On 23 July I had a unilateral
mastectomy of my left breast with Auxiliary Lymph Node Removal. It was 23 days after my diagnosis with
Cancer. This post is based on notes I
kept each day I was in my Belgian hospital.
Day Minus One
I was instructed to be at hospital by 2pm sharp on the day before my
operation to meet the anaesthetist, but of course I've been waiting nearly two
hours before he strolls in and then our chat takes barely two minutes. Weight, height, any questions and we're
done. So now I'm in my hospital room, in
my street clothes, a full day in advance and feeling rather daft as I pretend
to be a proper patient. Luckily, St
Luc's have put me in a two-bed room with a Belgian lady who is here for a
second breast cancer op, to remove more from her breast after a lumpectomy in
January. She's done chemo and knows the cancer
drill. We sit at the table and eat
dinner together, discussing baldness. Wigs
make her head permanently wet with sweat, she tells me, but on the other hand
it's good to have a warm turban to wear at night when a bald head gets
cold. She shows me the products she uses;
cream to stop her bald head itching and varnishes to use on her chemo-cracked
nails. It's like a Girls Night In with a
Cancer Theme and no wine.
Before we go to bed we are told to shower with liquid red
soap that smells of hospitals and turns the skin a charming shade of
yellow. Tonight we are allowed to wash
it off with our own soap but tomorrow morning we must shower again with just
the disinfecting soap. The nurse brings
me a shaver as I didn't bring my own and I need a freshly shaved armpit. I try not to dwell on the fact that they are
preparing me for the knife and concentrate on getting to sleep while hospital
trolleys trundle down the corridor and machines beep.
Day Zero
This morning I have no time to brood, or get hungry. My operation time has been brought forward
and suddenly I am in a rush to shower and get into the hospital gown. I have to leave my specs behind so everything
is a blur as they wheel me on my bed down to the bowels of the hospital and I
feel like an extra in a hospital drama. Indistinct
people talk rapidly at me French from behind face masks and I haven't got a
clue what is going on but it all fades blessedly soon. I'm under.
I have a memory of coming round from an operation as a young
teenager and it was like trying to escape from water when drowning. But this time I am gently washed onto the
shores of consciousness - I guess the drugs have got better in the last thirty
years. As if I am in a dream, my husband
comes in and kisses me. He tells me I
look beautiful.
When I wake up properly, my husband is gone. I lie very still, as if I am glued to the
bed, and take stock. I have bandages
wrapped so tightly around my chest that it is hard to breath. A drip is attached to my right hand so the
arm has limited use. There's no way I'm
even thinking about moving my left arm.
Two tubes emerge somehow from my left side and drain into plastic bottles
on the floor. I'd heard about these
drains and expected little pod-type things,
but these bottles are as big as a pint of milk. All in all, I cannot imagine ever being able
to detach any part of my body from the bed.
On the plus side though, the pain is not too bad.
My roommate snores like an aircraft taking off all
afternoon. Later I learn that her throat
is painful after the tube that was inserted during surgery. A tube? I ask. She smiles at my innocence and tells me that
I had one too. I am surprised. I must have a big throat as I was blissfully
unaware.
I leave it as long as I dare but in the end there is no
denying it any longer - I am desperate to pee.
The nurse brings a shiny, metal bedpan and helps me wriggle onto
it. Nothing happens. My bladder aches and yet my body simply
refuses to believe that it is ok to go while lying in bed with my bum higher
than my head, my knickers round my ankles and my roommate on the other side of
a thin curtain. This is not how I had planned to spend my summer
vacation.
Day One
It is a miserably long and sleepless night and my back aches horribly from
lying immobile so long. But the morning
brings great progress.
FIRST: I make it to the toilet! When the nurse suggests moving I think she is
mad but I will try anything to avoid
using the bed pan again. She hauls me up
and I do a slow shuffle, pushing the drip while she follows behind with my
drain bottles. But I make it!
SECOND: they take the catheter out. So now I can use my right hand again. I can sit up in bed and they have moved my
bedside table to my right hand side so that I can reach for things myself (it
is impossible to reach over to my left).
THIRD: they take the ultra-tight compress bandages off and I
can breathe again. The nurse who changes
my dressing asks if I am ready to see the scar.
Not yet, I say.
In the afternoon, I am sitting up in bed and flicking
through magazines when my temporary boob arrives. It comes with a lovely lady from Vivre Comme
Avant, a charity staffed by volunteers who have survived breast cancer and
visit cancer patients in hospital. She
is full of information and leaflets. She
explains to me that I will need to be careful with my left arm now that I have
had around 10 lymph nodes removed. I
must take extra precautions to compensate: disinfect any cuts or burns on my left
arm promptly and don't ever allow injections or blood pressure monitoring on
that arm. She gives me addresses for
clinics which will provide my new prosthesis in due course, though it will be
six weeks or so before I can wear it.
For now, she gives me a little pouch, stuffed with padding, to use in my
bra. It's about as sophisticated as
stuffing socks in your bra. But I thank
her - it is better than nothing at all.
Day Two
With the aid of a sleeping tablet, I get a bit more sleep and continue to
make rapid progress. I am now moving
around though it still feels like a great effort. The nurse offers to bring me a bag to carry
my bottles in and I expect some kind of medical accessory so I am surprised
when she comes back with a River Woods paper shopping bag. Still, it does the job.
There is occasional discomfort but no real pain across my
breast. It is painful under my armpit
though, and I cannot really move my arm.
I'm hoping that is mainly the drains though it is also swollen and sore. The oddest thing is the numbness. They tell me that this is because they cut
nerve ends and the feeling will come back, though it can take up to a
year. When the nurse dabs disinfectant
on my chest, it has the same sensation as the inside of the mouth after being
to the dentist for a procedure. It is
also quite weird when something brushes down the back of my arm: not numb but
oddly prickly, like the skin is raw.
