Does Radiation Treatment stop the pain?
Comments
-
Pain relief
YES!
A good brief recent (Feb. 2012) summary of the topic is here:
http://www.uptodate.com/contents/radiation-therapy-for-the-management-of-painful-bone-metastases0 -
Radiation...
Hi Bennette,
Standard radiation and chemo therapies are not effective against the spread of RCC, I don't know if it will help manage the pain, what does the doctor say? What med are they going to try, votrient, sutent, etc? If it is effective against the RCC the pain should diminish as well, foxhd had mets to organs and bone with severe pain and as the trial he is on shrunk them his pain went away, as reported here he is doing very well today. I wish I could be of more help. Gary0 -
Radiation and Votrientgarym said:Radiation...
Hi Bennette,
Standard radiation and chemo therapies are not effective against the spread of RCC, I don't know if it will help manage the pain, what does the doctor say? What med are they going to try, votrient, sutent, etc? If it is effective against the RCC the pain should diminish as well, foxhd had mets to organs and bone with severe pain and as the trial he is on shrunk them his pain went away, as reported here he is doing very well today. I wish I could be of more help. Gary
Gary,
The radiation treatment is being done mainly for pain relief, in the hopes my mom will be able to get around better. They are also ordering Votrient and she will be starting that soon. Her oncologist said that bone mets don't respond as well to the drug therapy, but there have been indications that they respond better if the bone mets are also treated with radiation just before or while taking the drug. So we are keeping our fingers crossed. My mom is just in so much pain in her leg and back that it is impossible to get her to see there is HOPE! This whole thing just started Feb 28 and we thought she was just starting to accept the situation when they scheduled to have her kidney removed, but during her recovery the past few weeks and with the added discovery of the bone mets last week, she is losing hope faster than we can supply alternatives. I am trying to get down as much fruits and vetables as possible to keep her strenght up and I am just praying the radiation stops the pain! I believe the pain meds are clouding her judgement and affecting her appetite and her emotions - I need to get the pain stopped and get her off the pain meds so I can get her to see that there is still hope. The oncologist also wants to try the IL2 treatment after she has been on the Votrient for 8 weeks. He feels she needs to build up her strength as she has lost about 20 pounds in the past month. I am soooo worried about her mental state, more so than her physical state right now. Bennette0 -
pain reliefTexas_wedge said:Pain relief
YES!
A good brief recent (Feb. 2012) summary of the topic is here:
http://www.uptodate.com/contents/radiation-therapy-for-the-management-of-painful-bone-metastases
THANKS! That was helpful. I guess we just wait and see, hopefully she will be in the percentage that gets enough relief to end the pain meds. I need to be able to talk to her without the drugs, to find out where she is really at on fighting this monster!
Bennette0 -
Radiation and Votrient...Bennette said:Radiation and Votrient
Gary,
The radiation treatment is being done mainly for pain relief, in the hopes my mom will be able to get around better. They are also ordering Votrient and she will be starting that soon. Her oncologist said that bone mets don't respond as well to the drug therapy, but there have been indications that they respond better if the bone mets are also treated with radiation just before or while taking the drug. So we are keeping our fingers crossed. My mom is just in so much pain in her leg and back that it is impossible to get her to see there is HOPE! This whole thing just started Feb 28 and we thought she was just starting to accept the situation when they scheduled to have her kidney removed, but during her recovery the past few weeks and with the added discovery of the bone mets last week, she is losing hope faster than we can supply alternatives. I am trying to get down as much fruits and vetables as possible to keep her strenght up and I am just praying the radiation stops the pain! I believe the pain meds are clouding her judgement and affecting her appetite and her emotions - I need to get the pain stopped and get her off the pain meds so I can get her to see that there is still hope. The oncologist also wants to try the IL2 treatment after she has been on the Votrient for 8 weeks. He feels she needs to build up her strength as she has lost about 20 pounds in the past month. I am soooo worried about her mental state, more so than her physical state right now. Bennette
Bennette,
Good to learn that the radiation will help with the pain, TW is amazing with research and answers isn't he? Sounds like you are in very good hands with a well thought out plan. Hopefully your mom will find renewed hope with reduced pain and meds. As her main caregiver she will be relying heavily on you so don't forget to take good care of yourself as well.
