Breasts: An Owner’s Manual: Every Woman’s Guide to Reducing Cancer Risk, Making Treatment Choices and Optimising Outcomes. Kristi Funk
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СКАЧАТЬ do this. Repeat the entire exam three times—first with a light touch, then medium, then deeper still.

       5. Gently squeeze your nipple a few seconds. At some point in your life, you will probably elicit discharge from your nipples due to tiny amounts of fluid always present in the breast ducts. It’s normal to have discharge when you squeeze or stimulate the nipples, but fluid should never come out by itself without touching the nipple (e.g., staining your bra cup or PJs). If you squeeze out bloody or clear-like-water fluid, or if discharge is spontaneous, see your doctor. I don’t care about nonspontaneous discharge that’s any color other than bloody or clear like water.

       6. Repeat on your right breast. You’re done for the month!

       7. Visit easybreastexam.com to watch a demonstration video.

      WHAT TO LOOK FOR DURING A BREAST SELF-EXAM (BSE)

      In 2017 an image from Worldwide Breast Cancer depicting bright, cheerful lemons in an egg carton went viral with the caption “What Breast Cancer Can Look & Feel Like.”

      Worldwide Breast Cancer, “What Breast Cancer Can Look & Feel Like,” © Worldwide Breast Cancer, 2017. Used by permission. Knowyourlemons.org.

      So smart. I love this! Certain signs of breast cancer are seen and not felt, so they should be seen. It’s said a picture is worth a thousand words. And looking at lemons, well . . . they don’t make you squirm or feel embarrassed, and it’s hard not to associate these yellow balls of fruit with sunshine and lemonade.

      Here’s the list of signs shown in the picture:

       • a thick area

       • a dimple

       • nipple with crusting, itching, pain, rash, cracks, peeling, flaking, scaly, or bleeding skin

       • redness or heat

       • new fluid from the nipple (especially bloody/brown or clear like water)

       • skin sores (that are not typical skin conditions)

       • a bump

       • a growing vein

       • a sunken nipple that is pointing in a new direction, getting flatter, or inverting (retracting inward)

       • a change in size or shape (especially one side only)

       • skin that looks like an orange peel (larger pores, orange/red discoloration)

       • a hard lump deeper inside the breast

      Also worth noting:

       • swelling or lumps where lymph nodes are located: armpit, around the collarbone, in your neck

       • pain or tenderness in one spot, constant, not changing with your periods

      Any one of these findings is a good enough reason to check in with your doctor. No one will think you’re paranoid, and most times we discover a noncancerous reason behind the signs. So if your breast reminds you of one of those lemons in the egg carton, get it checked out. On the other hand, don’t fret that finding breast cancer is all up to you. That’s why you get breast imaging and annual breast exams with your doctor.

      BREAST HEALTH BY THE DECADE

      Though you can improve your breast health at any age, you’ll want to keep a certain level of vigilance in mind based on where you are in life. Let’s take a look at my recommendations for optimal breast health, based on the decades in life. The median age for breast cancer in the United States is sixty-two years old, so half of women are diagnosed at or after sixty-two, and half before sixty-two; so if you’re at, over, or under sixty-two, I want you to pay attention.

      As a teenager, you’re in a sweet spot for breast health. With a lifetime of conscientious habits ahead, I don’t want you to worry about your breasts as they develop. Learn to do a breast self-exam (BSE) and do it every month, one week after your period starts, because the younger you learn to recognize lumps and bumps, the more familiar you will be with any changes that occur in the future. My unforgettable friend Mary Ann Wasil began the Get In Touch foundation to help young girls demystify and understand their breasts by teaching them the potentially lifesaving skill of breast self-exam. Check out their site, getintouchfoundation.org, to learn creative ways to spread knowledge and skill regarding BSE.

      If you have a family history of breast cancer prior to age fifty, your mother or father (whoever is blood-related to the person with cancer) should schedule a genetic counseling and risk assessment visit for her/himself, the result of which will further inform you about your own risks. Know, though, that breast cancer as a teen is a reportable phenomenon, with chances being less than one in a million.

      Women in their twenties and thirties need to take breast health more seriously than they did when they were younger. If this is you, do your BSE once a month, one week after your period starts or the first day of every month if you do not have a period. Visit the gynecologist for an in-office manual exam, called a clinical breast exam (CBE), every three years, plus schedule a genetic counseling and risk assessment visit if it’s appropriate due to family cancers. Women under the age of forty with breast cancer have more aggressive tumors, so it’s crucial to stay aware.

      A decade or two later, in your forties, continue doing a BSE once a month, but start seeing your gynecologist annually for a CBE for the rest of your life. You’ll also need to add a mammogram once a year, and if your breasts are dense, get an ultrasound too. And from here on out, that’s the deal, ladies, whether you’re in your fifties, seventies, or nineties.

      If you’re considered high risk, we layer a little extra on top of all this advice. Various factors determine what makes a woman high risk, with the most outstanding being whether any marker lesions have been identified in your own breast tissue, and how many of your relatives have had breast cancer, especially under age fifty. If this sounds like you, take our anonymous, free genetics quiz at pinklotus.com/genequiz. Talk to your doctor about more frequent testing beginning ten years prior to the age of your youngest relative with cancer, and be sure to inquire about CBE twice a year, annual mammograms, and possibly ultrasound and/or breast MRI. You might also want to discuss the benefits of risk-reducing medications and operations. More on this in part 3.

      WHAT IT MEANS TO LOWER YOUR RISK FACTORS

      We’re going to spend a lot of time discussing risk factors for breast cancer in this book, so I want to be sure you understand what I’m talking about straight away. Simply put, a risk factor is anything that increases your chance of getting a disease, but does not definitely cause the disease. We don’t understand all of what causes breast cancer, so it’s impossible to eliminate every last variable and declare, “There, I prevented it!” with the same assurance that you could cry, “Five in a row. Bingo!” In that way, prevention doesn’t exist, but risk reduction does—and you, my friend, are in the driver’s seat.

      Think of it this way: driving fast doesn’t automatically mean you will have a car accident, but it certainly increases the odds. Car accidents are caused СКАЧАТЬ