Posts Tagged ‘breast cancer’

Makeovers for Mammograms: Doing What You Can With What You Have

Monday, February 8th, 2010

The moxie and strength of some our patients is truly amazing. This past weekend Leslie Crawford Moore and five of her coworker and girlfriends held a Makeovers for Mammograms party here at the Charleston Breast Center. Leslie is a professional makeup artist with Moore Makeup and has just finished chemotherapy treatments for breast cancer that she found herself while doing her own self-exam. Her next step is radiation.

But this past weekend she refocused her energy to raise money for a cause she believes in. On Saturday February 6, Leslie and her talented buddies, Margaret, Elizabeth, Kelly, Laura and Pam, donated their time and performed 30-minute makeovers for a nominal fee, which they presented to the Charleston Breast Center. You should have seen the beautiful ladies leaving the center! We’d like to thank Moore Makeup for their generous donation.

These ladies didn’t have a lot of money to give away… but they used their talents and a little ingenuity to do more good together than they could have done individually. What are you good at and how could it benefit someone else? Pay it forward.

You Never Know Who’s Listening

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Ever heard the saying “little pitchers have big ears”?

It means “Children hear and understand more than you think they do. The play on words here is on the resemblance of the ear to the handle of a pitcher. It’s an ancient saying, recorded by John Heywood in 1546.

Think about this the next time you describe an experience as being more dramatic or painful than it really is, just to be funny. You never know who’s listening!

We’ve had women come into the Breast Center in tears to get their first mammogram because they have heard friends or family describe the experience in derogatory terms. “I’m afraid it will feel like getting my boobs slammed in a refrigerator door.” “My aunt says a mammogram is an awful experience.” This is just not true.

Our techs are so highly trained that a mammogram takes less time than a pedicure and is no more uncomfortable than a good back massage.

Encourage your friends and family to get their mammograms and don’t joke about getting “squished.” You never know who’s listening.

It Sounds Like Science Fiction

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Did you see last week’s Grey’s Anatomy episode? The surgeons at Seattle Grace use a high temperature chemotherapy treatment to specifically target the unhealthy cancer cells in a patient with lung cancer. Sounds like something straight out of the brains of a Hollywood writer, right?

It turns out that the University of Oklahoma just completed a study of a technique that not only killed larger tumors (1-1 1/2 inches in size) but reduced the need for mastectomies by almost 90 percent. The technique, recently approved by the FDA, is called Focused Microwave Thermography and “uses a modified version of the microwave technology behind the ‘Star Wars’ defense system”. The heat therapy is applied within two hours of chemo and thus was more susceptible to the chemotherapy and shrunk rapidly.

Even more unbelievable, scientists are beginning a clinical trial that they hope will have a similar success rate on tumors up to 5 inches and are planning to study an unexpected by-product of this technique – a boosted immune system that could reduce the chance of cancer recurrence.

We hope to read about this process in the non-fiction aisle soon!

We Get by With a Little Help From Our Friends

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Are you aware that your friends can save your life?

Besides pinch hitting as babysitters, giving us opinions of how that purple skirt really looks and cheering us up when we have had yet another “one of those days”, having friends positively affects your health.

Clinical studies have definitively proven that social support improves the outcomes of cancer patients. They keep you positive, take care of your family, and occasionally pull you kicking and screaming through the whole experience.

But even more important, a study published in Cancer Prevention Research in October of 2009 clearly links the stress produced from isolation to increased mammary gland tumor growth. In plain speak: Having a tight group of friends may actually reduce your risk of developing breast cancer.

That sounds like a wonderful excuse for a Girl’s Night Out!

It’s Nice to Be Heard

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

When the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force issued guidelines in November that seemed to be leading the way for decreased coverage for breast cancer screening, women’s groups, doctors and imaging-equipment makers began putting pressure on lawmakers with angry calls and emails relating their confusion.

And Washington seems to be listening.

The Senate added an amendment from Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D., Md.) to its health-overhaul bill that effectively nullified the new guidelines and promised mammogram coverage for women starting at age 40. The House lawmakers voted unanimously for a resolution named for Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D., Fla.), a breast-cancer survivor, saying the task-force guidelines shouldn’t be used by insurers to deny coverage for routine mammograms. Negotiations are currently in progress to include these measures in the final healthcare bill.

Keep yelling , girls!

We Know, It’s Confusing

Monday, January 18th, 2010

New breast health guidelines have been released jointly by two different organizations, the American College of Radiology (ACR) and the Society of Breast Imaging (SBI), based on actual results and successes of beginning annual mammography screening at age 40.

They recommend that “annual screening should begin on women with an average risk of breast cancer at age 40 and women with a higher risk at age 30.” This negates the guidelines issued in November by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, but is based on a work in progress for nearly two years. The data gathered from this joint project also helps to determine how to screen women with different risk levels.