Good luck and Godspeed,
Gary0 -
caregivinggarym said:Radiation and Votrient...
Bennette,
Good to learn that the radiation will help with the pain, TW is amazing with research and answers isn't he? Sounds like you are in very good hands with a well thought out plan. Hopefully your mom will find renewed hope with reduced pain and meds. As her main caregiver she will be relying heavily on you so don't forget to take good care of yourself as well.
Good luck and Godspeed,
Gary
Gary,
Thanks. I am definitely doing that, trying to eat better myself and get more sleep at night. I still have a 17 year old daughter at home and I take care of my 3 year old grandson from 6:15am - 4:15pm Mon - Fri, as well as manage my husband's dental practice (mainly from home). So my husband is has also made it his responsibility to watch out for ME! He calls me to make sure I remembered to feed myself and listens to me when I need to vent!!! Actually, my grandson has been great since my mom moved in, he plays games with her and carries things around for her and even tells me when she wants something if I am not in the room. Her sister's also came out this week and they are going to come over and stay with her so I don't miss my daughter's soccer and basketball games, since my mom isn't in any shape to go with me right now. I just know she hates having to be cared for, which is why I am hoping that the radiation eases the pain so she can get around without the walker soon. It is strange, as this has progressed and I have been studying up, I am less worried about the cancer itself and more concerned with her mental well-being. It is hard to see your mom weak and helpless and worse to hear her talk about "it not being worth it", etc. But luckily raising 6 children has made me a good pep talker, it is just a bit harder that it is my mom and subject is her life - that is taking its toll - some days worse than others. I don't ever get upset in front of her though, I do that in private so as not to upset her more. My biggest hurddle has been getting use to the idea of idea asking for help, but after missing two of my daughter's games, I realize I am going to have to call and let her sisters and my sisters help out me out so I don't miss out on too much. So, I am still learning myself.
Thanks,
Bennette0 -
Plangarym said:Radiation and Votrient...
Bennette,
Good to learn that the radiation will help with the pain, TW is amazing with research and answers isn't he? Sounds like you are in very good hands with a well thought out plan. Hopefully your mom will find renewed hope with reduced pain and meds. As her main caregiver she will be relying heavily on you so don't forget to take good care of yourself as well.
Good luck and Godspeed,
Gary
I agree with Gary that you sound as though you're handling a difficult situation well.
She will certainly need to be in much better shape to handle Il2 treatment. It would be a good idea to take expert nutritional advice. Fruit and veg are always good but she may need an energy-dense (hyper-caloric) diet to help her regain lost bodyweight and strength. What is her BMI now? (If you don't know it, there are calculators e.g. iPhone app "BMI for ADULTS" and on the Web. Otherwise, just tell her height and weight and we can calculate.)
What size was her tumour? Do you know the grade, from the path report? How old is she? Are they putting her on zoledronic acid (e.g. Zometa) for the bone mets?
Your perception about the need for a clear mind is spot on and the criticality of her mental attitude. Is there any possible problem of informed consent re treatment? If necessary, do you have access to an independent advocate (I don't know whether independent advocacy is community-based in the USA - I'm in Europe).
As Gary counsels, do make sure you are looking after yourself well enough too.0 -
DietTexas_wedge said:Plan
I agree with Gary that you sound as though you're handling a difficult situation well.
She will certainly need to be in much better shape to handle Il2 treatment. It would be a good idea to take expert nutritional advice. Fruit and veg are always good but she may need an energy-dense (hyper-caloric) diet to help her regain lost bodyweight and strength. What is her BMI now? (If you don't know it, there are calculators e.g. iPhone app "BMI for ADULTS" and on the Web. Otherwise, just tell her height and weight and we can calculate.)
What size was her tumour? Do you know the grade, from the path report? How old is she? Are they putting her on zoledronic acid (e.g. Zometa) for the bone mets?
