Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Mine are brilliant.
Mine, too. They're just not challenged in AAP. Any ideas on how to keep them from getting bored?
Well I am offended at the terminology "dense." My boobies are quite fabulous and who is anyone to call them dense? They are just jealous of my superior boobies. For the record we could get into AAP because my girls belong there, but I hear AAP is filled with boobs who's parents will do anything to inflate them and make them seem bigger and better than they are. Plus, there are so many full blown fakes out there and I guess the evaluators sometimes can't tell the difference.Anonymous wrote:No. Mine are brilliant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't worry much about it. Lots of women have dense breasts and just get mammograms. The risk of missing a tumor is quite low. From this point on, they will be looking for changes from one mammogram image to another. Research is also showing that while cancers can be detected earlier with mammogram, the death rates have not changed, meaning those that are aggressive will continue to be aggressive (i.e. come back, etc).
Just do a monthly check and report any lumps. My doc said they are distinctive as they often feel like a rooted pebble, rather than a round, rubbery movable ball, which is more likely to be a cyst.
This is a myth, that cancer doesn't move. In the old days it wasn't detected until it attached to the chest wall but these days thats rarely the case. My breast cancer moved. It was also bigger than a pebble. I'm pretty shocked a doctor is paying on this info.
My cancer was not picked up by a mammogram because of dense breasts. I agree that the benefit of mammograms has been overstated but they do have a benefit and if your breasts are dense you should supplement with an MRI or 3D ultrasound.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't worry much about it. Lots of women have dense breasts and just get mammograms. The risk of missing a tumor is quite low. From this point on, they will be looking for changes from one mammogram image to another. Research is also showing that while cancers can be detected earlier with mammogram, the death rates have not changed, meaning those that are aggressive will continue to be aggressive (i.e. come back, etc).
Just do a monthly check and report any lumps. My doc said they are distinctive as they often feel like a rooted pebble, rather than a round, rubbery movable ball, which is more likely to be a cyst.
That makes sense. I guess I should get copies of the images too?
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't worry much about it. Lots of women have dense breasts and just get mammograms. The risk of missing a tumor is quite low. From this point on, they will be looking for changes from one mammogram image to another. Research is also showing that while cancers can be detected earlier with mammogram, the death rates have not changed, meaning those that are aggressive will continue to be aggressive (i.e. come back, etc).
Just do a monthly check and report any lumps. My doc said they are distinctive as they often feel like a rooted pebble, rather than a round, rubbery movable ball, which is more likely to be a cyst.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't worry much about it. Lots of women have dense breasts and just get mammograms. The risk of missing a tumor is quite low. From this point on, they will be looking for changes from one mammogram image to another. Research is also showing that while cancers can be detected earlier with mammogram, the death rates have not changed, meaning those that are aggressive will continue to be aggressive (i.e. come back, etc).
Just do a monthly check and report any lumps. My doc said they are distinctive as they often feel like a rooted pebble, rather than a round, rubbery movable ball, which is more likely to be a cyst.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't worry much about it. Lots of women have dense breasts and just get mammograms. The risk of missing a tumor is quite low. From this point on, they will be looking for changes from one mammogram image to another. Research is also showing that while cancers can be detected earlier with mammogram, the death rates have not changed, meaning those that are aggressive will continue to be aggressive (i.e. come back, etc).
Just do a monthly check and report any lumps. My doc said they are distinctive as they often feel like a rooted pebble, rather than a round, rubbery movable ball, which is more likely to be a cyst.
Anonymous wrote:I get one of those letters after every mammogram. Just part of life for a woman with small breasts (airport here), as if the pinching is not bad enough.