Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get annual mammograms.
That said, the research shows that mammograms barely save lives. Early detection increases your survival rate by under 1% overall.
How much would you value the costs and benefits of a lumpectomy instead of radical mastectomy, no chemotherapy, no recurrence?
Anonymous wrote:I get annual mammograms.
That said, the research shows that mammograms barely save lives. Early detection increases your survival rate by under 1% overall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BFF never did mammograms (host of reasons that she kept rationalizing.) Well, the kicker was that she had metastatic breast cancer (finally went to a doctor when it became the size of a golf ball and protruded into her armpit.) By then it was too late and she died 18m later. I often wonder what would have happened if she got regular mammograms.
Flip side - my sister gets them regularly, caught her breast cancer early, had it removed, did 10 courses of radiation (no chemo needed), and has been cancer free for 8y.
Figure out your insurance.
I have an acquaintance who got annual mammograms religiously (she was a nurse) but was nonetheless diagnosed with metastatic stage 4 breast cancer. Mammograms are a great screening tool but some forms of cancer are deadly and aggressive regardless of when you find them. Unfortunately.
Anonymous wrote:BFF never did mammograms (host of reasons that she kept rationalizing.) Well, the kicker was that she had metastatic breast cancer (finally went to a doctor when it became the size of a golf ball and protruded into her armpit.) By then it was too late and she died 18m later. I often wonder what would have happened if she got regular mammograms.
Flip side - my sister gets them regularly, caught her breast cancer early, had it removed, did 10 courses of radiation (no chemo needed), and has been cancer free for 8y.
Figure out your insurance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell us what your insurance is and where you are and someone can tell you if you’re in network. I’ve always been happy with Washington Radiology - for mammograms, breast MRIs because I have family history and a gene mutation that increases my chances, a needle biopsy for something they found, and a thyroid scan. But I have friends who strongly prefer Sibley for this.
Please do this. My sister canceled her scheduled mammogram because she had just broken her driving foot so getting anywhere was a PITA, and by the time she went back a couple years later she had three tumors and needed a double mastectomy and chemo. My stepmother stopped getting them too early and ended up with breast cancer that was controlled after surgery and chemo and radiation but later came back and killed her.
Please tell me about a breast MRI at Washington Radiology. I typically have mammograms there, which are fine, but OB suggested an MRI due to dense breast tissue. I have been dreading this and putting it off because I hate the thought of an MRI.
PO here and if you aren’t claustrophobic it’s long/loud/annoying but not that bad. You have to lay still inside the machine for a bit - maybe 15 minutes? - on your stomach. They have you headphones to help with the noise and a reflector so you can “look out the window” even though you’re in the tube. This is at WRA in Friendship Heights.
PP thanks. I'm extremely claustrophobic and this is what I was afraid of!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell us what your insurance is and where you are and someone can tell you if you’re in network. I’ve always been happy with Washington Radiology - for mammograms, breast MRIs because I have family history and a gene mutation that increases my chances, a needle biopsy for something they found, and a thyroid scan. But I have friends who strongly prefer Sibley for this.
Please do this. My sister canceled her scheduled mammogram because she had just broken her driving foot so getting anywhere was a PITA, and by the time she went back a couple years later she had three tumors and needed a double mastectomy and chemo. My stepmother stopped getting them too early and ended up with breast cancer that was controlled after surgery and chemo and radiation but later came back and killed her.
Please tell me about a breast MRI at Washington Radiology. I typically have mammograms there, which are fine, but OB suggested an MRI due to dense breast tissue. I have been dreading this and putting it off because I hate the thought of an MRI.
PO here and if you aren’t claustrophobic it’s long/loud/annoying but not that bad. You have to lay still inside the machine for a bit - maybe 15 minutes? - on your stomach. They have you headphones to help with the noise and a reflector so you can “look out the window” even though you’re in the tube. This is at WRA in Friendship Heights.
PP thanks. I'm extremely claustrophobic and this is what I was afraid of!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Breast cancer is probably the one cancer that I never worry about. I may be delusional but I have zero family history on either side.
I've had regular mammograms and never had a horrible experience but the last one hurt and I thought then that I might never do it again.
I was the exact same way, never gave breast cancer a thought. And then I was diagnosed with it at 47. No family history on either side.