Your perception about the need for a clear mind is spot on and the criticality of her mental attitude. Is there any possible problem of informed consent re treatment? If necessary, do you have access to an independent advocate (I don't know whether independent advocacy is community-based in the USA - I'm in Europe).
As Gary counsels, do make sure you are looking after yourself well enough too.
I haven't taken her to a nutritionist yet. They do have one on staff at KU Med, where she is being treated (in Kansas). I wasn't sure she would be very receptive while in pain and under meds, so I was going to wait until the radiation treatment helps - they are going to do 10 treatments, so it wiill only take 2 weeks to get them all done. Currently, she is about 5'7" and weights 148lbs and she just turned 70 years old in March. I just went with fruits and vegetables because they were the one thing in common in all the cancer diet recommendations I read about. I do still give her a little meat with dinner and usually get her to eat an egg for breakfast, I am just giving her a higher percentage of fruit and vegetables than anything else. To be honest, I don't really know much about diets, but have always been an advocate of fresh versus packaged or canned foods - so I have just been going on my best instints. Any advice in this area is extremely welcome!
Thanks,
Bennette0 -
DietBennette said:Diet
I haven't taken her to a nutritionist yet. They do have one on staff at KU Med, where she is being treated (in Kansas). I wasn't sure she would be very receptive while in pain and under meds, so I was going to wait until the radiation treatment helps - they are going to do 10 treatments, so it wiill only take 2 weeks to get them all done. Currently, she is about 5'7" and weights 148lbs and she just turned 70 years old in March. I just went with fruits and vegetables because they were the one thing in common in all the cancer diet recommendations I read about. I do still give her a little meat with dinner and usually get her to eat an egg for breakfast, I am just giving her a higher percentage of fruit and vegetables than anything else. To be honest, I don't really know much about diets, but have always been an advocate of fresh versus packaged or canned foods - so I have just been going on my best instints. Any advice in this area is extremely welcome!
Thanks,
Bennette
She's a good height for her age and her weight sounds about right for her height as it is now. Your instincts are fine - keep avoiding processed food in favour of fresh as much as possible and get plenty of fluid intake. But do also get expert dietetic advice - handy you can get that at KU.0 -
DietTexas_wedge said:Diet
She's a good height for her age and her weight sounds about right for her height as it is now. Your instincts are fine - keep avoiding processed food in favour of fresh as much as possible and get plenty of fluid intake. But do also get expert dietetic advice - handy you can get that at KU.
Thanks! I will definitely call them and schedule an appointment with the nutritionist during one of our radiation treatment visits next week. At least then I can get some more information and we can make another appointment later, once we can get her off the pain meds or at least signifcantly reduce the amount of them. My mom is a bit stubborn and it is worse on the pain meds, she is kinda child-like so I have to keep nagging at her to eat her vegetables, as she doesn't like them! She is a little better with the fruit. It is actually kinda funny sometimes, my grandson has grown up helping in our garden and loves fresh vegetables, so he even tells her they are good and she needs to eat them as he hands her a piece of broccoli. It would be good to know how much of what she really needs, so I will get an appointment set up - the more info the better!
Thanks,
Bennette0 -
BennetteBennette said:Diet
Thanks! I will definitely call them and schedule an appointment with the nutritionist during one of our radiation treatment visits next week. At least then I can get some more information and we can make another appointment later, once we can get her off the pain meds or at least signifcantly reduce the amount of them. My mom is a bit stubborn and it is worse on the pain meds, she is kinda child-like so I have to keep nagging at her to eat her vegetables, as she doesn't like them! She is a little better with the fruit. It is actually kinda funny sometimes, my grandson has grown up helping in our garden and loves fresh vegetables, so he even tells her they are good and she needs to eat them as he hands her a piece of broccoli. It would be good to know how much of what she really needs, so I will get an appointment set up - the more info the better!
