Posts Tagged ‘radiation side effects’

Friday, May 3, 2013

Choosing the Right Oncologist

oncologistChoosing the right oncologist for you will be an important step in your cancer treatment. Where you live and insurance coverage will determine your choices somewhat, but you will still want to do some research and find the best possible option.  This is a person you will have to trust and feel good about working with.

When you’re looking for an oncologist in your area, you can ask your doctor for a referral, or ask a friend or family member you trust who had cancer before you. There are also some online resources.

Some requirements you will want your oncologist to meet:
- He or she should be board certified.
- He or she should have some experience working with your particular type of cancer.
- It is important that he or she is open to hearing your concerns and is able to answer your questions effectively.
- You should never feel rushed or get the impression that you’re just a number. This is true for both your experience with the oncologist and the center’s staff. You will be spending a lot of time with both as your treatment progresses, so you need to feel safe, cared about and respected.

Here are some questions you can ask a prospective oncologist:
- What hospital does he or she have privileges in?
- Will he or she be the only oncologist you’ll be working with or will other oncologists be managing your care?
- Are the office hours convenient for you?
- Who will fill in if the oncologist is unavailable?
- How does the office handle emergency situations?
- Is the oncologist available after hours?

Don’t be afraid to do invest some time when looking for an oncologist. This specialist will be one of the most important people on your health care team.
Friday, November 9, 2012

Radiation Side Effects Common In Breast Cancer Treatment

In this short video, Dr. Forouzannia explains the acute and long-term side effects of breast cancer radiation therapy. Acute radiation side effects experienced during the treatment include fatigue, skin irritation, and irritation of the ribs. Long-term effects could include risk of lung fibrosis, damage to the lung and heart, and increased likelihood of developing heart disease.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Minimize Radiation Side Effects on Skin

Skincare for Radiation Side EffectsSince skin reactions are a common part of radiation side effects, you will need to pay special attention to the skin area being irradiated while undergoing your course of treatment. Here are a few tips:

1. Select a good cream and use it consistently. Today, there are products made specifically for skin care during radiation. Your doctor or nurse may advise a specific cream or leave the choice up to you. With our product, we have found that people have the greatest success and suffer the fewest skin-related radiation side effects when they start early and use our one product exclusively and consistently throughout treatment.

It’s important to use a radiation cream regularly. And so, you may want to buy two or three smaller size tubes so you can keep one on your bedside table and put the other one in your purse or car. Having your radiation cream nearby at all times can make it easier for you to apply it throughout the day.

We recommend people start applying their radiation cream once or twice daily several days before beginning radiation. As soon as therapy begins, use the cream immediately following treatment and most importantly, again at bedtime. In the event your skin begins to react to the radiation, apply the cream more often. In some cases, it may be necessary to apply a radiation cream up to 5-6 times per day, each and every time the skin feels sensitive. Note that the skin area to be irradiated should be bare and dry for the treatment itself!

Once the course of therapy has ended, continue using your radiation cream for at least two weeks because the radiation keeps working and skin still needs to be cared for.

If the part of the body being treated is in an area that gets a lot of moisture or friction, such as the underarms, some people have found it helpful to apply their radiation cream first, and to follow up with a light dusting of corn starch.

2. Avoid sun exposure to treated area.

3. Wear only soft, loose, lightweight fabrics over the treatment area. If you are being treated for breast cancer, avoid bras that might chafe or irritate your skin.

4. Avoid artificial hot or cold packs. These can do further damage to delicate irradiated skin.

5. Check your skin at the treatment site every day and alert your nurse or doctor to any changes.

If your skin is exhibiting radiation side effects during treatment, symptoms will usually go away within a few weeks. Be sure to consult with your care team if any condition lingers.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Unexpected Moments of Joy and Hope

GUEST POST BY JENNIFER LEE EDMONDSON

I consider my experience with breast cancer more of a forced march than a journey.  “Journey” seems too kind and gentle a cancer hope candlesword for describing what breast cancer patients have to go through.  My breast cancer was discovered in early 2011, fourteen months after my 2010 mammogram.  I had had annual mammograms for the past 10 years, all normal.  Not this year’s.

