sentinal node questions
Thanks, El
Comments
-
Injections.......
I had 4 of them, and I have to say, they weren't bad at all.....they used a spray numbing agent before each one so it was just a little "sting"........try not to stress about them...and I didn't pee blue either........everyone reacts so differently......
Hang in there0 -
El
I just had this done Monday. I too was so nervous about the injection, I read about it so I "thought" I would at least know what to expect. I was definetely NOT looking forward to it at all! It does feel like a bee sting at first, then a little burning. The last two were a little more uncomfortable but my husband watched and said it probably was because they used more of the fluid on the last two. It's not as bad as I thought it would be though. The tech was very gentle and it was over pretty quick. I wouldn't say it was the worse thing I'd ever experienced though! Don't stress...you'll do just fine!
Hugz,
Cathy0 -
thanks
Thanks everybody. I feel a little better---I may call for an Rx of antianxiety med before the injections. I am being injected monday afternoon and surgery is tuesday am---anybody had a time span like that??
Thanks again, El0 -
Time span.....ms_independent said:thanks
Thanks everybody. I feel a little better---I may call for an Rx of antianxiety med before the injections. I am being injected monday afternoon and surgery is tuesday am---anybody had a time span like that??
Thanks again, El
Mine was done about 45 minutes before my lumpectomy......I also had the wire needle localization done 1 1/2 hours before surgery.....0 -
well .....MAJW said:Injections.......
I had 4 of them, and I have to say, they weren't bad at all.....they used a spray numbing agent before each one so it was just a little "sting"........try not to stress about them...and I didn't pee blue either........everyone reacts so differently......
Hang in there
I'm not sure what you are having. If it's a biopsy ... they will numb you ... but if it's the injection before surgery when they inject the radioactive stuff to "guide" the surgeon to the nodes ... then I'm afraid I sort of agree that it was painful. I was told they could not numb the area before injecting the radioactive stuff ... but I don't remember the reason they couldn't numb it. All I know is ... it hurt (!!!) ... but the doctor did tell me to breathe because that helps move the stuff to the nodes faster. And ... the INSTANT the needle was out they numbed me and I never felt a thing after that. The whole thing doesn't take long ... and you'll do fine.
Check with your doctor to see if it's OK to take a xanax before the procedure ... that will help ... and ... don't forget to breathe!
hugs.
teena0 -
good newsroseann4 said:I was under anesthesia
That's odd. I was under during surgery. I didn't feel a thing.
Roseann
Ladies, I live in the Phoenix area. In June I got the dx of DCIS. My surgeons did not think sentinal node was necessary. So I did not have to undergo that procedure.
What I want you to know, however, is that on the FRONT PAGE of the "Arizona Republic" newspaper that serves the greater Phoenix area, right after my rads were done in September of this year, there was an article about a local radiation technician who had developed a technique to make the dye injection pain free. He first injects buffered lidocaine. Ta da. How simple is that? He said he can't understand why other rad people don't do it.
I know that is what my rad onc injected in each of the 90 sites on my breast where a needle went through before he placed the catheters. Now, my sites were not the ultra sensitive nipple part of the breast, but I can tell you I didn't feel a thing.
So, PLEASE ask your rad people to look into this!! It doesn't have to be painful!!!
Connie0 -
I was told that some people
I was told that some people don't feel the technesium injection at all, others it feels like a bee sting. Mine felt like a bee sting, but not overly painful. When I told her it was stinging, she just injected it slowly so as to minimize the pain. Honestly, most bee stings and wasp stings hurt much worse than this injection, and it only hurt when being injected; once it was in, there was no pain at all.
The blue dye injection was not painful in the slightest. Be forewarned that the blue dye eventually is processed by the kidneys and you'll be peeing Smurf blue for a day or so! I was glad the doctor warned me of that or I would have been worried!