Thanks,
Bennette
Looks like T-W and Gary have covered your questions. I don't know how the radiation helps with the pain, but evidently it does. I have been aware of it being used this way. Good Luck to you and your mom.0 -
physical therapyfoxhd said:Bennette
Looks like T-W and Gary have covered your questions. I don't know how the radiation helps with the pain, but evidently it does. I have been aware of it being used this way. Good Luck to you and your mom.
Foxhd,
If I remember right, you responded when I first came to this place last month after my mom's diagnosis and told me you were in physical therapy. My mom's nurse scheduled her for an appointment with a physical therapist before the radiology doctor saw her and said he wanted to treat it with radiation. The therapist appointment is for Tuesday, I have been trying to decide whether to keep the appointment or cancel it and see how the radiation treatments go first. Do you have any input on that?
Bennette0 -
therapyBennette said:physical therapy
Foxhd,
If I remember right, you responded when I first came to this place last month after my mom's diagnosis and told me you were in physical therapy. My mom's nurse scheduled her for an appointment with a physical therapist before the radiology doctor saw her and said he wanted to treat it with radiation. The therapist appointment is for Tuesday, I have been trying to decide whether to keep the appointment or cancel it and see how the radiation treatments go first. Do you have any input on that?
Bennette
Bennette, cancel the therapy visit if it is out patient. They will get overzealous with treatment. If the therapist is coming to the home, do it. A good homecare therapist will work on increasing independence, mobility and confidence in your moms safety at home. It is a different philosophy in care.0 -
therapyfoxhd said:therapy
Bennette, cancel the therapy visit if it is out patient. They will get overzealous with treatment. If the therapist is coming to the home, do it. A good homecare therapist will work on increasing independence, mobility and confidence in your moms safety at home. It is a different philosophy in care.
You sure earn your keep here bro! So good for us to have a professional on site.0 -
TENSTexas_wedge said:therapy
You sure earn your keep here bro! So good for us to have a professional on site.
Not sure if it will help but you might ask the doc about a (TENS Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation) unit. It might help decrease pain a bit without the nasty side effects of drugs. Radiation hopefully will help as well.
I am currently using a TENS unit, though not for cancer, and it does provide some relief to my otherwise constant sciatica.
http://cancerhelp.cancerresearchuk.org/trials/a-trial-to-see-if-a-nerve-stimulating-machine-called-tens-can-control-bone-cancer-pain0 -
TENSrae_rae said:TENS
Not sure if it will help but you might ask the doc about a (TENS Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation) unit. It might help decrease pain a bit without the nasty side effects of drugs. Radiation hopefully will help as well.
I am currently using a TENS unit, though not for cancer, and it does provide some relief to my otherwise constant sciatica.
http://cancerhelp.cancerresearchuk.org/trials/a-trial-to-see-if-a-nerve-stimulating-machine-called-tens-can-control-bone-cancer-pain
I'm going to ask a friend who HAD RCC and has sciatica if he's tried/heard of TENS (he probably has). Meantime I'd value your thoughts about it Fox.0 -
therapy and tensingTexas_wedge said:TENS
I'm going to ask a friend who HAD RCC and has sciatica if he's tried/heard of TENS (he probably has). Meantime I'd value your thoughts about it Fox.
Thanks fox! I was thinking that might be the case. I will cancel it, but I will also ask about the in home, if she is not doing significantly better after the radiation therapy. We had a bad afternoon and evening yesterday. This stuff must go in waves. She did good the day before and then yesterday, she seemed to be hurting despite the pain meds, it was hard to get anything done her, I had to resort to protein shakes, it was like she was too weak to chew. Then the this morning she seems better again and had an egg and fruit for breakfast without any problem.
I will ask about the tensing, I know my chiropractor has used that on my daughter's knee to help heal from a sports injury.
I just hate seeing her in pain, especially when I can't seem to make it any better. Hopefully today will be a good day!
Thanks all for your input.
Bennette0 -
tensBennette said:therapy and tensing
Thanks fox! I was thinking that might be the case. I will cancel it, but I will also ask about the in home, if she is not doing significantly better after the radiation therapy. We had a bad afternoon and evening yesterday. This stuff must go in waves. She did good the day before and then yesterday, she seemed to be hurting despite the pain meds, it was hard to get anything done her, I had to resort to protein shakes, it was like she was too weak to chew. Then the this morning she seems better again and had an egg and fruit for breakfast without any problem.
