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Mastectomy

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Mastectomies (mas-TEK-tuh-mees)---surgical removal of one or both breasts---are usually performed to keep breast cancer from spreading. A mastectomy may also be needed if it seems likely that breast cancer will develop. The operation generally last 1-1/2 hours or more, and requires a hospitalization of 2 to 4 days. The area will heal in 2 to 6 months.

Risks

There are always risks with surgery. You might develop internal bleeding or get an infection. Blood clots could form and lodge in the lungs, making it difficult to breath. However, medical personnel are always alert for such complications, and know how to remedy them. Without the surgery, the cancer will eventually spread.

IF YOU'RE HEADING FOR THE HOSPITAL...

Before You Go

  • The Week Before Surgery:
  • You'll probably need to stop taking aspirin and ibuprofen; the doctor will tell you when. If you're taking aspirin for your heart, don't stop without asking the doctor first. Also ask whether you can take any over-the-counter medicines.
  • Your doctor will tell you whether you need to have blood drawn for tests.
  • The Night Before Surgery:
  • Your physician may suggest you take a sleeping pill.
  • Just before surgery, you should not eat or drink anything (even water). Your doctor will tell you when to begin fasting.

When You Arrive

  • Check with your doctor before taking insulin, diabetes pills, blood pressure medicine, heart pills, or any other medication on the day of surgery.
  • Do not wear contact lenses to the hospital. You may wear glasses.

What to Expect While You're There

You may encounter the following procedures and equipment during your stay.
  • Taking Vital Signs: These include your temperature, blood pressure, pulse (counting your heartbeats), and respirations (counting your breaths). A stethoscope is used to listen to your heart and lungs. Your blood pressure is taken by wrapping a cuff around your arm.
  • Blood Tests: You may need blood taken for tests. It can be drawn from a vein in your hand or from the bend in your elbow. Several samples may be needed.
  • Chest X-ray: The doctor will check this picture of your lungs and heart to make certain you can stand the stress of surgery.
  • Heart Monitor: (Also called an electrocardiogram [e-LEK-tro-KAR-di-o-gram] or EKG). Typically, three to five sticky pads are placed on different parts of your body. Each pad has a wire that is hooked to a TV-type screen or to a small portable box (telemetry unit) that shows a tracing of each heartbeat.
  • IV: A tube placed in your vein for giving medicine or liquids. It will be capped or have tubing connected to it.
  • Pulse Oximeter: With a little clip connected to your ear, finger, or toe, this machine measures the oxygen in your blood.
  • General Anesthesia: You'll be kept completely asleep during the operation. The anesthetic is given either as a liquid in your IV or as a gas through a face mask or endotracheal (END-o-TRA-kee-ull) tube placed in your mouth and throat.

After Surgery:

The area will be bandaged to keep it clean and prevent infection. (A nurse may briefly remove the bandage and check the stitches shortly after surgery.) You'll need to stay in bed until the doctor says it's safe to get up. As you begin your recovery, you can expect the following:
  • Oxygen: After the operation, your body may need extra oxygen. It is given either through a plastic mask over your mouth and nose or through nasal prongs. If the oxygen dries out your nose or the nasal prongs bother you, tell your nurse, but don't take off the oxygen on your own.
  • Deep Breathing and Coughing: These exercises help prevent a lung infection after surgery. Deep breathing opens the tubes going to your lungs. Coughing helps to bring up sputum from your lungs and keep them clear. You should deep breathe and cough every hour while you are awake, including any time you spend awake during the night.
  • Hold a pillow tightly against your abdomen to help reduce pain from your incision. Take a deep breath and hold it as long as you can. Then push the air out of your lungs with a deep strong cough. Put any sputum that you have coughed up into a tissue. Take 10 deep breaths in a row every hour while awake. Remember to follow each deep breath with a cough.
  • Incentive spirometer (spy-ROM-uh-tur): This piece of equipment helps you take deeper breaths. Put the plastic nozzle into your mouth, take a very deep breath, and hold it as long as possible. Then blow as hard as you can into the mouthpiece. Take 10 deep breaths in a row every hour while awake. Remember to follow each deep breath with a cough.
  • Drains: Thin rubber tubes may be left in the area around your incision to drain off excess fluid. They will be taken out when no longer needed.
  • Arm Pain: The arm on the side of the operation may swell. Keeping your arm on a pillow with your hand higher than the arm will help ease the pain and encourage circulation. Your nurses can teach you exercises to help strengthen the arm.
  • Ice: For pain or swelling, you may put ice in a plastic bag, cover it with a towel, and place it over the incision for 15 to 20 minutes out of every hour as long as necessary. Do not sleep on the ice pack. Treatment with ice is most effective when started right after the operation and used for 24 to 48 hours.
  • Heat: After the first 24 to 48 hours you may use heat for pain or swelling. Apply a heating pad (turned on low) or a hot water bottle, or sit in a warm water bath for 15 to 20 minutes out of every hour as long as you need relief. Do not sleep on the heating pad or hot water bottle. Heat brings blood to the area of the operation and helps it heal faster.
  • Activity: You may need to rest in bed for a while. But even if you are confined to bed, it's important exercise your legs in order to stop blood clots from forming. Lift one leg off the bed and draw big circles with your toes, then repeat with the other leg. You can also try lying on your side and pretending to pedal a bike. When you're told it's OK to get out of bed, make sure someone is with you the first time you try. If you feel weak or dizzy, sit or lie down right away.
  • Pressure Stockings: These tight elastic stockings keep blood from collecting in the legs and causing clots.
  • Pneumatic Boots: For extra insurance against blood clots, these plastic boots or leggings are applied over pressure stockings or ace wraps and connected to an air pump machine. The pump rhythmically tightens and loosens different parts of the boots, helping to push the blood back up to the heart.
  • Nasogastric Tube: This type of tube, also called an NG tube, is threaded through your nose and throat and down into your stomach. It is attached to suction, which will keep your stomach empty. It may also help to get your bowels working. Food or medicine is sometimes given through the tube.
  • Eating: When your doctor can hear bowel sounds (stomach growling) through a stethoscope, you'll be able to eat. You will probably get ice chips first and then liquids (water, broth, apple juice, or soda). If you do not have problems with the liquids, you'll then be allowed to eat soft foods such as ice cream, applesauce, or custard. If these foods agree with you, you can return to a regular diet.
  • Bowel Movements: Regular bowel movements can be difficult after surgery. Don't strain if the stool is too hard. Walking will help to stimulate the bowels. Eating foods rich in fiber, such as fruit, bran, cereal, and beans, will also help restore regularity. Drink plenty of liquids; prune juice may help make the stool softer. Or, if your doctor approves, you can take an over-the-counter fiber laxative.
  • Foley Catheter: This is a tube that is sometimes inserted into the bladder to drain your urine. The catheter may make you feel as though have to urinate. Relax and the catheter will drain the urine for you.
  • Don't pull on the catheter because this could cause injury.
  • Don't kink the catheter; this will stop the flow.
  • Don't lift the bag of urine above the catheter. If you do, the urine will flow back into your bladder, possibly causing an infection.
  • The catheter will be taken out when you can urinate on your own.
  • Strict Intake/Output: Your doctor may need to know the amount of liquid you are taking in versus the amount you lose in your urine. This is often called an "I&O."
  • Unless told otherwise, drink 6 to 8 large glasses of water each day. Keep a record of exactly how much liquid you drink.
  • Your output of urine may have to be measured. Ask your doctor whether it's OK to use the toilet.
  • Medicines:
  • Antibiotics: These medicines help prevent bacterial infection. They may be given by IV, as a shot, or by mouth.
  • Pain Medicine: To ease pain after the operation, your doctor will probably prescribe medication to be given by IV, as a shot, or by mouth. Tell the doctor or your nurses if the pain won't go away or keeps coming back.
  • Anti-Nausea Medicine: This medicine calms your stomach and controls vomiting. Your doctor may suggest you take it at the same time as your pain medicine, which sometimes upsets the stomach.
  • Stool Softeners: These medications make bowel movements softer so you won't need to strain.

After You Leave

  • Always take your medicine exactly as directed. If it doesn't seem to help, let the doctor know, but keep taking it until told otherwise. If you've been prescribed antibiotics, be sure to use them up, even if you're feeling better. If a medicine makes you drowsy, avoid driving or using dangerous machinery.
  • When you are allowed to bathe or shower, carefully wash the stitches or staples with soap and water. Then put on a clean, new bandage. Change your bandage any time it gets wet or dirty.
  • Eat healthy meals from all 5 food groups: fruits, vegetables, breads, dairy products, and meat. This will increase your energy level and promote faster healing.
  • Unless instructed otherwise, drink 6 to 8 large glasses of liquid, such as water, juices, and milk, each day. Limit caffeinated beverages, such as coffee, tea, and soda.
  • You'll need plenty of rest while you recover. Try to slowly increase your activity each day, resting whenever you feel it's needed. Do not lift anything heavy until your doctor gives the OK.
  • Your doctor will recommend exercises to build the muscles in your arm and shoulder. To keep the blood moving, raise your affected arm often and rub it gently. To protect the arm from injury and prevent infection, follow these guidelines:
    • Wear a loose rubber glove while washing dishes.
    • Stay out of bright sun.
    • Use an electric razor when shaving un__der__arm hair.
    • Use bug spray to prevent bites and stings.
    • Use lanolin hand cream many times daily to keep your hands soft.
    • Don't wear clothes with elastic at the wrists, elbows, or upper arms.
    • Don't carry heavy bags or a heavy purse with the affected arm.
    • Don't let anyone draw blood or give you a shot in the affected arm.
    • Don't reach into a hot oven with the affected arm.
    • Don't dig in the garden or work near thorny bushes. You may get a cut that could cause an infection.
    • Don't cut or pick at loose skin around your fingernails.
    • Don't let anyone take your blood pressure on the affected arm.
  • Do a monthly breast exam on your other breast. If you are still menstruating, do it 2 or 3 days after your period ends. If you have gone through menopause, check your breast on the same day each month.
  • Four to six weeks after the operation, you can begin wearing a light-weight false breast. Later you can switch to a more durable model. Six to nine months after the operation, you can have reconstructive surgery if you choose.

Call Your Doctor If...

  • Your incision is swollen and red, or you see any pus. These are signs of infection.
  • Your stitches or staples come apart.
  • Your bandage becomes soaked with blood.
  • You develop a high temperature.

Seek Care Immediately If...

  • You suddenly have trouble breathing. You could have a blood clot in your lung or an allergy to one of your medicines.



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