(edited to add:) My surgeon used a double technique: injecting the radioactive technesium as well as blue dye, as 2 separate injections. They then check the lymph nodes with a hand-held geiger counter for the presence of technesium, and visually see if any lymph nodes are turning blue from the uptake of the blue dye. She said sometimes a sentinel node absorbs one and not the other, and this is a double-safety check. Whatever the blue dye was that they injected, it definitely had me peeing blue for a day after it was filtered by my kidneys.0 -
Dear MS, I can't comment onWhoknowz said:Like a bee sting
That part was the easiest of the prep for me. I just felt a brief sting and that was it. It came about 2 hours before my surgery, and I didn't pee blue either.
Dear MS, I can't comment on the sentinal node as I haven't had that yet but I'll be asking my surgeon about that next week. When I had my first 2 biopsies it was so painful to me they had to stop. My BP went up too high and I felt faint. I told them I didn't get numb easy. I had a 3rd biospy done at a different place and told the Dr. before she started what had happened before. She said she couldn't understand me having any pain as they could pump gallons of lidocaine if I needed it. And this time I couldn't feel a thing. I think it depends on the drs and techs that do the procedures. SO anytime I need it I'm going to ask for gallons.0 -
a solution to the painSunrae said:Dear MS, I can't comment on
Dear MS, I can't comment on the sentinal node as I haven't had that yet but I'll be asking my surgeon about that next week. When I had my first 2 biopsies it was so painful to me they had to stop. My BP went up too high and I felt faint. I told them I didn't get numb easy. I had a 3rd biospy done at a different place and told the Dr. before she started what had happened before. She said she couldn't understand me having any pain as they could pump gallons of lidocaine if I needed it. And this time I couldn't feel a thing. I think it depends on the drs and techs that do the procedures. SO anytime I need it I'm going to ask for gallons.
ms_independent, please read my post above. It doesn't have to hurt and there is someone in Phoenix who won an award for discovering that! Tell your docs! I'll see if I can find more details about that article and come back and post it here.0 -
The wire needle localizationms_independent said:thanks
Thanks everybody. I feel a little better---I may call for an Rx of antianxiety med before the injections. I am being injected monday afternoon and surgery is tuesday am---anybody had a time span like that??
Thanks again, El
The wire needle localization was done about 1-1/2 hours before the lumpectomy and the injections were done about 45 minutes before surgery. As with other treatments, different doctors have different procedures. Not surprising.0 -
Lidocaine cream
When I met with my surgeon's nurse before my lumpectomy w/sentinal node biopsy, she suggested that I might want to use Emla (or its generic version) in advance of the injections. I agreed, because I'd had severe pain with the needle biopsy. Emla is by prescription; I put on a pretty thick layer an hour before I left for the hospital and covered it with plastic wrap (which was the best/only laugh I had that day!). Even with the cream, the 4th injection was painful; the tech said I must not have spread it as thickly in that area.
Good luck - I'm sure you can get through this.
rainbow40 -
Emla creamrainbow4 said:Lidocaine cream
When I met with my surgeon's nurse before my lumpectomy w/sentinal node biopsy, she suggested that I might want to use Emla (or its generic version) in advance of the injections. I agreed, because I'd had severe pain with the needle biopsy. Emla is by prescription; I put on a pretty thick layer an hour before I left for the hospital and covered it with plastic wrap (which was the best/only laugh I had that day!). Even with the cream, the 4th injection was painful; the tech said I must not have spread it as thickly in that area.
Good luck - I'm sure you can get through this.
rainbow4
I'm such a ditz. It wasn't the buffered lidocaine this guy used, it was Emla cream (which I also used prior to the catheter insertions, sheesh). Can't even claim "chemo brain"! To avoid the pitfalls of infecting anyone's computers, I will not put the link here, but will paste part of the article.
Good luck!
...........
Crowe began enlisting surgeons and nurses to help him come up with a protocol. One of them was Dr. Katherine McCuaig, a general surgeon, who helped Crowe sift through even more journals in the hopes of finding an effective method for administering the cream. Finally, a little more than a year after that fortysomething patient launched him on his quest, they began testing it on patients in September 2007.
They spent six months experimenting with various doses of the EMLA cream to find out which worked best to numb the areola.
