A Warning about Scans
I came back to Canada with the CT Scan and PET Scan and records of all their findings from Florida. Having made this excursion to the U.S. seemed to speed things up here-- almost immediately, I saw a chemo oncologist and gave him my medical records in Florida including the DVDs of the scans. I asked him if I had to go ahead with a scheduled MRI here in Canada since I had had the PET scan in the US. He said I did. He told me that MRIs SHOW THE PELVIC AREA MUCH BETTER THAN DO PET SCANS. I had the MRI and it showed that I not only have lymph node involvement but that I have a sizable (1.6 cm) cancer in my lymph nodes! We again consulted the oncologists in Florida who once again went over my scans from there and found absolutely no indication of lymph node involvement.
Had I not had the MRI, I would not be being treated for the cancer in my lymph nodes. So, I know that perhaps this message will cause alarm to some people but I just couldn't keep this information to myself. If you are newly in treatment, ask your doctor about an MRI.
Carol
Comments
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Thank you so much
It is at least worth mentioning this to our docs so they know we are aware of what could be missed. Sometimes its for insurance reasons but then one should be given the option of paying out of pocket. Thank you for the helpful info and good luck as you continue with your treatment.0 -
Had all Three Tests Before Treatment
I had CT, PET and MRI tests run before any treatment. The MRI was the last test run of the three tests. The MRI showed one enlarged lymph node where the CT and PET scans did not. The radiation oncologist treated this lymoh node as if it had cancer. As it ended up I had Stage 2 cancer meaning there was no cancer in my enlarged lymph node. The chemo doctor said sometimes the lymph node can be enlarged as a result of all the tests being run simultaneously.0 -
Thanks!sephie said:good info. thanks
At MD Anderson the radiation includes the lymph nodes in the pelvic area whether the scans show node involvement or not. so hopefully we are all covered. hope so. thanks for info sephie
Good info. Same at Scott & White in Temple, Texas. Lymph nodes are treated regardless.0 -
Funny how these scan results
Funny how these scan results are all over the place. I had all three for cervical cancer, MRI first, then a PET/CT. MRI showed no lymph node involvement and a very superficial lesion. The PET/CT picked up 2 positive pelvic lymph nodes. Lucky the pet scan lit up as the nodes were not all that large, despite the fact a tumor was growing in one of them. Surgically respected with rad hysterectomy and followed by aggressive chemo and rads.0 -
Scans
Good information Thank you. When do you start your treatments?0 -
All Testsccfighter said:Funny how these scan results
Funny how these scan results are all over the place. I had all three for cervical cancer, MRI first, then a PET/CT. MRI showed no lymph node involvement and a very superficial lesion. The PET/CT picked up 2 positive pelvic lymph nodes. Lucky the pet scan lit up as the nodes were not all that large, despite the fact a tumor was growing in one of them. Surgically respected with rad hysterectomy and followed by aggressive chemo and rads.
I think this is the reason for running the MRI,CT, And PET scans to make certain all evidence of cancer is picked up before treatment.0
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