1st PET post treatment
Comments
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Hi olybee
Normally I just wait and here what the doctor has to say about the PET scan and then question him from there. Also ask for a copy of the report so you can take it home and go over it, I use Google to help me understand a lot of what it is saying. Just make sure you are in one of the medical sites and not reading someone post about what they believe.
Will keep you in prayer for the report tomorrow
╠╣ONDO0 -
Get the report while you are thereHondo said:Hi olybee
Normally I just wait and here what the doctor has to say about the PET scan and then question him from there. Also ask for a copy of the report so you can take it home and go over it, I use Google to help me understand a lot of what it is saying. Just make sure you are in one of the medical sites and not reading someone post about what they believe.
Will keep you in prayer for the report tomorrow
╠╣ONDO
Ask for a copy as soon as you arrive. This gives you time to go over it and formulate questions. Doctors are wonderful people but are always rushed and it's to late once you are in the parking lot.
You want to concentrate on the size, appearance, location, and uptake of anything found. Ask questions accordingly.0 -
just a suggestion
jot down all questions on a list before the appt. I asked the doctor if he minded if I taped the appt. because I would always forget or not be clear on something later. I used the recorder on my iphone and it works great.
Hope you get a great report!
Robin0 -
Third person & tape recorderfisrpotpe said:Third
I suggest you take a third person with you to take notes, that way you will not get confused later.
Sorry I do not know your whole history and status so hard to help you make a list.
Good luck
John
Brilliant suggestions, but I didn't read them until after the appointment. That's something to remember for the future, though. THANKS0 -
1st PET RESULTSolybee said:Third person & tape recorder
Brilliant suggestions, but I didn't read them until after the appointment. That's something to remember for the future, though. THANKS
I HATE CANCER!
That's now out of my system, so here's what I know. There's a hot spot in the same tonsil/lymph node area as pre-surgery/radiation PET. It is a horseshoe shape around the two biggest tumors. Dr. put scope down there and said it looks very irritated, but some tissue could be tumor, could be inflamed scar tissue, not sure. She then put her hand and finger down there, said it didn't feel like a tumor to her, and she's felt lots of tumors. So her suggestion is wait six weeks (unless something hurts or he feels he needs to see her.) At six weeks she'll see him again, scope & feel again.
Any comments? I'm SCARED. I want to run out and get another opinion, but I am just running scared is the truth. I am such a control freak, and I want to MAKE IT GO AWAY. Guess this is just a lesson to me that I cannot control everything. HELP folks. Caregivers out there, how do you do it? Cancer folks out there, how do you do it? I have such a new-found respect for all who do this battle. IT STINKS!!0 -
Square oneolybee said:1st PET RESULTS
I HATE CANCER!
That's now out of my system, so here's what I know. There's a hot spot in the same tonsil/lymph node area as pre-surgery/radiation PET. It is a horseshoe shape around the two biggest tumors. Dr. put scope down there and said it looks very irritated, but some tissue could be tumor, could be inflamed scar tissue, not sure. She then put her hand and finger down there, said it didn't feel like a tumor to her, and she's felt lots of tumors. So her suggestion is wait six weeks (unless something hurts or he feels he needs to see her.) At six weeks she'll see him again, scope & feel again.
Any comments? I'm SCARED. I want to run out and get another opinion, but I am just running scared is the truth. I am such a control freak, and I want to MAKE IT GO AWAY. Guess this is just a lesson to me that I cannot control everything. HELP folks. Caregivers out there, how do you do it? Cancer folks out there, how do you do it? I have such a new-found respect for all who do this battle. IT STINKS!!
I know how you feel. I am quickly learning that to expect definitive answers is simply too much to ask. My first CT scan post ChemoRadiation came back with a conclusion of, "We're Concerned." This resulted in the endoscopy and hands on exam with the ENT surgeon informing me that there was still swelling in my affected left tonsil primary, however he said that in cases of residual cancer there is almost always a visible "crust" or "cap" on the surface that looks very much like the radiation burns you find immediately after the last radiation treatments. The rest of the pathology report refused to rule our residual cancer in all but one of the treated nodes, resulting in a determination that I can consider myself back to square one and starting all over as if this were my first visit. You are now in the same boat and I can tell you it is a tough one to row after going through months of pain and anguish now seemingly for nothing. That said, the answer to your question, "how do you do it?" is a very simple one. When faced with no choice there are few things a human being cannot adapt too and over come. They just seem to be more amplified and fantastical when you're on the outside looking in. We're not doing anything special. We simply have little choice as we either deal with it, or allow it to deal with us.
