My Onco. on Cold/Ice Caps and Scalp Cancer

Since I am pretty bald by now (3 weeks into chemo) I guess I am reacting to my new look

Comments
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I think this is an important issue, so thank you for highlighting what you learned. If someone I loved ever had to go through chemo, I would urge them not to use any kind of ice/cold cap, for exactly the reasons you're talking about. When I did chemo myself, the last thing I would have wanted was to do was anything that might cancel out any cancer-killing effects. Die, little cancer bugs, die -- no, you don't get to hide from the chemo in my scalp!
I've shared this before here, but it usually makes everyone giggle, so I'll share it again: When I did chemo, for some reason the first place where I lost my hair was in the "southern region." So my girlfriend (oh-so-helpfully) suggested that I sit through my next infusion with an ice bag between my legs -- mainly just to see what kind of reaction we would have got from the chemo nurses!
:-) Traci0 -
Thank you
My onc feels the same way...
I saw an old thread bumped up yesterday about this and then a new one started that disappeared very fast and I figured that someone reported it as offensive. The new thread was definitely a sales pitch and I was about to respond with the same information but by the time I wanted to, it was gone. Also the person that posted (their first post) was not listed in the member directory so perhaps they were "banned" from the site. I wanted to thank the people that maintain this site for their vigilance!
As much as I miss my long (dyed blond) hair, I wouldn't want to take the chance. My hair is started to come in pretty fast in a mostly salt with a little pepper now (I'm about 8 weeks out of chemo)--looking like a marine with a short buzz cut--about 1/2 inch. I'm toying with the idea of going coverless very soon!
JoAnn0 -
That is too funny!TraciInLA said:I think this is an important issue, so thank you for highlighting what you learned. If someone I loved ever had to go through chemo, I would urge them not to use any kind of ice/cold cap, for exactly the reasons you're talking about. When I did chemo myself, the last thing I would have wanted was to do was anything that might cancel out any cancer-killing effects. Die, little cancer bugs, die -- no, you don't get to hide from the chemo in my scalp!
I've shared this before here, but it usually makes everyone giggle, so I'll share it again: When I did chemo, for some reason the first place where I lost my hair was in the "southern region." So my girlfriend (oh-so-helpfully) suggested that I sit through my next infusion with an ice bag between my legs -- mainly just to see what kind of reaction we would have got from the chemo nurses!
:-) Traci
I can see the eye rolls now if you had done that!!!!0 -
Wow--I didn't know this!joannstar said:Thank you
My onc feels the same way...
I saw an old thread bumped up yesterday about this and then a new one started that disappeared very fast and I figured that someone reported it as offensive. The new thread was definitely a sales pitch and I was about to respond with the same information but by the time I wanted to, it was gone. Also the person that posted (their first post) was not listed in the member directory so perhaps they were "banned" from the site. I wanted to thank the people that maintain this site for their vigilance!
As much as I miss my long (dyed blond) hair, I wouldn't want to take the chance. My hair is started to come in pretty fast in a mostly salt with a little pepper now (I'm about 8 weeks out of chemo)--looking like a marine with a short buzz cut--about 1/2 inch. I'm toying with the idea of going coverless very soon!
JoAnn
I did have an English friend tell me about this--I didn't do it. My feeling is--the hair loss is so, so temporary--it wasn't a big deal for me. And talk about easy maintenance! Right now, 7 months post last chemo, I have a really cute pixie cut that everyone says is cute.
Hugs, Renee0
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