon Resection, 21 lymph node removed with one infected. Started as a Stage IIIB.

    Nine rounds of FOLFOX infusion every two weeks with the 5FU pump for 48 hours. Chemo wasn't a blast. I lost most of my hair,  vision periphial and depth perception. Nausea was held at bay with drugs. Tons of other side effects, all were livable just not fun. 

    Followed FOLFOX with six week hook-up yo 5FU & radiation. Radiation was nothing short of Hell. 

    approx six months NED (no evidence of disease) and the a liver met appears so I had that zapped. Now Stage IV. 

    i don't regret any of the treatments that I have had, even the radiation, which was THE most awful experience of my life (this coming from a woman wh had a C-Section without anesthetic). I have had total confidence in my team. Which in my opinion is a must. 

    I am sorry, very sorry about your port. They are truly wonderful things, when positioned right. I doubt you would want to get it out or repositionEd at this point. 

    I apologize for any spelling mistakes. It is early an morning here in Wales, UK and the brain is waking up with the birds. 

    Dont EVER feel bad about asking any kind of question. We are all here to listen, help, love, laugh & cry with each other

  • danker
    danker Member Posts: 1,276 Member
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    JanJan63 said:

    Thank you!

    Thank you both for the replies. Apparently, I'm not very good with math because I'd be having 8 treatments over 4 months, not 16. The basic chemo in the folfox, which I can't remember the name of, is the one I was on before but I didn't have the two additional ones I'll have now. And I'm not sure what side effects came from that and what was from the radiation I was on at the same time. I found that the anti-nauseants didn't help much and nobody warned me that my sense of smell would be heightened to the point where I had the smelling ability of a dog. It made the nausea much worse, too. I didn't have the mouth sores so that was lucky. I had it full time in the baby bottle last time, not for two days every two weeks.

    I'm happy with the rest of my team, it's just my chemo doctor that is so bland that I don't feel confident with her. I know two people who suffer long term effects from having chemo and that scares me, too. I just so don't want to go through the chemo again. I didn't even finish it last time, they gave me the last week off because I couldn't tolerate it anymore.

    oncologist

    Why don't you fire your oncologist??? My wife didn't think i could. but the hospital gave me a real jerk.  I selected three oncs on the hospital staff and asked my surgeon to recommend one.  I have now been with my "new" oncologist nearly 5 years.  I only need to see her every 6 months, but she is still the best!!  Good luck to you!

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    Trubrit said:

    Welcome to the forum

    You are on a long road filled with dilemas. There is no easy answer to your question, and I wish you all the luck in the world. 

    If you are not comfortable with your Oncologist, I would check out a few more, though you are what I would imagine, pushed for time.

    i personally would do the new chemo regime. 

    My history is a Colon Resection, 21 lymph node removed with one infected. Started as a Stage IIIB.

    Nine rounds of FOLFOX infusion every two weeks with the 5FU pump for 48 hours. Chemo wasn't a blast. I lost most of my hair,  vision periphial and depth perception. Nausea was held at bay with drugs. Tons of other side effects, all were livable just not fun. 

    Followed FOLFOX with six week hook-up yo 5FU & radiation. Radiation was nothing short of Hell. 

    approx six months NED (no evidence of disease) and the a liver met appears so I had that zapped. Now Stage IV. 

    i don't regret any of the treatments that I have had, even the radiation, which was THE most awful experience of my life (this coming from a woman wh had a C-Section without anesthetic). I have had total confidence in my team. Which in my opinion is a must. 

    I am sorry, very sorry about your port. They are truly wonderful things, when positioned right. I doubt you would want to get it out or repositionEd at this point. 

    I apologize for any spelling mistakes. It is early an morning here in Wales, UK and the brain is waking up with the birds. 

    Dont EVER feel bad about asking any kind of question. We are all here to listen, help, love, laugh & cry with each other

    Thank you all

    I want to thank you all for your responses. I'm going to go ahead and start the chemo and see what happens. I'm not sure if I'll ask for a change in oncologists at this point. Hopefully this will be the last time I have to deal with her and I don't want to have to drive to meet a new one. We live in a town that's about 45 minutes from the city where the cancer centre is.

    Trubrit, the radiation/chemo was bad and I never anticipated the fatigue would be that bad. I figured I'd be in bed a lot but would watch TV or read or draw or whatever. I didn't realize I'd be lying there staring out of the window for weeks without caring about anything. And the nausea, I've only just stopped gagging when I brush my teeth a few weeks ago and my chemo stopped at the end of March.

