Living life after treatment and surgery for Esophageal Cancer.
In December of 2020 I was diagnosed with stage 3 Esophageal Cancer. After chemo and radiation in February and March of 2021, I had surgery to remove the cancer in May of 2021. For me the surgery and recovery were probably the toughest part of the process. Not to say the chemo and radiation were easy, they were not but the changes the surgical part of treatments have changed my life from here on. Life after I got home from the hospital at first would not have been possible without a lot of help. Little things you take for granted such as showering or even walking about your home couldn't be accomplished without help. Those things got easier over time but it was a challenge. Getting use to having to sleep at a 30° angle because laying flat means anything in you new redesigned stomach comes up while you sleep(very uncomfortable and dangerous for your lungs). With the new design of your stomach food is also a bit of a challenge. They give you a list of foods you will probably be able to eat and a list of foods you probably should stay away from. With me I found after time that you have to try different foods and your body tells you quickly if you can or can not eat that again. You will also find portions you can tolerate will be much less than you were use to. This means you eat many more times per day. In the end it has been worth it for me because I have been cancer free on my 6 month scans so far . Another scan in a month which will be 2 years since surgery, I pray they continue to show me cancer free. If anyone has any questions on my journey so far please reach out. I have a friend who mentored me in my journey which helped tremendously for me. As I have said and believe since my journey started we are all" STRONGER TOGETHER "
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Esophageal Cancer Support Group.
Hi there. The shake sounds delicious. I will make one and I'm sure I'll like it. I had the same surgery as your husband 2 years ago. It's been a long road but I am getting better. Your husband has to stay positive and day by day things get brighter. Thanks for the recipe. Can't wait! Take care.
I'm a two year Esophageal Cancer survivor. In the time since surgery I have learned much about how and what I can eat to maintain weight. What I have been able to do is find foods that I can eat and eat them in small portions much more frequently than typical meals. I eat something every couple hours. I try to find things that are higher in calories without too much sugar in them. My diet is kind of boring but I am maintaining weight so that is good. Everyone's body is different so you will have to find what works for you.
It’s a common problem- I’m 4 years post surgery / chemo / radiotherapy - was fortunately diagnosed as Stage 2 - it is an ongoing challenge to maintain weight - I’ve permanently lost about 12 kilos including muscle mass & strength My digestive process has never recovered to pre-diagnosis - I eat 6 times a day but much of my intake is not fully processed & moves rapidly through my GIT & my daily motion expunges a kilo of faeces
It’s a matter of learning to live within these restrictions I can’t surf like I used to I carry snacks every time I leave my apartment
I also take digestives enzymes with each major meal
But I am grateful for my medical team & the resilience I have developed along the journey
And I still dream of riding my surfboard
Hi there. It's been 2 years now. My appetite is better, although I never have the hunger growls anymore. Weird. I just have to assume I'm hungry. I'm afraid to eat something different because it could upset my stomach and will cause me to aspirate that night and my episodes are getting fewer. So I'm caught between a rock and hard place. I still can't gain any weight but hoping soon that will change. Down to 85 lbs now. Onwards and upwards!
Thank you for sharing that with me/us. Good luck!
Good luck to both of you.
My main advice is to stay connected to a survivorship program, ask questions, eat smaller and more frequest meals, avoid sugar, separate food from drinks, weigh yourself daily, keep a food diary to learn what works- color code foods that don’t go well.
Where was your cancer located? My cancer is in the GE junction. Just got diagnosed a couple days ago.
Welcome, @mason1616. Getting a diagnosis of esophageal cancer is a shock. Fellow members @armylife @snickers124 @sunray also had esophageal cancer of the gastroesophageal junction and can share their experiences.
Mason, do you have a treatment plan yet? How are you doing?
Welcome mason2616. My cancer os also at the GE junction. I have finished my chemo/ radiation and am now healing for Surgery on June 14. I’ll be happy to share my experiences with you. @snickers124