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Old 02-13-2006, 11:10 AM   #1
mts
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Little tiny masses in abdominal area

All my life I have had symmetry... if I got a pimple on my right cheek, inevitably I would get a pimple on the left. A right chin hair and a left chin hair.
My breast cancer (fortunately) only came on the right side.
Anyway, I found this smallish lump that feels as though it "floats" above my rib cage about a 6 inches from the crease of my breast... ON BOTH SIDES!
I had a CT and a PET and both were negative.
Hemangioma has been ruled out. Whatever they are, they are benign, yet my onc wants them out. My mom had similar little masses. Her right shoulder was an eensy bit larger than her left. They said then that it was not uncommon.
I am not worried about them, but was wondering if anyone had any similar little masses. I have heard they are common and many women get them...
What do you all think?

Maria
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Old 02-13-2006, 09:32 PM   #2
Sherryg683
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well...

I haven't had that experience yet but I'd want them out also. Sounds like you have my kind of Oncologist, if it's not suppose to be there..take it out. It could be nothing but it could develope into something, I'm not a Dr. but I want the lumps out my body after all I've been through, especially if it's not a major operation..sherryg683
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Old 02-13-2006, 09:40 PM   #3
Lolly
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I don't know, I used to feel I wanted every lump and bump out, but over the years (going on 7 since BC) have gotten tired of surgeries and now it definitely has to be life threatening before I go for surgery!

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Old 02-13-2006, 10:34 PM   #4
Sherryg683
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Lolly, I can't wait till I get to the point you are. Since my diagnosis in December it seems like this Cancer preoccupies all my waking thoughts. I want everything that has anything to do with Cancer to just disappear, so I can go about my old life. I know it will never happen and I will have to learn to live with it. It's just not something I ever thought I would have to deal with. I was a health freak who worked out 5 days a week before this, now I don't have the energy to do anything. Hoping it gets better after chemo...sherryg683
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Old 02-14-2006, 03:19 AM   #5
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Dear Sherry,

You will get to that point, unbelievable though it seems now. Once chemo is over with, and radiation and cancer is no longer quite a full-time job, then whether out of weariness or optimism or pragmatism, the mind simply refuses to whirl constantly around the one topic. Tests show, for instance, that little aches in the breast are not a new tumor, that a pull under the rib-cage is not liver metastasis and gradually one actually internalizes this and can talk oneself through and out of panic. Anxiety can still erupt from time to time, but life does return - not to the pre-cancer garden of eden innocence and certainty - but to something very livable.

just hang in there, keep writing to this site and you'll get through it all.
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Old 02-14-2006, 05:00 AM   #6
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I am a man and non sufferer.

I have two I have had for years, but not symetric. One on the edge of the rib cage could have been the result of an impact injury, and a tiny one in the abdominal area. You would think you would notice them appearing but I didnt, so have no idea how long they took to appear or when.

The doctor says they are of no significance, and the advise is leave well alone. I have had them for years. One did start becoming sensitive but has no done so since I changed my diet, and I think they are smaller. After the time I have spent on this site I am much more concious about such things, and there is an element of cowadice / not wanting to know / avoiding the treatment machine, balanced by trust in my doctor / the result of my own observation.

If I had had previous contact with cancer I think I would want a biopsy just to know.

On the issue of adaptation we are wonderfully adaptable as a species, and have memories designed to forget/fog/grind off the harsh edges to an extent. If we could'nt forget I dont think we would survive, overcome and continue, but the price is loss of innocence, a sack of unanswerable questions, and a sense of sadness at the inevitablility of the human condition.

I think it is called wisdom, I just wish I could remember where I left it.

RB
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