Describe your recovery from lung NET surgery
77, female, diagnosed withNET carcinoid tumors in LLlung and left lymph nodes. No other organs lighting up on scans, of which there were many. No symptoms, and otherwise in good health. Tumor board recommends surgery removal of entire lower left lobe. Please describe your surgery experience.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Neuroendocrine Tumors (NETs) Support Group.
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Hi I’ve been away from the group a while living life 😊 I’m doing well I pray all is well with you all 🙏🏽 one thing I’ve learned having a grateful mindset is imperative to beat this disease . The sandostatin treat is truly a blessing
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2 ReactionsHello @char1962, and thanks for checking in with an update. I'm so pleased to hear that you are doing so well. I agree that a grateful mindset is really important, and I appreciate you reminding us of that.
As it has been a while since you last posted, I was wondering whether you have had surgery for your lung NETs and, if so, how long ago. Have you had any other treatments other than Sandostatin?
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1 Reaction@stephanieann Oh no, 6 years later to be having pain is so hard, I'm sorry to hear that! To be clear, I no longer have pain more than a year out. I do sometimes have strange Charlie-horse-like muscle cramps around the surgical areas, but they happen less and less. When I first started having them they were so intense I would cry out and do deep breathing like I was giving birth. It would be awkward if I got one in the middle of a work meeting, and I wanted to scream but instead gripped my chair and deep-breathed until it passed. You have a tough decision ahead of you, I think you can only follow the advice of your doctors and your own gut. You have more complications than I did, and I was 44 at the time of surgery, last year. I can tell you my experience if that would help you process your thoughts. I did not exactly have symptoms prior to surgery either. I complained to doctors that my breathing seemed off, that my cardio including swimming and boxing seemed labored and I felt like I was able to do less than I used to. As you might expect, that didn't raise alarms with anyone and doctors just dismissed that. What happened was, I got pneumonia 2 winters in a row, almost exactly a year apart. Both were difficult to recover from. Each time there was an x-ray, and the second time I read the x-ray report it said there was a mass in the same location, of the same size a year prior. I followed up on that with my primary care doctor, got it biopsied, and had a bunch more tests followed by the lobectomy. I will say that my quality of life seems a bit harder post-surgery, but I have no regrets getting that slow-growing NET out. At times my breathing is labored, like breathing through a straw in my chest. During this week's heat wave my chest feels tight and I feel light headed. But for everyday life and activities, after a longer-than-anticipated recovery I am able to do everything I could before. Sometimes I'm more easily winded or feel a bit weaker. I can't do all the active things I used to, or to the degree I used to. Some of them were a bit part of my life, or I want to be able to run around and keep up as a mom. But considering the alternative, I'll take it.
I know that after a certain age that cancer screening and treatment protocols change, and as you say they weigh quality of life against major interventions. We are dealing with that with my father right now. Maybe you would like to seek out a second opinion for another doctor? I wish you the best as you consider all this. Sending hugs.
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1 Reaction@stephanieann
I had VAT surgery in September 2025
I am age 78
If you are a patient of a competent Neuroendocrine Team , I would trust their guidance. I assume that your cardiology is involved,
If you have Medicare you are entitled to hom care services- ask to meet with a social worker
The first week I needed medication for pain- extra strength Tylenol did help .
You will need help with
food shopping and household chores
Have wedge pillow
lose tee shirts - bra is uncomfortable
Everyone is different but by the end of eight weeks the only issues I had were fatigue intermittent cough and nerve pain. I was told that it takes a year to recover and I have found this to be the reality.
I hope all goes well!
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1 Reaction@haelsky
I appreciate all of your helpful suggestions for @stephanieann. How are you feeling now?
@haelsky I had a Pulmonologist with National Jewish but he disconnected from there with his practice. Hoping I am not diving in on something that is more benign. Doing too much is also a hazard but CU medicine has a Dipnec and lung nodule specialty team so hoping that our Surveillance for the past 30 years yields an ok…continue or even we caught it in time …do this. They suspect both type right now in my lungs because one has started growing over the last 2 years. I am 70 so fingers crossed.
Hi everyone,
I greatly appeciate all the helpful suggestions from the volunteer mentor and all of you. It has been really difficult trying to decide what to do and the risk/benefit of the surgery. I will be seeing the medical oncologist again and ask him about other alternatives to having a lobectomy ie cryosurgery, is there a way to shrink the net instead of having surgery . Thanks again for all your help. It seems each person has their own rate of recovery.
Happy 4th Connie
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1 Reaction@stephanieann I look forward to hearing from you again, Connie. I hope you will continue to post with your questions and concerns.
Do you have an appointment with your medical oncologist scheduled?