For example, women with a greater than 20 percent lifetime risk based on family history or who possess the BRCA gene mutation should seek annual MRI testing by age 30.  Women with an average risk of breast cancer should start screening at age 40and women with an elevated risk of breast cancer should begin getting mammograms by age 30.

The Charleston Breast Center’s Dr. Lisa Baron agrees, “Breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer in women and the second-leading cause of cancer-related deaths. I join my colleagues in disagreeing with their new recommendations for breast cancer screening. Widespread use of routine screening, along with treatment advances in recent years, has been credited with significant reductions in breast cancer mortality.”

Our recommendation: get your mammogram!

Pretty But Painful

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Women are not nice to their bodies. And they never have been. Victorian women had their lower ribs removed in order to produce small waists. For hundreds of years the Chinese have bound the feet of young ladies to keep them petite and delicate. Americans inject toxins into their faces to appear a little younger and less stressed.

In fact the saying goes, “It’s better to look good, than to feel good.”

We’re willing to undergo actual pain to look good, but yet many of us are afraid of the slight discomfort of a mammogram. And if we’re not alive, what good is being pretty? Here are some other things women do for the sake of beauty:
· Lash tinting · Bikini wax – Have you seen the part of 40 year old virgin where Steve Carrell gets his chest waxed? Ouch!
· Stiletto heels
· Belly button piercing
· Tummy tuck (major surgery, like a c-section!)

So the next time you hesitate at getting your mammogram out of fear of discomfort, just think of the above and remember the most beautiful part of life is living it!

Oh, and check out our video that proves to you the Charleston Breast Center is NOT a little shop of horrors! What is the most painful part of your beauty regime?

Rock ‘N Roll All Night, Mammogram by Day

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Peter Criss, former drummer for the rock band KISS, discovered a lump in his chest one night in 2007. He decided to go to the doctor, and underwent some tests and a surgical procedure to remove the lump. A week later, the doctor called. It was breast cancer.

He was devastated and acted quickly. Luckily, Criss had caught the disease at its earliest stage. After a second surgery to remove it in 2008, he did not need chemotherapy, radiation or medication.

Now the former rocker is speaking out about his illness to encourage other men to get tested for breast cancer the moment they suspect something might be wrong. According to the National Cancer Institute, men account for only 1 percent of all breast cancer cases, but about 2,000 men develop it each year, and 440 die from it.

“Man or woman, there is no discrimination with breast cancer … we all don’t have nine lives,” says Criss on his Web site.

Today, Criss who’s 63 and best known for the 1976 ballad ”Beth,” Kiss’ biggest hit to date, is still cancer free – and working on a solo album. Beth, what can I do?

From Breast to Blog to…?

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

A diagnosis of breast cancer affects every woman differently. Coping mechanisms vary. Some women crave the comfort of their family; others may reach out to other breast cancer patients to feel less alone; some knit. Still others put pen to paper – or more accurately, fingers to keyboard.

Blogging one’s journey through breast cancer has become an incredible outlet for a growing number of breast cancer patients, serving as an ongoing diary of their days and nights battling the disease.

We invite you to take a look at a few of our favorites:

Jayne’s Breast Cancer Blog
Written by Jayne England Byrne, who was diagnosed with Stage 1 invasive lobular cancer in March 2006

My Not-So-Awesome Cancer Memoir
The memoirs of a 22-year-old, life-living, fun-loving Cali girl who was diagnosed with cancer in 2009

Breast Cancer Smancer – I Heart Life
A Facebook breast cancer journal

Tough Titties
The blog of Lowry, a 29-year-old breast cancer survivor

Not Just About Cancer
A 38-year-old writer diagnosed with aggressive breast cancer

Have a blog we should be reading? Let us know.

Tweet to Fight Cancer?

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

Almost everyone we know is on Twitter! Are you? If you’ve never tweeted, here’s the gist: tell the world what you’re doing or thinking in 140 characters or less. Twitter’s definitely become a phenomenon, often breaking news stories before the networks, sharing information and now raising money to help fight cancer. 

Drew Olanoff, a cancer fighter and blogger, had the brilliant idea to auction off his coveted Twitter username, “@drew,” in order to raise money for LiveStrong, the Lance Armstrong Foundation raising funds and awareness to fight cancer.  

When comedian Drew Carey heard about Drew Olanoff’s idea, he bid $25,000 for the “@drew” moniker, then quickly upped that bid to $100,000, and finally, promised a $1 million if he gets one million followers on his current Twitter account: @drewfromtv! Visit www.milliondollardrew.com to follow Drew Carey and help LiveStrong continue the fight against cancer.