    The worst for me was the complications after the resection. I went home after six days and was feeling pretty horrible but when I was readmitted and had to have the drains put in for the abcesses it was the worst. They didn't put me under to shove two drains through my buttock into the abcesses. They just shove a big needle in that freezes as they go and then a wire pulls the tube through. I had one and that one was removed after five days and then it turned out I had a second abcess so they put in another one. I knew how painful it was and was hysterical by the time they did it. And I'm pretty tough. I spent two weeks in the hospital that time and, God forgive me, I wanted to die because the pain was so bad and I was in such terrible shape. The recovery has taken so long and I wondered if I'd ever feel anything like normal again. I feel pretty normal now other than getting tired easily and I loathe the idea of putting myself back into any kind of situation that means I'll feel horrible again.

    Anyway, I know all of us here have suffered in many different ways but if we're on here after our diagnosis it means we're still fighting. And that's what really matters. My adult daughter once said she'd never go through what I've been through, she'd tell them she didn't want treatment if she ever finds out she has it. Which is certainly possible, unfortunately. I asked her if she could imagine me looking her and my husband in the eye and telling them that I'm not even going to try, I'm just going to let myself die.

  • Annabelle41415
    Annabelle41415 Member Posts: 6,742 Member
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    Welcome

    Welcome to the group.  As you can tell there are a lot of knowledgeable people here and caring beyond words.  I'm glad that you decided to at least try to start chemo because you can always stop it at any time.  My team of doctors suggested that the follow up chemo would be best for me.  It sounds like you had a pretty rough time at the beginning and can understand why you are so reluctant to move forward with yet another process of healing.  I'm sure that if your daughter was faced with a possible cure and needing treatment she would reconsider her position.  Hopefuly that will never have to be her option so I'm glad that you showed her your strength.  If you can't handle it in the future, please talk to your doctor because they can always reduce the dose.  Wishing you the best moving forward and please let us know how you are doing.

    Kim

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    Welcome

    Welcome to the group.  As you can tell there are a lot of knowledgeable people here and caring beyond words.  I'm glad that you decided to at least try to start chemo because you can always stop it at any time.  My team of doctors suggested that the follow up chemo would be best for me.  It sounds like you had a pretty rough time at the beginning and can understand why you are so reluctant to move forward with yet another process of healing.  I'm sure that if your daughter was faced with a possible cure and needing treatment she would reconsider her position.  Hopefuly that will never have to be her option so I'm glad that you showed her your strength.  If you can't handle it in the future, please talk to your doctor because they can always reduce the dose.  Wishing you the best moving forward and please let us know how you are doing.

    Kim

    Thank you Kim. I'm positive

    Thank you Kim. I'm positive for lupus and the talk on here about how chemo makes things you'd get later- such as arthritis- happen earlier scares me. My hip joints ache almost all the time and I don't know if that's from the previous chemo. I hate how everything now makes us wonder if it's to do with the cancer or the chemo. Today I have a leg that's aching terribly, why is that? I didn't do anything to it. Maybe it's something that would have happened anyway but now I wonder. It breaks my heart that we're all going through this.

    That was one of the hardest parts about going for radiation and chemo, seeing so many other people battling this. It was such a shock when I first heard the numbers. So many of us, it's just heartbreaking. And we'll never be the same. Several times I broke down at the clinic while I was waiting. Seeing someone very frail or elderly, seeing a young woman that had lost her hair, seeing people with containers on their laps. Some days it was completely overwhelming and I'd just sit and cry.

    When I have to go there even for just follow up appointments I can hardly sleep the night before and I cry on the way there.

  • janderson1964
    janderson1964 Member Posts: 2,215 Member
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    Welcome and I am sorry that

    Welcome and I am sorry that you have to be here but this is a great place to be for info and support. It took me 6 years after my diagnosis before I found about this forum. I wish I had found it in the begining like you have. I had 12 rounds of FOLFOX but I was also diagnosed stage IV from the start.

  • Nana b
    Nana b Member Posts: 3,030 Member
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    Welcome and I am sorry that

    Welcome and I am sorry that you have to be here but this is a great place to be for info and support. It took me 6 years after my diagnosis before I found about this forum. I wish I had found it in the begining like you have. I had 12 rounds of FOLFOX but I was also diagnosed stage IV from the start.

    I'm a believer in diet for a cure

    Listen to the Gerson therapy Videos on youtube 

    Listen  to truly Heal on YouTube 

    Read the book radical remission. 