So began my forced march into BC land.  No longer was I in control of my life or my body.  I opted for an aggressive approach, and obediently did as I was told through genetic testing, surgery, aggressive chemotherapy, and radiation.  When I was told to jump, my only response was “How high?”   For lack of better words, it was hell.

During my travels through hell, however, I was lifted by unexpected moments of joy and hope.  A young woman I have never met, but have corresponded with via email regarding business, sent me cute little cards containing messages of hope and encouragement.  Another woman, who lives in my city, whom I also had never met, had heard about my plight from a mutual friend, and began delivering meals to my door step and offering sage advice – she was a BC survivor herself.

Another moment of joy and hope was when I discovered Jean’s Cream.  I first heard about Jean’s Cream during my interview of a radiation oncologist.  I had asked her what she recommended for skin care during radiation, and she mentioned Jean’s Cream, among other products.

Well before my radiation treatments started, I ordered my first tube of Jean’s Cream, and found it to be much lighter than the usual product used by radiation patients, and, Jean’s Cream absorbed into the skin much quicker.  I used it three times a day during the weeks I underwent radiation.  Jean’s Cream is, in a word, FANTASTIC.

Jean’s Cream was and still is a source of joy and hope for me, and I share that joy and hope with others.  Even though radiation has ended for me, I continue to use Jean’s Cream.   I have since ordered Jean’s Cream for my mom, who experienced residual pain from shingles many years after the rash was gone.  Jean’s Cream has helped to alleviate her pain.  I also ordered a tube for my little nephew, who gets eczema in the wintertime, and I have also shared the “tubes of joy and hope” with other women undergoing radiation therapy.

I am thankful for Jean’s Cream, and Jean, the person who made it all possible.

Jennifer Lee Edmondson lives with her family in Wisconsin.  She and her husband practice law together, representing people who are injured or disabled, through their law firm, Edmondson Law Office.  Jennifer also writes as a community columnist for The Post Crescent.  Her most recent column, which encourages individuals to have annual health screenings, regardless of what recent studies recommend, can be found here.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Cancer Patients Receive Top Care at Keesler Air Force Base

Cancer patients who visit Keesler Air Force’s new Radiation Oncology Center (the first was wiped out in 2005 by Keesler Radiation OncologyHurricane Katrina) in Biloxi, Mississippi, receive outstanding care, including treatment with high-dose rate brachytherapy, a state-of-the-art linear accelerator and complimentary tubes of Jeans Cream to help soothe and heal skin from radiation side effects. Patients’ treatment protocol is closely monitored by Dr. James D. Mitchell, Dr. Patrick Jewell, and Margo Loe, R.N. The team also includes two government civilian administrative assistants provided by the Biloxi Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and eight contract members: two physicists, a dosimetrist, three radiation therapists, and a chief radiation therapist. The facility treats between 30-35 patient per day and finds that it’s the head and neck cancer patients as well as those being irradiated for cancers of the breast who need Jeans Cream the most.

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About the Medical Center, Keesler’s 81st Medical Group:
Keesler’s 81st Medical Group operates one of the largest Air Force medical facilities in the Air Force. Its primary mission is to maintain medical readiness for worldwide contingencies by providing quality, cost-effective health care for more than 27,000 enrollees, including almost 7,500 active-duty military personnel and/or family members. In addition, the 81st MDG commander oversees five military medical treatment facilities from Mobile, Ala., to New Orleans, coordinating care for 110,000 eligible beneficiaries along the Gulf Coast.

