Radiation side effects with H&N cancer. When will they ever end?
After receiving a full course of radiotherapy for squamous cell carcinoma to the left tonsil area, lingering side effects had to be faced. My very professional oncologist said I should snap back in a month or three however I was his first for an upper throat radiation. Aside from the normal expected side effects during and shortly after radiotherapy, some side effects can last for years.
Head and neck radiotherapy is unique in the fact that vital life areas are being attacked with radiation. The mouth, sinus, gums, salivary system, esophagus, airways, swallowing, vocal chords are all effected. It isn’t like we can stop breathing or swallowing to allow us time to heal. Other areas are usually less complicated.
Because the recovery years are hopefully behind me, I thought I would share with anyone interested and dealing with side effects and assure you that with time things usually get better. I will begin with four side effects and add a few over the next few weeks. This is not to say it is a complete list or that you have or may expect any or all of these side effects. We are all different in our treatments and recoveries.
Don’t be alarmed. I am in my sixties now, in very good health, and enjoying life.
1) Dry mouth. Probably the most common and bothersome. I keep water with me always and at my bedside. Mints help as well. This has improved over the last ten years but I wouldn’t win a spitting contest.
2) Nerve issues on the face and neck. Known as “creepy crawlies” or “bugs on the face” the feeling that something is there although that clearly is not the case. Sometimes rubbing the face or drinking cold water helped. This occurred initially several times per day but after a few years it became infrequent and lasted roughly seven years.
3) Nerve shocks on the left arm and shoulder or sometimes just a dull pain of the upper arm. The shocks would startle me and those around me I’ve been told. Lasted about five years.
4) Neck cramps. Some call this “lock jaw” but it is not the actual tetanus disease and only lasts for usually less than a minute. Mine was often initiated by yawning, a sneeze, a cough, and on occasion eating or talking. Rubbing the area helped and indeed it often felt like a cramped muscle in the neck. Unfortunately this stayed with me for roughly fifteen years.
More next week. If you have any questions or comments or wish to add I would welcome that input. Until then please know time heals all wounds as they say.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Head & Neck Cancer Support Group.
Thank you. And we’d love the Boost recipe. And will try egg drop soup, something he loved. We know it will be a long drawn out recovery, so many people have said so. Trying to get used to that idea! He does need to drink between bites.
All the best to you too.
I finished up my treatment December 23, 2022 it’s been almost 7 months and I’m starting to recover. I’m able to eat and swallow sometimes a bit stuck in my throat but I learned to use gravy and have water close by what I mean in the first three months out of my treatment. I lived on boost and help me get through some tough times. I had some other symptoms, dry mouth and affect my speaking a little bit. I have about 75% of my taste buds back so hang in there it will get better.
This is a long haul. I have a friend who went through this 20 years ago. His was stage 4, They radiated him to the point he thought he would not make it. It took him 2 years to feel normal as he remembers it. Today he is an encouragement to me. The radiation is tough for sure but every day we fight to recover is a good day.
Boost makes a dry powder . think Nestles quick. Same place in the store as boost. I always bought the high protein. I used chocolate. here ya go. One boost liquid, powder to equal a boost. "its on the container". Use good ice cream and whole cream "whipping cream" . I made milkshakes out of this. Don't skimp by using low fat anything. The fat and protein will help with his weight. The boost has the vitamins. make sure that you use the powder. It gives you more of the good stuff. I always used a straw. It depends on how he is with the mouth and swallowing. Also go online to Boost.com I think. look up and see if they have coupons that you can print out. And if you need more maybe you could ask a friend or two to print them for you too. you can write "e-mail" them and they might send some. Sometimes the doctor or nutritionist has coupons too. My milkshakes kept me going for a year. Also I used to make them and pour into a thermos if we went someplace for a couple of hours or so. They might not be thick but will still be good. Also if he is tasting a metal taste when he uses utensils use plastic. Try not to give him things out of cans. The taste is horrible. It took me a long time before I could use regular silverware again. my last treatment was the day before Christmas 2014. I still have trouble at times with food. Tell him not to get discouraged it does get better. They checked my throat too and it was fine. It didn't feel like it to me. LOL Remember if it was sour before it's gonna be worse now. Eventually something is gonna sound SO GOOD till he tastes it and then it's gonna be so BAD. But that is from the radiation. Some things won't ever taste like they used to. Some things will taste better. Give everything a chance. he'll do good it just takes time. If I can help in any way just give me a holler. my friend tells me I write books. sorry.
congratulations on getting those tastebuds back. I'm still working on those and my saliva still isn't very good. I still get things stuck at times. I guess it's just part of it all.
I am happy to hear you are doing better as time goes on. We are left with od pockets in our mouth and throat that is beyond explanation to the doctors. We just learn to live with it.
In a year or so you should be doing better yet. It's good to be on the green side of the grass. i wish you well.
@7881188, has Michael also worked with a speech-language pathologist? They work with head and neck cancer patients to help with swallowing, speech and more. @davidwrenn's daughter is an SLP and may have more to share.
You may also be interested in this related discussion in the Esophageal Cancer Support Group
– Anyone know of exercises or therapies to improve swallowing? https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/therapy-for-swallowing/
Bless you on this journey, and I wanted to share that yes, my husband had one, and it truly saved his life from being permanently, altered by weight loss, and admission into the hospital --the condition of his throat and the ruination of his taste buds left him, unable to eat, swallow.
💜 our doctor recommended he put it in before treatments began, and he is very glad that he did. How was your husband doing with his PEG?
Well guys, I've finally found my "lost hair soul mates" I'm a woman and I had the 35 radiation treatments to the head. Like many I've lost the sense of smell, & taste .I have virtually no saliva. It will never get any better. I still have problems with eating. My teeth have suffered. My nose runs constantly, I carry select a size paper towels all the time. If you should wash them they stay together, not like a kleenex. I'm a woman and of course I know about things being left in pockets like a kleenex. Anyway my radiation was of course to my head. Actually my cancer was at my brainstem. So the radiation was at the back of my head. Now my hair is not only fine. But it is thinning and my neckline is a good inch from where it should be. Like you if I lift it up it looks like I shaved it. You ought to see it in a pony tail. What a site. Like I said at the begining of this book. I'm so tickled to now have "lost hair soul mates". I hope this put a little smile on your faces.
If you are lucky like me the hair loss is temporary. The loss of saliva however can go on for years but in my case has improved while the nose running has almost gone completely. This recovery stuff takes years unfortunately. Broken legs are easy to bounce back from compared to this.
Wish I could find my lost hair photo to attach. But like the radiation mask and other torture apparatus, I have no doubt disposed of it in the hopes of getting rid of the nightmare as well.
I hope you heal well and fast.