I am an eight year breast cancer survivor. Diagnosed at age 38. I went to my doctor for,about a year prior complaining of a feeling of fullness in my left breast, rib pain, and my bra fitting differently on that side. I was dismissed, and ignored because I was told I was “too young”. Thank God I listened to my gut and demanded a biopsy. I was told even after having a 3-D mammogram, that I was fine. Moral of the story, be your own advocate. No one else will advocate for you!
Exactly. Catch it early but when you go in early they say to young to need to look. The logic is like 5 iq. Can’t catch something early if you won’t look till a set age. Its ridiculous
Ditto but 29 and no lump until it was way too late...ignored all other symptoms because I'd always been taught it's just lumps and only for 45+. 6 years ago.
I have a friend who was in the same situation. The mammogram didn't "read" it, but she could feel the lump. Finally, it was realized she had breast cancer. They said because she wasn't menopausal and had a denser breast, it was difficult for them to see detect it on imaging.
@@belindapaysinger1874 Yep. 2 ultrasounds and a 3D mammogram...nothing. Doctor had same exact diagnosis as I did at 33 but told me at 29 that I'm too young. Didn't want to send me for MRI but I'm glad she relented. My boob lit up like a dang Christmas tree. Other doctor I saw (she also finally agreed to biopsy) didn't want to do a biopsy but I pushed. Sure as sht...I wasn't "fine." I wasn't "too young." I had other symptoms for years before finally going in because a lump finally showed up. Doctors thought it was a cyst and so did I. Guess not. Couldn't breastfeed any of my children no matter how hard I tried. Pretty sure this was why. And now if I am ever blessed with more (in my mid30s now) I can't even try again cuz I got them chopped off. I regret it SO. MUCH. Had I known the alternatives.... This is what irks me so much about the whole "trans" crap...these poor souls have NO IDEA how badly they're screwing up their bodies. Forever. 😢
On June 20, I will be a 5-year survivor of stage 2 breast cancer. I had one lump in my left breast and several lumps in my left armpit. I had four rounds of chemo, then surgery, and no radiation. I was 71 when diagnosed, and I will soon be 77.Just this year I discovered your videos about the proper human diet and eating right for cancer prevention and so much more, and I immediately changed my way of eating and have lost 43+ lbs. and am feeling so much better. I think I might just live another 20 years, maybe more!
OMG D r Berry. You identified pain with breast cancer. Yes!! THANK YOU!!! It took 2 years for my Dr to diagnose my cancer because she insisted cancer doesn’t hurt. It does. Excruciatingly & increasingly over time. When finally diagnosed it was bad, caused by delay. Thank you for alerting women to the truth.
Pain is a symptom and unresolved pain is a reason to seek medical treatment. If young women are not old enough for a mammogram, there are other modalities such as ultrasounding the region of the breast with pain. If the ultrasound reveals suspicions, then a Mammogram can follow or MRI. Among breast specialists we used to think electrical shock or shooting pains, heaviness or dull aches were caused by either nerves in the breast or a strain to the coopers ligaments in the breasts, but we no longer have that understanding. Pain that does not come and go with your monthly cycle or hormone fluctuation, but is persistent and localized to one area can be imaged. I am so sorry it took you so long to get help. God bless you and continue to heal you. G.J. Mammographer.
It's linked to inability and pain with breastfeeding, too, which is likely why I couldn't do it and the little bit I did manage HURT. The "tingling" I was supposed to feel was pins and needles. I cried trying to feed my children because the "letting down" of the wee bit of milk I could produce before it dried up completely hurt so much. No one talks about this! It's so frustrating. PS- I have a high pain threshold...and I'm not just saying that. I really do.
Dr. Berry, I am a retired mammography tech. The same money making BS was going on with scaring these poor women telling them they needed biopsies when they simply did not.
That happened to me. The dr who did the biopsy didn’t understand why I was in tears. She thought I was afraid I had cancer. I said that No, I don’t want to go through the biopsy because I know I’m okay. I trust my gut a lot and maybe I shouldn’t when it comes to health, but I do take all into consideration.
I had 2 in my left where I did have cancer and 1 on the right when they said it was suspicious since I had already had breast cancer. I personally would rather be safe than sorry, I have 2 markers, 1 in each breast.
As a breast cancer survivor, I disagree with the screening recommendations. You don't have to have mammograms that crush and irradiate the breast and OVER diagnose. Mammograms are terrible and there's a reason the allopathic system promotes them so heavily whilst the stats tell a different story. Stage 0 is not cancer and, for most women, does not progress. Thermography was my saviour, indicated an issue to be investigated that, because of covid, I didn't follow up for 2 years. When I did, ultrasound showed stage 3, biopsy confirmed the diagnosis at 52. When diagnosed, I refused poisonous radiation and chemo and treated myself with massive lifestyle changes (including animal based therapeutic ketosis). Be your own doctor, be your own advocate and, most of all, trust your instincts. Over 2 years later, now NED.
