← Return to Anyone know what kind of treatment Suzanne Somers got over the years?

Discussion
Comment receiving replies
@pmoore66

@jessica79 I'm 70 yrs old now. I had lobular carcinoma cancer in 2015 with a mastectomy of my left breast. My husband has been very supportive about the lack of one breast for the last 8 years. I hate the prosthetics and prosthetics bras. I wish I had gotten a new breast reconstruction when it happened. 2018 I got both knees replaced. They say the results are either good or bad. Mine's been very painful.
The only good thing is I can get up now but I can't walk for long time periods. Also for the last 3 years, my husband has had dementia and I'm his caretaker. I'm going 11/17/23 for a consult on making the right one smaller and getting a new left one. Can anyone tell me how bad the recovery from this will be. My mastectomy was easy peasy. Everything healed wonderfully with no pain. My 42 yr old son thinks I'm crazy and "no one does this kind of thing". I know he is only worried about "the pain".
@jessica79 do what you need to do for you. Jessica, do you.

Jump to this post


Replies to "@jessica79 I'm 70 yrs old now. I had lobular carcinoma cancer in 2015 with a mastectomy..."

I think it's great if you want implant reconstruction. Typically insurance will cover both breasts (for symmetry)--my experience w/ my first mastectomy 2006 (w/ A cup breasts) was that in order to make them symmetrical, they had to make my contralateral healthy breast larger because the implant on the mastectomy L side doesn't sag. If you've got any aging, they've got to make it larger so that it "matches" the new one.

Our children never see us as women who'd like to feel good about our appearance either alone or w/ a partner, especially sons.

The question is whether you're going to do a tissue expander or just do pre-pec implants all at once. Unfortunately if you didn't opt for reconstruction at the time, the surgeon probably didn't leave extra skin, so you might need expansion. Frankly, tissue expanders often hurt much more than the minimally sore post-implant surgery because 1) they're stretching skin, which hurts more if it's subpec, which I had in 2006 and 2) prepec tissue expanders are right under the skin and frankly can feel like wire depending on how you move.

But in the hands of the right plastic surgeon the results can look AWESOME. There's nothing wrong w/ doing something for yourself, esp if covered by insurance.

I doubt you'd want any of the tram/diep flap surgery--while yes, there's a tummy tuck involved, or removal of fat from thighs, bottom, etc., they leave a long scar, and the recovery time is extensive requiring 24/7 caregiving, which doesn't sound like an option right now. But the implant surgery--esp if you could get it done all at once--can provide quick awesome results. I hope it works out for you!!