Breast Fluid
Josie
Comments
-
Hi Josie and Lesley,
I had a neighbor who told me her breasts got fluid after a lumpectemy. Apparently her issue was that when lymph nodes were removed the fluid built up. This also sometimes happens in the arms of mastectomy patients. Josie and Lesley..are your arms a bit swollen? I have also hear steroids like Prednisone might help.
-Michael (leukemia survivor)0 -
Hey Josie,
I also had fluid in my breast! I didn't even realize it until I had my first post-lumpectomy mammogram and there was this fluid where my tumor had been. My surgeon called it a seroma.
It grew to the point where it filled out my lumpectomy site (which was kinda nice) and my surgeon drained it twice. He said that if it filled again I could either live with it or have it surgically excised. I chose to live with it til about a year later when it got so full it was painful.
Right around that time, I decided to have breast reconstruction and had the seroma removed at the same time. It did not come back but the tissue there is hard and very un-breast like. My plastic surgeon says its from the radiation therapy.
I was very freaked out by the whole fluid thing and couldn't keep my hands off of it which is always interesting in public. I did some reading on it and seromas are very common after removal of a large amount of tissue. Some people get them after tummy tucks. Anyway, my surgeon said they sometimes reabsorb and that some patients like them because, as I said, they make the breast a more normal shape.
I posted my concerns on this very site when I was messing with my "fluid issues" and no one knew much about it so I'm glad I could help....well, if I helped that is!
Blessings,
Karen0 -
Very interesting Karen. Thanks for the heads up.jamjar62 said:Hey Josie,
I also had fluid in my breast! I didn't even realize it until I had my first post-lumpectomy mammogram and there was this fluid where my tumor had been. My surgeon called it a seroma.
It grew to the point where it filled out my lumpectomy site (which was kinda nice) and my surgeon drained it twice. He said that if it filled again I could either live with it or have it surgically excised. I chose to live with it til about a year later when it got so full it was painful.
Right around that time, I decided to have breast reconstruction and had the seroma removed at the same time. It did not come back but the tissue there is hard and very un-breast like. My plastic surgeon says its from the radiation therapy.
I was very freaked out by the whole fluid thing and couldn't keep my hands off of it which is always interesting in public. I did some reading on it and seromas are very common after removal of a large amount of tissue. Some people get them after tummy tucks. Anyway, my surgeon said they sometimes reabsorb and that some patients like them because, as I said, they make the breast a more normal shape.
I posted my concerns on this very site when I was messing with my "fluid issues" and no one knew much about it so I'm glad I could help....well, if I helped that is!
Blessings,
Karen
Lesley0 -
Thanks everyone! It is almost to the point of pain. I can barely sleep on my tummy these days because of the fluid. I have my first post-lumpectomy mammogram in April. I'll find out more then.jamjar62 said:Hey Josie,
I also had fluid in my breast! I didn't even realize it until I had my first post-lumpectomy mammogram and there was this fluid where my tumor had been. My surgeon called it a seroma.
It grew to the point where it filled out my lumpectomy site (which was kinda nice) and my surgeon drained it twice. He said that if it filled again I could either live with it or have it surgically excised. I chose to live with it til about a year later when it got so full it was painful.
Right around that time, I decided to have breast reconstruction and had the seroma removed at the same time. It did not come back but the tissue there is hard and very un-breast like. My plastic surgeon says its from the radiation therapy.
I was very freaked out by the whole fluid thing and couldn't keep my hands off of it which is always interesting in public. I did some reading on it and seromas are very common after removal of a large amount of tissue. Some people get them after tummy tucks. Anyway, my surgeon said they sometimes reabsorb and that some patients like them because, as I said, they make the breast a more normal shape.
I posted my concerns on this very site when I was messing with my "fluid issues" and no one knew much about it so I'm glad I could help....well, if I helped that is!
Blessings,
Karen0
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