My mom’s was caught on a mammogram at less than 1 cm. Very tiny. Stage 1 with no lymph nodes involved. Fortunately she was still going for her mammograms at 77.
I had the exact same experience as pbj91. My baseline mamogram at age 40 found cancer. Refused a lumpectomy and insisted on a mastectomy. Fast forward to 2024....l am 77 and have had no further issues.
I did thermography every year for over 10 years, and it missed the cancer developing in my breast because it was slow growing. I felt a lump and had a mammogram followed by a biopsy and was diagnosed with stage 2 cancer. I had a lumpectomy and have radically changed my diet and am now 3 years NED. But my point is that thermography doesn't catch all cancer, so alternate and get a mammogram every other year or so.
@@vdincher It doesn't matter that it was slow growing, thermography identifies the differences between the breasts as well as year on year changes between thermograms. The person reading them made a mistake for you. Mine was slow growing and picked up because there was a very slight difference between the breasts that I was advised to check out. They didn't do that for you...
I found my aggressive cancer that didn’t show on any mammogram. I had a lump that felt like a pebble and discharge from my nipple (I was 44 and not pregnant) I was told they didn’t see anything on the mammogram and dismissed me but I aggressively advocated for further testing. I went through 2 surgeries, a years worth of 2 chemos and 25 rounds of radiation and I’m going on 5 years with no evidence of disease. 🎉 Please do self exams - they can save your life. ❤
palpable lumps should ALWAYS be Ultrasounded. Not seeing anything on a mammogram does not mean it is nothing. If you 'feel it' it CAN be imaged. My aunt called me saying she found a lump. I said- get a mammogram, She said she had just had one 3 months ago, I said you did not have a lump 3 months ago, go back and get another one AND ask for an ULTRASOUND. A lump could be a cyst but the technologist can see by width to height ratio and if there is any debri or contents inside the lump. These are what will determine if a biopsy or lumpectomy is needed. An experienced technologist will know what is abnormal. I am so sorry you went through this. I am happy you strongly advocated and are now cancer free.
Yep. Mammograms don't always show. My MRI however had me lit up like a Christmas tree. It was aaaaaaaall up in there! And I was 29 so "too young." Ugh.
@@Digitaldream1116 I also had nothing show up on my mammograms and I get them annually. I got an mri last year and this year and now I have a change and a sticky discharge from my right nipple. Now I’m doing a mri guided needle biopsy. What color was your discharge? Mine is a white/yellowish one . I hope everything is still going well for you!
@@stephenandchristiparsons251 Mine was white/yellow and the more I messed around with the nipple some blood began to streak in it. I wish you the best and I truly hope it ends up being nothing of concern. 💕
Iodine sufficiency is very very importante to prevent breast cancer. Also breast painting with iodine (a carrier oil like jojoba with a few drops of Lugol's Iodine) apply to your breast is a very good way to deliver iodine to the breast tissue on a regular basis.
Wow, I take 2 drops of 5% Lugols in water every day but never thought about direct onto breast tissue!! How often do you apply, and how many drops for 2 breasts, each application?
Im a stage 3 breast cancer survivor with the BRCA2 mutation. I had a modified bilateral mastectomy, radiation and chemotherapy. Mine started as a rash. Thank you for addressing this and mentioning ALL these symptoms. I never thought it could happen to me. I can't stress enough how important it is to be diligent. Once again Dr. Berry does not disappoint.
I have the BRCA1 mutation. Nice to see a fellow survivor. I also had a bilateral mastectomy, but no radiation or chemo. When found, mine was almost all in the duct. This was 22 years ago. I opted for the bilateral because my surgeon said if it were her, she would do that (pretty radical, but I'm thankful she spoke so openly about it. Oddly enough, I did not know of my BRCA status at the time.). I'm glad now that I went that route. Have you had your ovaries out? I did that a couple years ago since they were pretty much useless at age 60!
I am a survivor of breast cancer twice. The first was stage 3. I found on A. Tuesday had mammogram on Friday and surgery on Tuesday. Reconstruction with Transflap. Insurance would not cover both breast. Eight chemo treatments and follow up surgery. Twenty years later after 3 years of mammograms and just knowing something not right. Stage 1 in right breast. Again mastectomy but did not need radiation or chemo. Learn your body and be your own advocate for your health. I am fine good life and had great doctors and support. Your diet and attitude are very important. Watch your diet sugar feeds cancer.
I had breast cancer in all of 2021 stage 3 double mastectomy and all the limp nodes from right under arm removed! My little sister Marlene got me to over two dozen appointments and cared for me in her home for a week after surgery. She passed away with sepsis March 19,2023. I was heartbroken from her loss. I did well in 2022 until she was in a coma for 11 days after her open heart surgery to replace a broken heart valve. She came back to us fine but she wasn't fine. Anyway I've been through a lot. Now getting my life together. 66yrs old 5'1" tall A1c was 8.4 now 5.2...weight 425 now 225. Still doing Carnivore and OMAD.
