Have you ever been called dense? I have…in multiple senses of the word. Dense, the feeling
Based on the definitions on dictionary.com, I have been dense in the sense of being “stupid; slow-witted; dull”. Now, to be honest, this definition does not fit me most of the time. I call myself a smartass, and you can’t really be one without being quick-witted. I also don’t think that people would refer to me as dull. I’m not the life of the party, but no one has fallen asleep talking to me. I, on the other hand, have fallen asleep in a room full of people. I don’t get a lot of sleep and when things are dull around me, I can’t seem to stay awake. I guess you could say that I’m dense when it comes to going to bed at an earlier hour. Dense, the information I also felt a little dense (stupid) when I started my cancer journey, but it was really the information itself that was dense, that is, “difficult to understand or follow because of being closely packed with ideas or complexities of style.” With cancer, the information just keeps coming and it’s likely to be totally foreign to you. Most people don’t know anything about sentinel and axillary nodes, which is understandable. Learning cancer terminology is on a need-to-know basis. If the time comes when you need to know it, you’ll learn and remember it because, unlike calculus, you will actually use the information to make decisions about treatment. The “complexity of styles” part of the definition is an understatement. A pathology report can be a nightmare if your doctor doesn’t explain it well. It would be nice if there was a doctor’s version of test results and a simplified version below it for you, as the patient. They are your results after all. Dense, the breasts I had multiple mammograms in the process of reaching my cancer diagnosis. At no point did anyone mention that I had dense breasts. Instead, I got the news indirectly during my first ultrasound biopsy. The radiologist doing the biopsy said that he was changing needle sizes because my breast was dense and he was having trouble getting a sample. In this situation, dictionary.com defines dense as “having the component parts closely compacted together.” The National Cancer Institute explains that “Breasts contain glandular, connective, and fat tissue. Breast density is a term that describes the relative amount of these different types of breast tissue as seen on a mammogram. Dense breasts have relatively high amounts of glandular tissue and fibrous connective tissue and relatively low amounts of fatty breast tissue.” But what does this mean? Why is it important? The densebreastscanada.ca and densebreast-info.org websites provide the following information:
Personally, I had multiple mammograms and ultrasounds before I had an MRI that made it abundantly clear that there were signs of cancer in three-quarters of my left breast. Don't worry. This is not likely to be your experience. How to be Smarter about Cancer Here are some suggestions that may help you feel less dense about cancer.
With breasts, it’s better to know than not know if you're dense.
3 Comments
Margaret
5/6/2018 09:38:36 am
Interesting info here Deb !!
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Rosanne
5/7/2018 07:29:15 am
Like you, when sent for my first mammogram that started me on my cancer journey, I was advised that I had dense breasts. I wondered how would one know this prior to having a mammogram? I didn't know at the time the significance to this statement. During surgery it was discovered that my tumour was much larger than expected as it did not show on any of my pre surgery tests. Personally, I suspect this may have changed my treatment plan to try and reduce the tumour prior to surgery but I was just happy to have the tumour gone.
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Joan Low
2/25/2020 04:09:35 pm
Dense breasts.
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Debbie KerrOver 30-years of writing experience, about 10 years as a cancer survivor, and a lifetime purveyor of wit and laughter. Sign up for notifications of new posts.
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