     

    On FB go to the group, Let Food be thy Medicine

     

    The  2014 cancer summit was just on last week but you can still get the presentations  

    http://thecuretocancersummit.com

    Some good articles:

     

    http://www.livingfoodsinstitute.com/about_meetBrenda.php

     

    http://www.beating-cancer-gently.com

     

    I went into remission 2.5 years after Folfox and I stopped my juicing and watching what I ate and the cancer came back, had I known then what I know now, I would not have had chemo, but that is me.  I'm very determined this time that my new life vegan diet is the way to go  It's what I'm doing now, I'm pretty much out of chemo options,  the second time around the cancer is a lot more aggressive  

     

     Cancer isn't about genes all in itself, it's also trauma. Stress, diet, depression, they all play a factor, per all the research I've done daily, almost hourly it's what the experts say.   Remove the cause  

    Stay Strong and make a good choice for you  If you want my email address or phone number  and I'll send you a private message here  

     

  • JanJan63
    JanJan63 Member Posts: 2,478 Member
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    Nana b said:

    I'm a believer in diet for a cure

    Listen to the Gerson therapy Videos on youtube 

    Listen  to truly Heal on YouTube 

    Read the book radical remission. 

     

    On FB go to the group, Let Food be thy Medicine

     

    The  2014 cancer summit was just on last week but you can still get the presentations  

    http://thecuretocancersummit.com

    Some good articles:

     

    http://www.livingfoodsinstitute.com/about_meetBrenda.php

     

    http://www.beating-cancer-gently.com

     

    I went into remission 2.5 years after Folfox and I stopped my juicing and watching what I ate and the cancer came back, had I known then what I know now, I would not have had chemo, but that is me.  I'm very determined this time that my new life vegan diet is the way to go  It's what I'm doing now, I'm pretty much out of chemo options,  the second time around the cancer is a lot more aggressive  

     

     Cancer isn't about genes all in itself, it's also trauma. Stress, diet, depression, they all play a factor, per all the research I've done daily, almost hourly it's what the experts say.   Remove the cause  

    Stay Strong and make a good choice for you  If you want my email address or phone number  and I'll send you a private message here  

     

    Thank you so much for the

    Thank you so much for the links Nana B, I'll check them out. And thank you for the support. Everyone on here has been wonderful.

    Here's what I think. The cancer might or might not come back whether I do the chemo or not. If I do the chemo and it doesn't come back then I'll think the chemo worked. If it comes back then I'll wish I hadn't. If I don't do the chemo and it comes back I'll blame myself for not doing the chemo. And if it doesn't come back I'll think that the chemo wasn't necessary. If I try an alternative therapy with or without chemo I'll think the same things. I have a friend that didn't do any chemo but just ate certain things and still is. He swears by that but the fact is that it's possible that it wouldn't have anyway but because it hasn't he thinks it's working. He has a different kind of cancer somewhere in his throat. I have a benign tumour in my parathyroid and it sounds like he has something similar.

    It would be so much easier if we could find out if there are any cancer cells present long before they do damage. I'm going to do the chemo but maybe I don't have any cancer cells loose at all or maybe so few my body can deal with them. Or maybe it's too late already and I'm just going to make myself more miserable for whatever time I have left. I'm not having a good week right now, my last week before chemo, and I'm feeling really down about that. There are things I want to do while I still feel human. The weather is still nice and I want to ride my horse but I've been too weak. I've been really good for a month or more up until now. Will it always be like this? I need to get back to work as soon as possible and I wonder how I'll be able to stick to a full time job.

  • hippiechicks
    hippiechicks Member Posts: 509 Member
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    Hi there. Welcome to our

    Hi there. Welcome to our little cyber community. Although, sorry you are in this boat.

    I can relate to your dilemma, as I also faced complications after surgery preventing the start of chemo within the first 12 weeks.  I actually was not aware at the time that there was a suggested time, although I recall wanting to desperately begin ASAP.  It took just over 4 months for me to be able to begin my Tx's.

    i do not regret it one bit.  I didn't always like them, and honestly kicked and screamed through all of them, but in the end I can say I did all I could to stop the beast! 

    It is, however, a very personal decision.  I was told by some doctors to march forward and some told me to stand still, I in the end decided to fight the way I always have for what I want ... That is hard and determined.  My chances for recurrence were told to be near 100%, I am currently 2 years NED.  

    No one will ever know if that is from surgery alone or from surgery followed by chemo ... Even if later than hoped. 

    If it helps at all, I think the latest news is that it is still inconclusive, and it is just a theory regarding the time frame in which to begin but in a perfect world (which we clearly are not in) the sooner the better to stop any growth. 

    My very best to you and wish you comfort in your decision process.