Anyone having right breast radiated and holding breath?
Today I started my 3 weeks of radiation and I was surprised/dismayed that I had to reach a certain lung capacity and hold it. It took forever and I think my lungs are pretty good! During my simulator appt, I'd been told (when they were having me hold my breath for an x-ray) not to worry. I wouldn't have to hold my breath during treatment. Yet here I am. I went online and it looks as if this breath protocol is used with the left breath to raise it away from the heart. But I'm right breast. It was a long, uncomfortable appt without the comfy angled back rest I see in the ads. I'm beginning to feel that a woman's comfort is not taken into consideration for some of these treatment factors. When I showed the NP the screen shots I had of a woman comfortably angled having her treatment, she just said, we don't have that equipment.
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I've mentioned that to the head of the dept. The patient needs more education and it can be done nicely as the process moves along. It also demystifies some pretty fearsome equipment. The blue ink didn't get on my clothes. That's really too bad. I'm wearing a lot of white shirts during this process. They are so busy where I am and run a quick pace. Today we were clicking along. Then everything got quiet. I lay there for about 10 minutes. They came back in and said I was in the wrong position! (which they had put me in.) Moved me down about four inches. So I guess they radiated my liver instead of my breast. They made an arm adjustment that was even more uncomfortable and we were off to the races again. Yes, I'm with you re: the lumpectomy and radiation...but it shouldn't be uncomfortable. These facilities have a mission statement and they really should live up to it.
I did three weeks of radiation this past summer, and was not asked to hold my breath, just hold very still. But of course the positions of our tumors is so varied, it’s not surprising to hear differing treatment solutions.
On the positive side my treatments were brief and I had no side effects from the radiation. I wish you the same. Good luck!
I agree that the arm position is painful. My radiation started about 6 weeks post surgery. I had a lot of cording and scar tissue that need to be broken up. That caused most of the pain for me.
Today I had a break through with that painful arm position. My doctor came through the area when I was talking to the two techs about yesterday and that position. Couldn't they bring my arms down a bit? At the time my arms were just about fully extended, grasping those two dowels. He said, well, let's go in and see. So he came into the treatment room with us. They got me set up and he checked it out and agreed that it wouldn't hurt the positioning at all to give me a little more slack. The session went so well. I'm very relieved.
Hi
I had right breast lumpectomy and sentinel node surgery. I did not have to hold my breath and was in a comfortable position during the treatment. Seven months post Treatment and now I have been told by my Respiratory physician I have some lung damage. I had asthma prior to treatment and was controlled with my inhaler. He had to give me a stronger inhalor I also have to take Cough syrup because I have a wet cough now. He said it shld heal on its own hopefully. WTH does that mean.
@sue417 I am so sorry to hear that. Of course that makes me feel better about the trials I've had with holding my breath (with the help of YouTube videos I did learn how to do it) but I'm so sorry you have to deal with an additional health issue. Hopefully your respiratory doc is right and it will heal. If you had asthma to start with, I am a bit surprised but there are so many factors involved. May time bring you healing. ❤️
Hi @sue417
I don’t know enough to help you with the lung damage although I have read that it often will heal itself. I don’t think the radiation damage has anything to do with the asthma as those are two different types of breathing issues.
My guess is how well the lung can repair itself is affected by the health of your body’s ability to either generate new tissue or have other parts of the lung work a little harder to adjust for the non functioning cells.
I know for myself that I try to do the the best I can to be healthy to help my body repair itself, but I do have my days of failure 🥴
After my diagnosis, and before any treatments had begun, they had me undergo a bronchoscopy (hope I spelled that right!) that ultimately discovered some weird node formation in my lungs, but no further involvement with the cancer in my breast. That was the good news, the bad news was the bronchoscopy really tore me up, leaving my lungs sore along with a wet cough that lasted weeks.
Hi
Well that's a drag
I had lumpectomy on my left side…and was told to hold my breath during radiation…but they said they can’t guarantee that down the line I won’t have lung or heart issues….