To compare results with those who received the cream, they called previous patients who had the procedure without an anesthetic and asked them to describe their pain to set a baseline.
They finally hit on an effective dose and application, which now is a standard of care at Banner Baywood.
Now, other hospitals are taking notice.
Later this month, their research will be presented online at a national symposium on breast cancer in San Francisco. From there, Crowe and McCuaig expect it will become a standard for sentinel-node biopsies.
"We're seeing considerably less patients feeling significant pain now than before," Crowe said. "We're at the point where 90 percent of our patients are not having pain."0 -
I wish I'd seen this before I had mine donecrselby said:Emla cream
I'm such a ditz. It wasn't the buffered lidocaine this guy used, it was Emla cream (which I also used prior to the catheter insertions, sheesh). Can't even claim "chemo brain"! To avoid the pitfalls of infecting anyone's computers, I will not put the link here, but will paste part of the article.
Good luck!
...........
Crowe began enlisting surgeons and nurses to help him come up with a protocol. One of them was Dr. Katherine McCuaig, a general surgeon, who helped Crowe sift through even more journals in the hopes of finding an effective method for administering the cream. Finally, a little more than a year after that fortysomething patient launched him on his quest, they began testing it on patients in September 2007.
They spent six months experimenting with various doses of the EMLA cream to find out which worked best to numb the areola.
To compare results with those who received the cream, they called previous patients who had the procedure without an anesthetic and asked them to describe their pain to set a baseline.
They finally hit on an effective dose and application, which now is a standard of care at Banner Baywood.
Now, other hospitals are taking notice.
Later this month, their research will be presented online at a national symposium on breast cancer in San Francisco. From there, Crowe and McCuaig expect it will become a standard for sentinel-node biopsies.
"We're seeing considerably less patients feeling significant pain now than before," Crowe said. "We're at the point where 90 percent of our patients are not having pain."
by far the worst pain I've EVER had in my life. I even had crying spells for weeks afterward every time I thought about it. No one told me that I was NOT going to be given any numbing agent, and my sister was put out for hers. The surgery was a half hour later! Why couldn't they put me out??? Well I complained to the hospital, the surgeon, and everyone who would listen to me and now I understand they are using lidocaine. I hope all the horrendous pain was for that reason. NO ONE should have to go through that in this day and age!!!!! Make SURE you check this out first! Good luck! (p.s I'm in Vero Beach , Fl)0 -
Pain
El,
My biopsy was very painful, too. I guess I am also "unusual". My injections (4) for the node sampling weren't that bad. Like a bee sting. Try to breathe through it and try not to look when they are injecting you - it might reduce some of the stress that could make it uncomfortable.
Good luck!0 -
for meMama G said:I wish I'd seen this before I had mine done
by far the worst pain I've EVER had in my life. I even had crying spells for weeks afterward every time I thought about it. No one told me that I was NOT going to be given any numbing agent, and my sister was put out for hers. The surgery was a half hour later! Why couldn't they put me out??? Well I complained to the hospital, the surgeon, and everyone who would listen to me and now I understand they are using lidocaine. I hope all the horrendous pain was for that reason. NO ONE should have to go through that in this day and age!!!!! Make SURE you check this out first! Good luck! (p.s I'm in Vero Beach , Fl)
I went to the nucular lab of the hospitial and was given 4 radioactive injections right around the right nipple.. no numbing and it did feel like a sting for a second. Then i was put on a table where they scanned me. Next I waited for about an hour then went up to surgery. I was put under a general anistetic. The Doc then injected the blue dye and using the geiger found the sentinal node and removed 2 nodes. This was done 2 weeks before my bilateral masectomy.0 -
thanks
Thanks everybody. I picked up my Emla cream on Friday. I feel so much less frightened knowing I can use that AND that it really helps.
El0 -
Please let us know how it went...ms_independent said:thanks
Thanks everybody. I picked up my Emla cream on Friday. I feel so much less frightened knowing I can use that AND that it really helps.
El
I'll be praying for you.0
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