You have good reason to be scared. If the first round of treatments fail your range of options are decreased significantly with median statistics for a chance of success becoming even less optimistic for the long term. I wish I could tell you exactly what works from this point, but I am just now entering into it myself. All I can say for sure is that I know what I have been though and I have no intention of doing it again, so, when my Biopsy results come back this time, I will just be prepared for the worst while praying for the best.
Best wishes to you,
Nick0 -
On second opinionsolybee said:1st PET RESULTS
I HATE CANCER!
That's now out of my system, so here's what I know. There's a hot spot in the same tonsil/lymph node area as pre-surgery/radiation PET. It is a horseshoe shape around the two biggest tumors. Dr. put scope down there and said it looks very irritated, but some tissue could be tumor, could be inflamed scar tissue, not sure. She then put her hand and finger down there, said it didn't feel like a tumor to her, and she's felt lots of tumors. So her suggestion is wait six weeks (unless something hurts or he feels he needs to see her.) At six weeks she'll see him again, scope & feel again.
Any comments? I'm SCARED. I want to run out and get another opinion, but I am just running scared is the truth. I am such a control freak, and I want to MAKE IT GO AWAY. Guess this is just a lesson to me that I cannot control everything. HELP folks. Caregivers out there, how do you do it? Cancer folks out there, how do you do it? I have such a new-found respect for all who do this battle. IT STINKS!!
We benefit from understanding ourselves well enough to decide if getting a second opinion reflects our lack of faith in our provider or is simply a manifestation of our fear. It matters, because we can sometimes cloud our judgment with second opinions, which may not be any better than our first opinions were.
One way of handling all of this is to learn how not to fight tomorrow's battles today. that's easy for me to say, but much harder to do. Whether tomorrow's scan is positive, or whether this disease is going to reoccur and require more disabling treatment, or whether we are ultimately to die of this disease, it is all for the future to decide.
I've been through a fair amount of treatment, relapse, replanning, and retreatment, and am currently back in process again. I have disease that, to be honest, may very well kill me. Eventually. But not today. Today is pretty good. Not perfect by my old standards, but pretty good.
I choose to live in today. I'll let tomorrow tell me what I need to do then.
Best regards0 -
THANKSlongtermsurvivor said:On second opinions
We benefit from understanding ourselves well enough to decide if getting a second opinion reflects our lack of faith in our provider or is simply a manifestation of our fear. It matters, because we can sometimes cloud our judgment with second opinions, which may not be any better than our first opinions were.
One way of handling all of this is to learn how not to fight tomorrow's battles today. that's easy for me to say, but much harder to do. Whether tomorrow's scan is positive, or whether this disease is going to reoccur and require more disabling treatment, or whether we are ultimately to die of this disease, it is all for the future to decide.
I've been through a fair amount of treatment, relapse, replanning, and retreatment, and am currently back in process again. I have disease that, to be honest, may very well kill me. Eventually. But not today. Today is pretty good. Not perfect by my old standards, but pretty good.
I choose to live in today. I'll let tomorrow tell me what I need to do then.
Best regards
for your responses, everyone. Longtermsurvivor, you hit the nail on the head with your first sentence. I have to say, I'm thinking long and hard about why I want a second opinion, because I don't want to do it simply as a manifestation of my fear. I do need to learn how to not fight tomorrow's battles today. I have this desire to fight it all now and make it go away - hah, if life were that easy, right? Anyway, you have such a great attitude, and I just told my husband about your statement, "I choose to live in today. I'll let tomorrow tell me what I need to do then." I'm posting a sticky-note to my monitor to remind me of that. It will be something I will say to myself every day. EXCELLENT advice and attitude on your part.
THANK YOU!0
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