I will ask about the tensing, I know my chiropractor has used that on my daughter's knee to help heal from a sports injury.
I just hate seeing her in pain, especially when I can't seem to make it any better. Hopefully today will be a good day!
Thanks all for your input.
Bennette
A tens unit is a good tool. They can be set up in several ways for pain relief. It is important to have the correct electrode placement. A great trick is to put yourself in series with the current. You then can find "trigger" points for electrode placement. Essentially it is used like an ohmeter and you can feel when there is low resistence to the flow of current. This is where the electrodes work the best. There is a very high correlation to the accupunture points. A tens unit works by either providing a counter stimulation to your nerve endings at a higher level of perception, or creating endorphins which are natural pain inhibitors, or what's called the gate theory which keeps the free nerve ending synapse open. Thereby blocking transmission of pain impulse.0 -
tensfoxhd said:tens
A tens unit is a good tool. They can be set up in several ways for pain relief. It is important to have the correct electrode placement. A great trick is to put yourself in series with the current. You then can find "trigger" points for electrode placement. Essentially it is used like an ohmeter and you can feel when there is low resistence to the flow of current. This is where the electrodes work the best. There is a very high correlation to the accupunture points. A tens unit works by either providing a counter stimulation to your nerve endings at a higher level of perception, or creating endorphins which are natural pain inhibitors, or what's called the gate theory which keeps the free nerve ending synapse open. Thereby blocking transmission of pain impulse.
Great stuff - knew there was a good chance you'd come through - thanks, as ever, Fox!0 -
therapy and tensfoxhd said:tens
A tens unit is a good tool. They can be set up in several ways for pain relief. It is important to have the correct electrode placement. A great trick is to put yourself in series with the current. You then can find "trigger" points for electrode placement. Essentially it is used like an ohmeter and you can feel when there is low resistence to the flow of current. This is where the electrodes work the best. There is a very high correlation to the accupunture points. A tens unit works by either providing a counter stimulation to your nerve endings at a higher level of perception, or creating endorphins which are natural pain inhibitors, or what's called the gate theory which keeps the free nerve ending synapse open. Thereby blocking transmission of pain impulse.
Thanks for the info.
I looked into the appointment she has on Tuesday with physical therapy and it is in the spine center and they do have the tens as one of their treatment options. So I think I will keep the appointment on Tuesday and just not let them do anything over zealous and discuss the tens treatment with them to see if they think this would be helpful to her. We have to be at the hospital every day for radiation treatments next week, so I won't have to get her out for a special trip. At least now I have an idea of what to talk to them about, thanks to all of you.
Bennette0
Discussion Boards
- All Discussion Boards
- 6 CSN Information
- 6 Welcome to CSN
- 121.8K Cancer specific
- 2.8K Anal Cancer
- 446 Bladder Cancer
- 309 Bone Cancers
- 1.6K Brain Cancer
- 28.5K Breast Cancer
- 397 Childhood Cancers
- 27.9K Colorectal Cancer
- 4.6K Esophageal Cancer
- 1.2K Gynecological Cancers (other than ovarian and uterine)
- 13K Head and Neck Cancer
- 6.4K Kidney Cancer
- 671 Leukemia
- 792 Liver Cancer
- 4.1K Lung Cancer
- 5.1K Lymphoma (Hodgkin and Non-Hodgkin)
- 237 Multiple Myeloma
- 7.1K Ovarian Cancer
- 61 Pancreatic Cancer
- 487 Peritoneal Cancer
- 5.5K Prostate Cancer
- 1.2K Rare and Other Cancers
- 539 Sarcoma
- 730 Skin Cancer
- 653 Stomach Cancer
- 191 Testicular Cancer
- 1.5K Thyroid Cancer
- 5.8K Uterine/Endometrial Cancer
- 6.3K Lifestyle Discussion Boards