Radiation side effects with H&N cancer. When will they ever end?
After receiving a full course of radiotherapy for squamous cell carcinoma to the left tonsil area, lingering side effects had to be faced. My very professional oncologist said I should snap back in a month or three however I was his first for an upper throat radiation. Aside from the normal expected side effects during and shortly after radiotherapy, some side effects can last for years.
Head and neck radiotherapy is unique in the fact that vital life areas are being attacked with radiation. The mouth, sinus, gums, salivary system, esophagus, airways, swallowing, vocal chords are all effected. It isn’t like we can stop breathing or swallowing to allow us time to heal. Other areas are usually less complicated.
Because the recovery years are hopefully behind me, I thought I would share with anyone interested and dealing with side effects and assure you that with time things usually get better. I will begin with four side effects and add a few over the next few weeks. This is not to say it is a complete list or that you have or may expect any or all of these side effects. We are all different in our treatments and recoveries.
Don’t be alarmed. I am in my sixties now, in very good health, and enjoying life.
1) Dry mouth. Probably the most common and bothersome. I keep water with me always and at my bedside. Mints help as well. This has improved over the last ten years but I wouldn’t win a spitting contest.
2) Nerve issues on the face and neck. Known as “creepy crawlies” or “bugs on the face” the feeling that something is there although that clearly is not the case. Sometimes rubbing the face or drinking cold water helped. This occurred initially several times per day but after a few years it became infrequent and lasted roughly seven years.
3) Nerve shocks on the left arm and shoulder or sometimes just a dull pain of the upper arm. The shocks would startle me and those around me I’ve been told. Lasted about five years.
4) Neck cramps. Some call this “lock jaw” but it is not the actual tetanus disease and only lasts for usually less than a minute. Mine was often initiated by yawning, a sneeze, a cough, and on occasion eating or talking. Rubbing the area helped and indeed it often felt like a cramped muscle in the neck. Unfortunately this stayed with me for roughly fifteen years.
More next week. If you have any questions or comments or wish to add I would welcome that input. Until then please know time heals all wounds as they say.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Head & Neck Cancer Support Group.
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Please don't you give up hope ! It seems that you could contact sone of these places and find someone to manage your issue ? I wasted so much time with people in this area ,It is time to seek advise or help out side of of my area Norfolk VA .
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2 ReactionsThank you, for listening, and understanding, I am going to Vanderbilt Nashville Tn soon as possible, if I can't get any updated info I go further. Just can't travel, I would like to zoom or some other face time something 🤔
It has been nine years since I received radiation for base of tongue cancer. I've been having neck cramps for years, but the cramps seem to be occurring more frequently.
@ctzipp Hello and welcome. I too had neck issues for years however they eventually cleared up. Nine years seems like a long time to be having things get worse instead of better. Maybe some physical therapy might help. PT people are getting very clever in the ways of working out muscle and skeletal defects.
I guess to some degree these many years later I certainly can turn my head further in one direction than the other.
Other than giraffe neck, how are you doing otherwise?
Two years out from RT and Chemo. Bad neck cramps and shoulder pain. Just finished second round of Botox injections and have experienced great results.
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