Keesler Medical CenterThe hospital offers almost 60 services and education programs with a staff of more than 1,600 military and civilian members and partnerships with Tricare, the University of Mississippi Medical Center, the VA Gulf Coast Veterans Health Care System medical center and Gulfport Memorial Hospital. The hospital has seven newly-renovated surgery suites and a myriad of improvements throughout the ground floor including flood barriers on external doors and a re-alignment of high-dollar assets to floors above the basement level. Construction of their new $50+ million inpatient tower began in late 2009 and the new $10 million Radiation Oncology Center was completed in October 2009 and began treating patients in March 2010.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

New Help for Radiation Side Effects Available at Hurley Medical Center

Cancer patients at the Hurley Medical Center in Flint, Michigan can now conveniently purchase Jeans Cream at the Lobby Gift Shop to help their skin cope with radiation side effects. At Hurley Medical CenterHurley, they combine state-of-the-art treatment efforts with educational and support services to achieve faster recovery rates and positive long-term outcomes. Their team of trained oncology specialists is involved in every aspect of screening, diagnosis, treatment, recovery and rehabilitation. Their board-certified physicians and nurses certified by the Oncology Nursing Society develop individual, comprehensive treatment plans for each patient.

Hurley’s cancer program has received continuous approval from the Commission on Cancer of the American College of Surgeons (ACoS) since 1956 and meets the qualifications for a Community Hospital Comprehensive Cancer Program. This means that Hurley accessions over 650 newly diagnosed cancer cases each year and in addition to having board-certified experts on staff, the Center provides a full range of diagnostic and treatment services that are available on site or by referral. The Center is also required to participate in clinical research.

From helping patients receive the best treatments for their situation, to helping them cope with chemotherapy and radiation side effects, Hurley makes cancer care a priority.  Visit the Hurley Medical Center on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

E’s Giuliana Rancic To Cope with Radiation Side Effects

E! News anchor, Giuliana Rancic Giuliana Rancicwill be going through what so many of us have experienced: radiation side effects. She recently learned that she has Stage I breast cancer thanks to a mandatory screening prior to undergoing IVF treatment.

Treatment for breast cancer is determined according to a number of different factors, including tumor size, cancer type, the speed with which the cancer is growing, how far it’s spread, the woman’s age and general health, whether she’s had breast cancer before, etc. In Giuliana’s case, her doctors and health care team have determined that her treatment protocol will involve surgery and radiotherapy.

Most people who undergo a lumpectomy will experience a recovery time ranging from one day to two weeks. In most cases, radiation therapy causes radiation side effects such as skin redness and burning, fatigue, and nausea. Giuliana can support her skin by using a good cream, avoiding irritating clothing, and staying out of the sun.

Another thing that can help women recover from a breast cancer diagnosis and treatment is a good support system. Fortunately for Giuliana, her husband Bill Rancic has been extremely supportive.

“Bill is unbelievable,” Giuliana said. “He lets me cry when I want to cry, he doesn’t say, ‘Hey, look at that person who’s worse off than you are.’ He just lets me feel what I’m feeling.”

So with a few months of medical care, including surgery and radiation side effects, ahead of her, how does Giuliana feel about continuing her IVF treatment?

She has said, “I’m not gonna give up, I want that baby. And what’s amazing is that baby will have saved my life…Now I truly believe that God was looking out for me. Had I gotten pregnant [earlier], a few years down the line I could be a lot sicker.”

We are grateful to see that another woman has caught breast cancer early and are reminded of how important it is for all of us as adult women to be proactive about our health. Staying on top of diagnostic testing is so important in being able to nip cancer as early as possible so that we can live our lives to the fullest for many years to come.

Our prayers go out to Giuliana and Bill, and to every other woman who has recently been diagnosed with breast cancer. May your journey be grace-filled and may you have all the support and resources you need.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Enter Our FREE Giveaway of Queasy Pops!

One of the most common chemotherapy or radiation side effects is nausea, and everyone discovers what works best for queasy popshelping them to ease theirs. Many experts recommend that patients suck on hard candy, which is why Queasy Pops and Queasy Drops are such a great way to find relief. Developed by healthcare professionals, Queasy Pops are all natural, drug free, and use a special formulation of essential oils and aromatherapy to stimulate the trigeminal nerve, a cranial nerve associated with nausea relief. They are also wonderful for helping with dry mouth and can give a nice energy boost.

Queasy Pops come in seven flavors: peppermint, cinnamon, sour lemon, papaya, ginger, sour raspberry and green tea with lemon.

Lucky for us! As a special for the Jeans Cream community, Three Lollies, the maker of Queasy Pops, is offering two free boxes of Queasy Pops to two winners of our giveaway. Just leave a comment by 6pm on Wednesday, September 28 and tell us why you (or one of your friends) would love to try Queasy Pops, and we’ll enter you in the drawing to win.


