Sunday, June 19, 2022

Are Your Hands Burning after Chemotherapy?

I read about different skin irritations that you can get from Chemotherapy.  I have delicate skin so I expected to have run-ins with some skin reactions. With Triple Negative Breast Cancer treatments, I'm expecting all kinds of adverse reactions as the weeks progress. 

After my first infusion, I did feel tingling in my arms and legs that lasted all night long and kept me awake. I found a solution to that by using Cold gloves and cold socks. I keep them in the freezer, and take them in a cooler with me to my infusions. Once the infusion begins, I put them on and I'm good to go. No more tingling-or so I thought.

The new sensation wasn't exactly tingling. It was more like burning and itching. I started to feel it in some spots on my fingers, palm side after the fifth chemo infusion. I mentioned it to my Oncology PA. She said some people reported that sensation on the tips of fingers after typing or the palms of hands if doing something physical. 


It's a sensation that comes and goes. It's more prevalent after I've been fixing a meal, opening a jar, etc. I'm feeling it more often as I do things around the house. I find myself scratching the palms of my hands. The itching and burning aren't intense but are still there. 

You can see from the photos that different areas are irritated based upon what activity I've undertaken. I've had the sensation pop up in my lower back, under my thighs after sitting on the edge of a wooden chair for too long, etc.


                     

I'm going to try to keep the cold gloves on longer this week. I got such a good pair that the frozen part is really thick and cold, and lasts a long time. I was keeping them on one hand and switching off so I had my hands free, plus they're really gold. Maybe I'll leave them out a bit before my infusion starts to I can keep them on longer. 


Saturday, June 4, 2022

Chemotherapy and The Great Hair Loss

A friend of mine opted for an expensive cold capping treatment so she wouldn’t lose her hair from chemotherapy. 

If I were younger, I’d probably care more but I was ready to lose it, or do I thought.

My Oncologist says I might or might not lose it during the first series of treatments but guaranteed I’d lose it for the 2nd round. 

I had my hair cut extra short, put my hairdresser on alert, and sat back. I have fairly thick hair so I figured it would probably only thin out some in the beginning. 

To my surprise, the morning of my third infusion, it started to fall out! The shower drain was full of my hair, 

My hair was pretty short and wavy so I didn’t usually brush it, just ran my fingers through it. That morning it came out in my hands when I ran my fingers through my hair!

I dealt with it another few days and then made an appointment with my hairdresser to cut it all off four days after the fallout began.

Now that it's gone, it's a bit weird. I don't see myself as much as my husband so I don't wear a headscarf when I'm inside in the SC heat. He doesn't care. I'm often taken aback a bit when I do see myself in a mirror. 

I expect to be completely bald with the next series of infusions. Meanwhile, my hair is really short and any fallout is much easier to manage.!

Getting Ready
My supportive angel

Shave it off!
Layer by layer she kept going

Scar from falling off a horse
Close enough

How does this work

Let the expert do it

We did it together

The new lighter me


 

Monday, May 23, 2022

Chemotherapy Tricks

 Things happened so fast for me. I barely had time to think about having Breast Cancer. I had so many appointments, immediate surgery, schedules to manage, wondering what I need to do to recover from surgery, backup surgical bras to order, will I go bald, and do I need to order caps in advance to cover my head, just to name a few.

I'll try to touch on many of these items throughout my blog posts. 

Here are just some tips to be prepared before your first infusion:

1. Get an implantable port

I was able to schedule the insertion of a port prior to my first infusion. Granted, it was the morning of, but so worth it to me to not have to mess with IV needles every week! Here's a nice explanation of an implantable port from the Sloan Kettering Website. Ask your doctor if you need one. I did because my particular chemo infusions can be pretty toxic to my veins. Also, my treatments will go on for at least 6 months. It also made the weekly blood tests and any extra blood tests any other doctors needed so easy! At my Cancer Center, they mostly use power ports. 

2. Buy cold socks and cold gloves 

These are readily available online. Just search for chemotherapy socks or gloves. Wear them during your infusion to ward off tingling sensations. I had them in my legs and arms all night after my first infusion and didn’t sleep a wink.

Since wearing these each week, the tingling sensations were greatly reduced. (I've since encountered another problem with tingling). I cant go without these and have worn them during the week too!

3. Buy a Chemo port shirt. 

Again, readily available online. The one I bought has zippers across the shoulders, at the neckline, part way down the front, and across the top of each breast. It has long sleeves which are great even in summer in cold hospital rooms.

Pink shirt with zippers in front, on shoulders and on above both breasts
The nurse can take your labs from your port, which you give before every infusion. With the shirt, the access tube extends through the zipper opening. She takes my blood and leaves the short access tube in. I can see my Oncologist or go to a waiting room or chemo chair before being hooked up to my infusion. 

The nurses have all commented on my shirt. Even the receptionists have commented about how pretty it is!

