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Metastasis means that tumor is spread beyond the area of the breast. It first spreads in the area of the axilla or the armpit. Dr. Jane Mendez, Chief of Breast Surgery with Miami Cancer Ins****ute, explains what tests are useful for a correct diagnosis. **************************************************************************************************************************************************************************
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We teach you why lymph nodes are important in breast cancer treatment. A sentinel node biopsy is the most common surgery performed to assess if cancer has spread to the axillary lymph nodes.
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Questions for your Breast Surgeon:
1. Am I a candidate for a “sentinel lymph node biopsy?”
2. If I have a “positive node” how will that change my treatment plan?
3. Under what situations might I need an “axillary dissection?”
4. What will you do if you find one or two nodes with cancer?
5. What are the side effects of the biopsy?
6. Can I avoid lymph node surgery altogether?
Knowing your “lymph node status” helps determine which combination of therapies are best for treating your unique cancer. Only about 30% of all patients diagnosed with invasive breast cancer are found to have cancer in their lymph nodes. If cancer travels to the lymph nodes, these cells typically go to the axillary lymph nodes under the arm on the same side of the newly diagnosed breast cancer. These cells usually lodge in the first 1, 2, or 3 lymph nodes (known as “sentinel nodes”) and grow there. Research suggests that cancer typically spreads to the sentinel nodes before the other 10 to 20 axillary nodes everyone has under the arm.
If you are found to have cancer in your lymph nodes, you will likely be offered chemotherapy if you can tolerate it. It is less likely you will need chemotherapy if your lymph nodes are “negative.” Your lymph node status is one of many factors in deciding your treatment options.
“Sentinel Node Biopsy” vs. “Axillary Dissection”
A sentinel lymph node biopsy has replaced the more extensive “axillary dissection” for most early stage breast cancer surgeries. A sentinel node biopsy is easier to perform, is just as accurate, and causes fewer side effects than an axillary dissection. An axillary dissection is a more extensive surgery that removes all of the axillary lymph nodes and results in more armpit sensation loss and an increased risk of lymphedema than the less invasive sentinel node biopsy.
There are some situations where an axillary dissection is still clearly needed. Having detected cancer in the lymph nodes before surgery is usually an indication for an axillary dissection. In some instances, if you are found to have cancer present in the sentinel nodes, you might need an axillary dissection. Our goal with this course is to give you an outline on axillary surgery so you can better make these decisions with your breast surgeon.
How is a sentinel lymph node biopsy performed?
Hours before your breast surgery, you will likely undergo a small injection into the skin of your breast of a mildly radioactive “tracer.” This tracer slowly filters through the lymphatic system of the breast to the first one or two axillary lymph nodes (sentinel nodes) under your arm. These are the same lymph nodes that breast cancer cells would first travel to from the breast. A blue dye injection is also commonly used in addition to the radioactive tracer.
Your surgeon will use a small probe (similar to a Geiger counter) during surgery to find your sentinel nodes. The dye can also turn the same sentinel nodes blue in color, assisting your surgeon in finding them. The term “biopsy” implies taking just a piece of these nodes. In fact, these “sentinel nodes” are removed intact. The average number of sentinel nodes removed is only about three of the 10 – 20 lymph nodes normally present under the arm.
Are there side effects of a sentinel node biopsy?
Sentinel node surgery is a much less invasive procedure than an axillary dissection. The risks do include pain and discomfort in the armpit that does improve over time. You may have some permanent, partial sensation loss in the armpit and upper, inner arm. There is a slight risk of mild lymphedema. If your surgeon uses “blue dye” during the surgery to help find the sentinel nodes, there is a 1 to 2 % chance of having an allergic reaction to the dye.
Does a “positive” sentinel node mean an axillary dissection?
Until recently, surgeons would remove the sentinel lymph nodes and immediately have a pathologist evaluate the nodes under the microscope to see if cancer was present. For years, if any cancer was found in a sentinel node, surgeons would go ahead and remove all the nodes during the same surgery. This “axillary dissection” results in more long-term side effects than a sentinel node biopsy surgery.
In 2011, the ACOSOG Z00011 clinical trial showed that carefully selected women with early stage cancer undergoing a lumpectomy can now avoid an axillary dissection if only one or two sentinel nodes are found to be involved with a small amount of cancer.


A leading health panel is now recommending mammogram screenings for breast cancer begin for women at age 40 rather than the previous guidelines which recommended 50. NBC News’ Erin McLaughlin has more details.
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NEW BREAST CANCER VIDEO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3375_ai0Qs
--Script--
Breast cancer affects one in eight women during their lives. Breast cancer kills more women in the United States than any cancer except lung cancer. No one knows why some women get breast cancer, but there are a number of risk factors. Risks that you cannot change include
Age - the chance of getting breast cancer rises as a woman gets older
Genes - there are two genes, BRCA1 and BRCA2, that greatly increase the risk. Women who have family members with breast or ovarian cancer may wish to be tested.
Personal factors - beginning periods before age 12 or going through menopause after age 55
Other risks include being overweight, using hormone replacement therapy (also called menopausal hormone therapy), taking birth control pills, drinking alcohol, not having children or having your first child after age 35 or having dense breasts.
Symptoms of breast cancer may include a lump in the breast, a change in size or shape of the breast or discharge from a nipple. Breast self-exam and mammography can help find breast cancer early when it is most treatable. Treatment may consist of radiation, lumpectomy, mastectomy, chemotherapy and hormone therapy.
Men can have breast cancer, too, but the number of cases is small.
NIH: National Cancer Institute


आज इस वीडियो में, Dr. Supriya Puranik (Test tube baby consultant and gynecologist at Sahyadri Hospital, Pune) हमें breast cancer के शुरुवाती लक्षणों के बारे में जानकारी देने जा रही है।
Breast cancer वेस्टर्न देशोमे बोहत कॉमन है लेकिन आजकल हम देख रहे है की भारतीय महिलाओंमे भी Breast cancer का प्रमाण बड़ी मात्रा में बढ़ रहा है। Breast cancer का प्रमाण भारतीय महिलाओंमे बढ़ने के बोहत सरे कारन है जैसे की हमारे जीवनशैली में आये हुए बदलाव, पुरुषोंके मुकाबले स्त्रियोंमें Breast cancer का प्रमाण ज्यादा होता है, Age भी ऐसा factor है जिसके वजह से Breast cancer के patients में वृद्धि आती है।
Late marriage और Late conceive होने के वजह से भी Breast cancer का प्रमाण बढ़ता दिखाई दे रहा है। हमारा diet जब सही नहीं होता, उसमे अगर fast food, junk food हम ज्यादा खाते है तो यह Breast cancer की cause बनता है। व्यायाम न करना, sedentary lifestyle होना यह भी Breast cancer के incidents को बढ़ाता है।
कुछ non-modifiable factors होते है जो हमारे control में नहीं होते जैसे की genetics जो की एक मुख्य कारण होता है Breast cancer होने में।
Breast cancer के शुरुवाती लक्षण क्या होते है?
Breast cancer के शुरुवाती लक्षण बोहत ही mild होते है जो हमें ज्यादातर महसूस नहीं होते और जब लक्षण दिखने लगते है तब तक ब्रैस्ट कैंसर स्टेज २ या स्टेज ३ में पोहोच जाता है। Breast lumps यह Breast cancer का सबसे common लक्षण है जो हमें जरा भी नजरअंदाज नहीं करना चाहिए। Nipples से discharge होना यह भी Breast cancer का symptom है जो अगर हमें दिखाई दे तो तुरंत डॉक्टर से संपर्क करना चाहिए। ब्रैस्ट के त्वचा का कलर बदल जाना, वह संतरे के छिलके की तरह महसूस होना यह भी Breast cancer का लक्षण है।
Breast cancer के बारे में महिलाओंको बोहत ज्यादा सतर्क रहना चाहिए, इसके लिए हमें Breast cancer screening करने की सलाह डॉक्टर्स द्वारा की जाती है जिससे Breast cancer शुरुवाती stages में diagnose किया जा सके।
अधिक जानकारी पाने के लिए पूरा वीडियो देखे।
Check out our other videos -
1.प्रेग्नेंट कैसे बने? | How to get pregnant or conceive? | Hindi | Dr Supriya Puranik- https://youtu.be/IankTQ3W1ME
2.नॉर्मल डिलीवरी के लिए महत्वपूर्ण टिप्स | Tips for Normal Delivery | Dr Supriya Puranik, Pune - https://youtu.be/RyYMEY6tJWA
3.प्रेग्नन्सी के ७ महत्वपूर्ण लक्षण | 7 Early Pregnancy Symptoms - Hindi | Dr Supriya Puranik, Pune- https://youtu.be/fdcWd8GX6qY
4. प्रेगनेंसी के लिए सम्बन्ध बनाने का सबसे सही दिन : https://youtu.be/u1Bh3xkJ9oE
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Jenny Mosier, a mother of three children from Indiana, thought she’d beaten breast cancer – until it reappeared and spread. As she lives with metastatic breast cancer, the hope of seeing her kids graduate from high school has kept her going, more than six years since her second diagnosis. #wearelilly


(13 Dec 2022) Ricki Fairley, a 11-year late stage breast cancer survivor and advocate, is fighting hard to improve the chances for Black women to overcome breast cancer. In 2020, she started a nonprofit called Touch, The Black Breast Cancer Alliance. (Dec. 13) (Production: Vanessa A. Alvarez)
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