Breast Cancer Information

Victorious


Home | Site Map | 101InfoLinks.com | Best Book Shop | Sports Fans ONLY
     .
© 2007

There it is again. I muttered to myself, frustrated as I washed my arm. Every morning for five or six days in the fall of 2003, I noticed this rust-colored sticky stuff that appeared in both drips and smears on my left forearm and thigh. I had no idea where it could be coming from.

Finally, on Sunday morning I found the answer. My eyes followed my hand as I wiped the steam from the bathroom mirror. Looking past my fingertips, there it was. To my shock and horror, the rust-colored sticky stuff easily dripped from my left nipple.

In disbelief, I collapsed into my bedroom chair, swirling with a mix of grief and fear. I stared at the blank white wall, feeling vacant, distant, disconnected from what I had just seen in the mirror. All I heard was that loud, penetrating silence that surrounds and encompasses every thought and movement.

I called my doctor and was told that this was not an emergency room issue, but did need immediate attention. It could be cancer or another of many health challenges. Then, I began to wonder, what now? What is next?

After an exam, the breast cancer specialist made an appointment for that same afternoon to have both a mammogram and an ultrasound. They took two sets of two x rays on each breast and a third x ray of a specific area of my right breast. I realized I could have two areas of concern, not just the one.

Next, was the ultrasound. I could see the area of my breast where they had done the extra mammogram. There was a dark mass which had a very different pattern than therest of my breast. After the biopsy, I was diagnosed with infiltrating ductile carcinoma, a rare, aggressive, deadly cancer that can quickly metastasize to the bones and lungs. Next is death. I had symptoms of both bone and lung cancer.

The ultrasound of my left breast showed a trail of little beads. Masses unevenly lined up from my underarm to my nipple. This could not be good, I thought. These masses were rubbing against several ducts, causing bleeding and discharge. That was the rust-colored sticky stuff. My left breast was diagnosed with a rare hyperplastic disease involving multiple ducts. My oncologist felt that I also had cancer in this breast. She was deeply concerned, and wanted to immediately remove the mass in my right breast and cut off 1/3 or more of my left breast. From now on, on medical history forms, I would check the box for cancer.

Even before these diagnoses, I had already decided that I did not want surgery. In my heart, I really did not believe I would live through a surgery, much less the chemotherapy or radiation. I preferred an alternative approach. I did have my health insurance to pay for most medical expenses, but it did not cover alternative therapies. Also, I had previous long term health challenges. I wanted a fix, not just a partial solution. I chose Mye Cell treatments in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico and worked with Dr. Melenie Dunn, NMD in Scottsdale, AZ. Her number is 480.556.6700. I am now cancer-free.

I have the confirmed belief that each of lifes moments hold a purpose and a gift. There are no accidents. Nothing is random. Lifes lessons come hand in hand with their opportunities. I do not always remember to live by these beliefs, but I do always come back to them. I knew that this particular lesson was about trust. It was about my ability to trust. It was about my confidence in myself. My confidence in God. The lesson was about realizing, knowing with every breath and every beat of my heart, that I Am Blessed. We All Are.

Doreene Clement, a cancer victor and author of The 5 Year Journal, is currently writing a new book, Blessed, about her life and her cancer experience.

For more information:
http://www.the5yearjournal.com
480.423.8095

Copyright 2005 OMDC, LLC All Rights Reserved


MORE RESOURCES:

More High-Risk Women Preempt Breast Cancer
Washington Post, United States - 15 hours ago
By the time she found the third lump, she was 25 and had watched her grandmother die of breast cancer (after being diagnosed at 55) and her mother endure ...


Health Newstrack

New Mammography Technology Effective In Detecting Breast Cancer
Science Daily (press release) - Dec 2, 2008
The ability of x-ray mammography, a standard screening tool for breast cancer, to detect lesions is reduced when performed on dense breasts, where tissue is ...
RSNA Releases Findings on New Technologies and Therapy for Breast ... DOTmed.com (press release)
RSNA: New Techniques Improve Breast Cancer Diagnoses Breast ... Drug Topics Magazine
New Breast Cancer Scan Cuts False Alarms WebMD
U.S. News & World Report - MarketWatch
all 62 news articles


TopNews

Can breast cancer regress naturally?
Healthcare Republic - 19 hours ago
Norwegian research found that breast cancer rates were higher among women who were screened more regularly than a control group. This suggests that some of ...
Delays In Radiation Therapy Lead To Increased Breast Cancer ... Science Daily (press release)
all 26 news articles


High Tech Breast Cancer Treatment Comes to the First Coast
First Coast News, FL - 2 hours ago
JACKSONVILLE, FL -- As a nurse of 29 years, Carol Robinson has dealt with breast cancer on many levels, but never on her own until this September. ...



Bradley president says she has breast cancer
WAND, IL - 5 hours ago
AP - December 3, 2008 8:14 PM ET PEORIA, Ill. (AP) - Bradley University President Joanna Glasser says she has breast cancer and will start treatment early ...


EIN News Introduces 'Breast Cancer News Today'; Website Offers ...
MarketWatch - Dec 2, 2008
Responding to the growing demand for accurate information about breast cancer, its risk factors, screening procedures and drugs to treat it, ...


DHS DECA club raising funds for breast cancer awareness
Daily Citizen, GA - 7 hours ago
This year, Georgia DECA has contributed more than $10000 to breast cancer awareness and the club at Dalton High hopes to reach more than $1000 in ...


The green behind the pink: How Komen breast cancer group spends ...
Medill Reports, IL - 6 hours ago
by Colleen M. Padia If you’ve ever purchased a pink item during Breast Cancer Awareness Month, or pledged money to a co-worker running the Susan G. Komen ...


TRI-AD Associate "Walks for the Cure" in the San Diego Breast ...
PR Web (press release), WA - 21 hours ago
With support from coworkers, family and friends, TRI-AD Associate Irma Lopez walked 60 miles to support breast cancer research in the Breast Cancer 3-Day, ...

Breast-Cancer - Google News

     Home | Site Map | 101InfoLinks Directory | You'll LOVE This! | Sports Fans ONLY          
© 2007
.