Regular shirts with openings in the front work, but everything’s not as easily accessible as it is with the chemo shirt. I have one friend who didn't know about these shirts, She was stripping off her shirt with each infusion and freezing. I bought mine from a Small Business called Port Fashions. They sell their shirts for Women and Men on Amazon and Etsy

4. Bring a blanket, drinks, and, snacks with you

The Chemo group may have warm hospital blankets or small bottles of water or juice handy. However, it’s not the same as having a snuggly throw blanket or quilt from home.

Their small bottles are not enough to keep you as hydrated as you need to be on infusion day and throughout your treatments in general. If your infusion happens close to lunchtime, you can get hungry. They may have crackers or an occasional kind soul drops off fresh fruit or bagels, but if you're really hungry, you need nourishments. I've seen patients bring in meals that need to be microwaved. I tend to take nuts, juices, even Ensure. ANything to keep up my nourishment and eat or drink without too much fuss.

5. Bring headphones, AirPods, etc. 

You can’t spend the whole infusion time reading facebook posts! If your hands are covered with cold mittens, you can't scroll very easily. Make it easy to listen to audiobooks, music, etc. You can borrow audio books from your local library. 

6. Buy REAL Silk Pajamas and/or a Silk Pillowcase

OK, so this last one is especially for those with sensitive skin. A real silk (not satin) nightgown, P.J's, nightshirt feels great on sensitive skin– IF and this is a big IF, you wear the nightgown inside out?!?

I mention this because I bought a silk nightgown that feels great on the outside, but is not as nice on the inside. The silk pillowcase I bought is nice and silky on the outside. They are great for those sensitive bald heads some of us are dealing with nowadays. 

I also just bought real bamboo sheets and they have every silk feel to them! They also help to keep you cool–a problem I now seem to have during chemo. ðŸ˜… I'm also going to order a nightgown made from bamboo. 

Hopefully, these suggestions will help get you through your chemotherapy infusions regardless of your particular form of cancer.

Monday, April 18, 2022

What Is TNBC?

There are several websites and articles that will explain Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) in greater detail than I can here.

TNBC doesn’t have receptors for estrogen and progesterone hormones, and the HER2 (human epidermal growth factor) protein. Most breast cancers are positive for one or more of these. Since it doesn't have any positive receptors for those 3 categories, you end up with Triple Negative.

TNBC only appears in 10 to 15% of breast cancer cases. Its usual targets are Black or Latinx women, under 40, with a BRCA gene mutation. A BReast CAncer gene mutation indicates over a 50% chance you’ll develop breast cancer. 

Without hormone receptors or HER2 receptors to target, TNBC is tough to treat. It spreads quickly so often surgery first, followed by aggressive chemotherapy. Depending on how large the cancer is and if it’s spread into the lymph nodes, radiation may be included in that package. Some patients may also need immunotherapy.

There are no guarantees with a TNBC diagnosis, but with more aggressive treatments used recently, you don’t read articles labeling it a death sentence published by the NIH as recently as 2017. 

So if you are a lucky winner in the TNBC lottery, things are looking up!

TNBC often recurs within the first 5 years after diagnosis and any surgery or treatments you undergo. Most other breast cancers could recur much later after 20 or 30 years. TNBC may recur in another location like your bones or brain.

However, with more aggressive treatments, you can reduce your chances of reoccurrence. Remember, nothing is a guarantee, so this is a personal choice as to how much you are willing to endure to ensure you don't have to deal with this nasty bugger again!

Talk to your Surgeon, Oncologist, Radiologist, Priest, or Shaman. Pray on it. Do your homework. The choice is yours as to how to handle this roadblock life has thrown at you. 

I won't be your personal cheerleader, but I can give you some idea as to what to expect, how to deal with what you may experience, and/or maybe even a laugh along the way. Join me on my journey into Triple Negative Breast Cancer....





Wednesday, April 6, 2022

My Diagnosis-Triple Negative Breast Cancer

On April 6, 2022, I was diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in-situ (DCIS), High Grade, Triple Negative Breast Cancer. (TNBC)  I’d already gone through my annual mammogram, a follow-up targeted mammogram and ultrasound, followed by a biopsy. 

I’ve had calcium deposits before, as did my sisters, so I thought it was all just routine.

Things happened fast after that. I had a unilateral Mastectomy on the 26th and started Chemo on May 16th.

I’m pretty sure I hadn’t taken a breath during those first few weeks. 

Luckily it was only Stage 1 so I don’t need Radiation. However, it's a more aggressive cancer so I have 6 months of serious Chemo lined up. Also,  DCIS that is highgrade, is more likely to come back (recur) after it is removed with surgery. 

I've been a bit overwhelmed but am doing well. This is me getting ready for my expected hair loss. I got it cut really short this time!


I didn't have a discernible lump so my annual mammogram was the only way it was caught in time. This is an uncommon type of cancer that usually targets Black or Latinx women under 4O with a BRCA gene mutation. As you can see, I don't fall into any of those categories!

Please get your annual mammograms and/or encourage your family members and friends to get theirs.

It saved my life!

“We cant go over it. Wcant go under it. We've got to go through it!" Michael Rosen

Lonliness During Chemotherapy

Except for my husband, I was all alone when I got my breast cancer diagnosis. We moved to a new city, he started a new job and the Covid pan...