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Mastectomy and breast reconstruction pros and cons?

Breast Cancer | Last Active: 14 hours ago | Replies (226)

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@casualobserver

Hi trixie1313. I had multiple tumors in one breast, both invasive lobular carcinoma and infiltrating ductal carcinoma. It also spread to two lymph nodes. The type of cancer the pathologist described was Signet-ring cell carcinoma (SRCC). It is a unique subtype of mucin-producing adenocarcinoma. According to my research, this cancer rarely presents in the breast as its first location. In one article it said that if you find it in the breast, you should look and see where else it is. The gastric area is usually the most common location that it presents. Armed with this information, after I recovered from my double mastectomy, I had numerous other investigations, MRIs, ultrasounds, etc., to scan the rest of my body for masses. So far, no others have been found.

I am continuing to take numerous specific vitamins and other remedies currently off-label that are being investigated for their benefits in going after tumors.

It is being shown that certain anti-parasite remedies go after cancer tumors the same way they go after parasites like malaria, and certain intestinal parasites. There are many people trying this protocol. I am one of them.

Read up on these anti-parasite remedies and their use related to cancer: Fenbendazole, Mebendazole and Hydroxychloroquine.
Also read up on Joe Tippens and his cancer journey. It is very interesting. Here is a link if they will allow it: https://www.mycancerstory.rocks/single-post/2016/08/22/Shake-up-your-life-how-to-change-your-own-perspective

Let me know if I can be of any other help.
We all must help each other here. This journey can be best had with friends to lean on.

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Replies to "Hi trixie1313. I had multiple tumors in one breast, both invasive lobular carcinoma and infiltrating ductal..."

@casualobserver
Thanks for the info. Sounds like we both have rare and aggressive cancers that normally don't begin in the breast. Mine is in less than 0.5% of the population. And due to the aggressive nature, that is why they are doing PET scans every 6 months and now 3 months due to the new lesion in my lung. My first lesion in the breast was invasive ductal ca with erosion from the lymph nodes. We only found the neuroendocrine tumor because I insisted on MRI of the breast, otherwise, that would escape notice. In addition, I was lucky where I had surgery that the pathologist stained for neuroendocrine cancer. Many of these go unnoticed because not all pathologists due that staining. Steve Jobs had what everyone thought was pancreatic cancer, but in fact was actually neuroendocrine cancer of the pancreas.