Today I am ready to see the scar. The nurse covers it with a piece of paper and
hands me a mirror, so that at first I see the strange lack of cleavage. Then she moves it away and I see a diagonal
scar, slicing up across what used to be my breast into my armpit. It is quite neat. I have already seen photos on the internet so
I am prepared for the strangeness of no nipple in all that flatness. In fact, it is much less ugly than some of
the images I have seen. I do not cry.
Looking back, I went into this operation very innocently naive. It all happened too fast to ask any questions
and I didn't really know what they were going to do to me. I now learn that I have had an Auxiliary
Lymph Node Removal. This is when they
just take out 10-15 lymph nodes and usually takes place when they have reason
to think there is cancer there. It comes
with potential complications as you lose the protection of those lymph nodes
and your arm is more vulnerable to swelling and infection. The alternative is to do a Sentinel Node
Removal. In this case, they inject a
radioactive dye beforehand so that they can locate the first nodes easily. They remove between one and three and may
test them straight away, only removing more if necessary. It is too late now to ask my surgeon now why
I needed the more drastic option. I just have to trust her.
One drain has been removed!
It came out painlessly, just an odd pulling sensation and then a
whoosh! Already I can move much more
easily.
The nurse brings me some sample prosthesis's. They are surprisingly soft but also heavy, so
I am glad I will only need a small one.
I stick my finger into it and the dent slowly pops back out. You can buy special bras with a pocket for
your fake boob or get one that sticks to you.
I am sceptical. Surely the
stickiness can't last? The nurse
assures me that you simply wash it at the end of the day, put the protective
covering on overnight and the next morning it will stick right back on. Hmmm.
Might be worth considering though.
Yesterday I heard the story of a lady who went swimming with her slip-in
prosthesis and it slipped out. She found
two boys playing with it in the pool like a Frisbee.
The kinesitherapist comes to see me. She is young and energetic and gives me lots
of arm exercises. For the first week
they are all below shoulder height, after that I can move as much as I like so
long as I don't lift more than 7kg. Exercise,
she warns me, or you will stiffen up when you get older. She shows me what she
expects me to be able to do after six weeks but just now, I can't lift my arm
without pain in my armpit and I can't imagine being able to move that easily ever again. And exercising the arm alone is not enough,
she impresses on me: apparently 2.5 hours of cardiovascular exercise a week
reduces recurrence of cancer by 25%. And
there's one more reason why it will be important to exercise more in future -
hormone therapy makes you fat. Great. So now I get to look forward to having one
boob, no hair and rolls of fat?
I'm feeling weepy this afternoon. I think the elation of getting through this operation
is wearing off and I am remembering that there is still a long road ahead. Cancer never really leaves. Its shadow stays behind, the cold whisper in
the night that it can always come back.
The fear that it is already quietly nibbling away at some corner of your
body.
Also, I well up every time I think about showing my husband
my scar. I can't explain why, because
he's been amazing and I know he will love me however bad it looks. Somehow I can't help feeling ashamed and it
makes me cry.
Day Three
It's going home day and I feel stronger again. The remaining drain comes out and now I can
do the below shoulder exercises with just a bit of discomfort. My armpit is still very swollen but I can
move around and use my arm fairly comfortably.
It's so good to move without carrying a bag of bottles with me! I wash my hair myself under the tap in the
bathroom sink, put in my contact lenses and feel more myself again.
When the nurse briskly shows my husband what he needs to do
with the bandages over the next few days, he doesn't flinch. I told him last night how I felt and he was
so loving and reassuring that I don't shed a tear when my scar is finally
revealed. The bandages are a simple
affair: a sticky mesh to help the scar heal nicely, covered by simple pads and
held in place by a kind of string vest.
With a bandage wrapped all the way round my chest and a baggy shirt worn
over it all, it isn't obvious that I only have one breast underneath. I'm ready
to leave!
As I put my things back in the suitcase, I realise that my
packing for hospital was somewhat arbitrary.
So here are some Top Tips learnt from my mistakes:
- ·
Don't forget some nice smelling shower gel which
will help clear the smell of disinfecting soap, and a washcloth and soft towels.
- ·
Bring your razor so you can make sure you are freshly
shaved pre-op.
- ·
Bring slip-on slippers. I brought fluffy ones but ended up using my flip
flops because they were much easier to shove my feet into when I shuffled to
the loo.
- ·
My eye mask was invaluable, I wouldn't have got
any sleep without it. It was also great
to listen to soothing music on my Smartphone through earphones at night when
the hospital buzz got too much.
- ·
If the food is anything like my hospital (and I
guess institutional food is always grim) then it's a good idea to bring snacks
and drinks. I brought chocolates with me
but in the end it was fruit I really craved - I must have been ill! A friend
actually brought in a complete meal for me and it was one of the most enjoyable
dinners I've ever had.
- ·
A notebook and pen are useful for keeping track
of the information that is thrown at you when you might still feel quite
groggy.
- ·
I went shopping and bought button-up pyjamas for
hospital and a button-up baggy shirt to wear home and they were certainly much
easier to put on than T shirts. I expect
that button-up shirts will be best for the next few days but I don't think I
will need them for long.
- ·
The lady from Vivre Comme Avant who gave me the
pouch-boob talked about using it in my bra to go home from hospital. In fact, I am so strapped up that it is impossible to
put on a bra. But I guess larger breasted
ladies might need the support and, if so, it needs to be soft with no under-wire.
So here I go, leaving my hospital room for the first time in
days.
If I walk tall and wear the shirt baggy, no-one will ever
know that I'm a One-Boobed Babe.