Should I get a port?
Should I get a port? I'm prescribed 6 infusions: taxol, carbo, and Trastuzumab. The port is a last minute decision...the person who is responsible for guiding me is out of the office all next week so I need to decide with very little info!
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Appreciate the reply. You’re in the minority- I succumbed and got the port. It’s uncomfortable at night. I’m glad you seem to be doing so well without it!
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2 ReactionsThe port is great if you have recurrent disease. If you’re only a first timer, I agree. It would be a little overwhelming. Wait and see …
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1 ReactionGlad you got the port! You’ll probably have some discomfort for a while; it took some time for scar tissue to harden around mine. However, the twinges weren’t too bad and two years out I don’t even know I have it. Like many of us, I am receiving maintenance infusions every three weeks, so I am grateful for it. Use the lidocaine an hour and a half in advance, cover it with a bandaid, and you won’t feel the needle prick. Hugs!
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4 ReactionsSo kind of you to follow up! Yes, 4 weeks out it’s still uncomfortable. I’m still not comfortable sleeping on that side. I garden a lot and - for example- reach with pruners- and it definitely lets me know it’s there. But on infusion day I love that it’s there! So to anyone else making the decision- it’s not simple but people like you really help!
I think that some people adapt to the port better than others, maybe due to thicker/thinner skin? I’m “bony” (my oncologist’s adjective) so maybe that’s why I felt it more. After the initial discomfort it was more annoying than it was painful. And it certainly helped with the infusions, as did the lidocaine. Cancer World is full of all kinds of things that we wish we never had to know about.
Many people prefer ports for chemo, and keep them for awhile in case of recurrence or mets…chemo is strong and can be hard on IV…immunotherapy is often given by IV.