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DiscussionNavigating my way through throat cancer
Head & Neck Cancer | Last Active: Mar 31 11:06am | Replies (49)Comment receiving replies
Replies to "@sandy8043 I know the feeling. I have had total anxiety attacks just thinking about an MRI...."
@rllampton You are in our prayers if that is okay! Nowadays, a person has to be careful what they say to another person. Oh, well. My husband and I have been together since 1976, and we pray all the time. It is the only thing that has gotten us through this life. Everyone on here is rooting for you.
@rllampton By now you have already had your PET scan. I am just shy of 3mo out from my chemo radiation at Mayo and scheduled for my first PET scan / NavDX on March 24th. I am, like many others, nervous about recurrence. In regards to anxiety with going in to the scan, Ativan is something I took 30min prior to my radiation treatments x 2 / day in December. I'm not claustrophobic but when my face was compressed under the mask plus mouth guard, I experienced anxiety in a very new way. The Ativan plus mental imagery and breathing helped center me for all 20 treatments. Good luck and let us know how you're doing.
@rllampton Pet scan usually involves a preliminary CT scan followed by you getting a slightly radioactive cocktail to consume. Then you wait alone in a room until your systems have moved the radioactive material through your body where cancer cells often collect this material in abundance. Then you are rescanned and the results are compared. The whole thing takes about an hour.
The scan results will also show scar tissue, which will give you a false impression. Don’t be alarmed from results of a single PET scan. A second or third scan gives a better idea of reality.
You will be somewhat radioactive for a day or two until you wash the material through your system. Some clinics advise you should sleep alone and stay by yourself for 24 hours.
And you fear an MRI? That’s just a big noisy magnet spinning around you in a cylinder. No radiation whatsoever. No one ever glowed in the dark after an MRI. Okay, you will not glow in the dark after a PET scan either. Just trying to lighten the mood. You will be at Mayo. It doesn’t get better that that. Good healing.
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@rllampton Tell the tech you're nervous. I think they'll give you something. As I recall its a more open machine than an MRI or CT. Good luck. If you're hungry we love the food at the Hollandberry Pannekoken Broadway. Just a few blocks from Gonda. Use the valet parking. Less stress. Take care.