Some technical details…
1. Only one entry will count.
2. Giveaway is open to legal residents of the continental United States who are at least 18 years of age.
3. The winner will be selected at random and notified via email.

Monday, August 22, 2011

What I Did To Move Forward

GUEST POST BY JAN BIANCHI

I can honestly say the combination of support groups, therapy and my love of writing is what help me to navigate my journey Jan Bianchiafter diagnosis.  I can’t shortchange the emphasis of close friends and my mother.  Writing was and has been a great filter but then I like to journal and digress.  Not everyone likes to digress and go within to see the murals on the interior walls of their being.  As a poet it is an essential part of my being.  The murals within can be daunting, unfamiliar to someone new who hasn’t been exposed to their inner being on a regular basis. Writing can be cathartic like hot steam needing release. It is the vehicle for the inner voice to have a place on the outside rather than in the warehouse of one’s being.  Journaling my feelings became a poetic quest as I documented my journey.  That documentation led me to create later, My Journey with Breast Cancer, Measures of Hope.

I was forty-one when I was diagnosed.  And I can confess what matters to me now at fifty-one is different than what I felt vanity wise at forty-one.   I would have made different choices regarding my breast reconstruction. (That is another story for another time.)  I was diagnosed with DCIS.  Since it was in various areas in my right breast I was told they could not do a lumpectomy.  I would undergo a mastectomy with immediate breast reconstruction.

The journey of breast cancer is a process of unfamiliar decisions that become educated decisions, startling facts, heart rendering calculations, and unfathomable testing of the human spirit.  The journey is one of declaring that the Self shall shine forth and bare the badge of Honor, Courage and Hope.  Support groups I found very resourceful for having the gift to listen to other’s process and treatments.  Their stories allowed me to become more familiar with my own in the early stages after diagnosis.  If you have one loyal friend you can count on and trust unconditionally, then I would assign that person to being your wingman. Having two sets of ears and eyes during doctor’s visits, treatment protocols (if mandated) will make a huge difference.  For the individual diagnosed, a certain numbing process goes on for a period of time.  There will be things one will miss and perhaps not hear as clearly as the person beside you.  That person has the ability to be the X factor in asking the necessary questions when you may not feel up to it.  That person will also become a valuable resource to anchor the unknown as you go.  If there isn’t someone you feel close enough to ask, reach out to someone in a neighboring support group to help you.  People really are willing to help if invited!

So moving forward through the maze of any forms of cancer is uncharted territory.  Moving forward from life events that catapult one from one extreme to another is life altering.  It is like sifting for gold in the old westerns trying to discover gold verses pyrite.  To distinguish the outcome will vary for each of us. Anywhere someone can find a quiet setting like a garden creates calm around you. It is in that space creativity can be born to uplift the soul that is burdened. Here is where healing can be found whether in silence, discussion with another or journaling with one’s thoughts.

Jan Bianchi was diagnosed with breast cancer ten years ago at the age of forty-one. She underwent a mastectomy to her right breast and had the tramflap for reconstruction*.  A writer of Inspirational Books, Jan has written five books, including one on her breast cancer experience titled, Measures of Hope, My Journey with Breast Cancer.

Jan is an active artist, combining her own photography with her written verses to make inspiring posters. In fact, right now she is running a giveaway of her creations on her blog. She’ll draw three names from the first 200 followers of her new blog and will giveaway 2 prints of the Header Pic that reads: “Encourage the possibilities of your dreams!” along with one copy of her book, Measures of Hope. Visit Jan Bianchi’s website here.

*Jan has had a lot of fallout from undergoing the tramflap and would love to receive any stories regarding similar issues and how they were handled. Please feel welcome to contact her through her blog.
Friday, July 22, 2011

How To Reduce Radiation Side Effects and Chemotherapy Side Effects

Radiation side effects and chemotherapy side effects can seriously impact a person’s ability to function and feel positive. Here are some quick tips to help reduce the side effects caused by radiation and chemotherapy: