All the wrong symptoms...

FormerMember
FormerMember
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I was diagnosed in October 2020 with a Pancoast tumor in my right lung.  Symptoms appeared in July but did not include normal signs of lung cancer causing, I believe, a three month delay in proper testing and treatment plan.

I am a 71 year old widow who until July of this year was in good health, hiked trails with my dogs, and had more energy than my children.  I will admit I neglected annual checkups and, in fact, didn’t even have a primary doctor at the time the pain began in July.  The pain started in the back of my right shoulder and I suspected bursitis as I had experienced that years ago. Within a few days I began having a burning sensation in the right side of my right breast and armpit.

I made an appointment with a general practitioner in early August and after a very lengthy scolding on overdue annual testing and a history of smoking he decided I had pulled a muscle or strained a tendon in the shoulder. By then I had tried every over the counter pain medication known to man with no relief so he wrote a prescription for pain and also a steroid.  I was given a list of overdue exams he wanted me to schedule that included mammogram, bone density, blood work, colonoscopy and CT scan.

The pain medication had no affect at all on my pain that was quickly becoming unbearable so I made an appointment with an orthopedic doctor who gave me an injection of cortisone and suggested massage therapy.  Massage therapy was out of the question as I was social distancing, not because of the pandemic, but the fear of anyone touching me around the right shoulder.

On arrival for the CT scan appointment scheduled for early September I was told they would not be able to do the scan because the primary care doctor had sent incomplete paperwork.  The scan was rescheduled for September 28th.

Two weeks after the CT scan I received an email from the patient portal regarding test results from the scan.  There it was...a 5.6 cm mass in the top apex of the right lung with “destruction” of the 2nd and 3rd ribs. I called the doctor’s office to see if that was standard procedure to let a patient receive that news through an email and they gave me a referral to an oncologist.

My first appointment with the oncologist was October 13th followed by a PET scan two days later that revealed the tumor at 7.5 cm.  I live in a very small town in north Florida, population 700, and the oncologist who I now consider my primary physician is twenty miles away.  He quickly referred me to a thoracic surgeon at the highly respected University of Florida Shands Hospital, 65 miles from me, for further testing and hopefully followed by surgery.

I have completed pulmonary testing, biopsies of the tumor and surrounding lymph nodes and chest and brain MRI’s.  The bronchoscopy biopsies and MRI’s concluded no spread to lymph nodes or other organs which puts my cancer at stage 3.  I am currently back with my oncologist preparing to start combination radiation and chemotherapy to hopefully shrink the tumor.

The pain is being controlled with Oxycod/acetam 10-325 mg but is still unbearable at times and now has radiated from the shoulder down the back of my right arm.  I am told radiation treatment should alleviate some of the pain.  When fighting the pain this monstrous tumor has caused I try to be mindful that without the pain a correct diagnosis would have surely come too late.

Dee

  • Hi Dee  and a warm welcome to the Macmillan Online Community, a Community that no one really plans to see themselves joining, and so sorry to hear about your Lung cancer diagnosis and a welcome from across the pond.

    A cancer diagnosis indeed brings a lot of confusion, stress and many questions but talking with other people who are on the same type of journey helps a lot.

    I see you have joined and posted in our Lung Cancer group, this is the place where you will connect with others walking the treatment journey both as a patient or family.

    Follow the above link then introduce yourself, post questions or just  join in with existing discussions by clicking on 'reply' you could copy and paste this first post to save some time.

    Macmillan Support Services provides lots of information, and you may find our Ask an Expert section a great help but do allow two working days for replies from our expert team.

    Our Online Information and Support Section  is a good place to find information covering diagnosis, treatments and pages covering most types of cancers.

    All the very best.

    Mike (Thehighlander)

    It always seems impossible until its done - Nelson Mandela

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  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to Thehighlander

    Thank you Mike