My sister is dying from stage 4 metastatic breast cancer - even though she rang the bell. 6 to 7 years ago my sister near 40 had already had a mammogram - it was negative. She got sick with bronchitis and pneumonia at the same time. 3 months on and she was not getting better at all and her armpit blew up. She went to the dr., and they told her that she's just very sick and it will go down. She had gyno exam and told the gyno what was going on. Gyno took one look at my sisters armpit and said this is cancer we need to biopsy you right away. 2 days later my sister is getting a biopsy and yes it was cancer. It was stage 3 at diagnosis. She goes through all the treatment, testing surgeries, is told she is in remission - rings the bell. 6 months later she is not feeling great - this goes on for about 2 years where she is telling the oncologist about pain and weird things and they say well your body is still healing from all it has been through. She has a full body scan and they say all is good. 2 years ago my sister is in the bathroom brushing her teeth and she gag coughed at the same time then screamed a scream her children had never heard in their lives. Her ribs broke away from her spine in one spot. The full body scan she had - the technician missed that my sister had metastatic bone cancer from the breast cancer, so my sister had cancer growing through her body for 2 Effing years and was literally ignored when she kept telling these doctors something was wrong. They did a ton of genetic testing on her to see where this all started. My sister's breast cancer is hormonal and per the geneticists, she was always destined to get it. She explained to me that they did a genetic study to see where the genes broke and they told her it was at conception or just shortly after - possibly our mother contracted a virus or something early on and it caused a genetic blip for my sister. Either way, women - I tell you my sisters story because there are people out there that listen to doctors as if they speak the holy gospel. Reading my sister's story above - you can see how many times doctors let her down. Now she will lose her life. The cancer is all over - from the occipital bone in her skull down to her pelvis. She has lung cancer, liver cancer, nasopharyngeal cancer, her lymph nodes in her abdomen started lighting up recently as now cancer, she still has breast cancer because they didn't get it all the first few times she had surgery, she has skin cancer as well. She is in liver failure because she has hundreds of tumors in her liver and is on tons of meds to keep her liver going because no liver means death. My sister is going to be 47 years old and will die prematurely because of a microscopic devil she can't see. A devil that if she doesn't have chemo for as little as 2 weeks will see a massive spike in the growth of the cancer. Early detention does not always matter, but you fighting for your life does. Make sure to be your own advocate if you feel something is not right. I wanted to add to this because I have milk duct papilloma's and a doctor I was seeing almost forced me to have surgery that I didn't need. That surgery is a partial mastectomy. Me and my sister both go to Sloan Kettering currently - but I was seeing another dr before Sloan. This surgeon scared the shit out of me by telling me that I had the start of breast cancer and was demanding I have immediate surgery. I told my sister who then spoke to her team at Sloan and they said no - have her come here because partial mastectomy isn't the protocol any more. I fired the doctor I was seeing and I went to Sloan - I'm fine, no cancer, just a couple of calcified/papilloma milk ducts which are caused my milk duct cysts I used to get, my genetic testing is fine too. So, please don't have surgery without a second opinion if you fall into the category I am in. Any woman afraid to have their titties squished - so what, get it done any way because you don't want the battle that my sister and other women and even men have to go through. I had a breast biopsy with scar tissue that makes that test cause me serious immense paid for a few days after a mammogram, but I deal with it to make sure I will not go through what my sister and other women and men do. Not all breast cancer is cleared up in a year or 2. Some will have it until the day they die like my sister. So, make sure to get tested right away - any delays in getting a biopsy - call someone else and tell them what you are up against 9 out of 10 times you'll get a sooner appointment with someone new.
So sorry about your sister. Unfortunately, health insurance companies are not helping. You are so right about advocating for yourself. You must push to get them to do certain testing. But, unfortunately, ins companies don't always agree, and you may have to pay directly for said testing. I know because my husband just had open heart surgery 4 months ago, and we had to deal with this issue. Some things we paid for out-of-pocket. Ugh. 😡
That is really a very sad story. Have you heard about Prof. Thomas Seyfried at Boston College? I highly recommend to google him out. There are many videos on YT about his cancer research and a metabolic therapy not only for the treatment of cancer, but for the prevention as well. It also explains why are conventional treatments very often unsuccessful.
Im so very sorry your family is going through this. Early Detection is not 100% like you just shared. But we still want to encourage women to take care of themselves and listen to their gut. I agree we must advocate for ourselves and not let medical professionals convince us it is all in our head. That is such a 1950's mentality. God bless you and your precious sister. My grandmother, Mumm, Aunt and her daughter all had breast cancer and different lives and outcomes. I have had 2 lumpectomies-and till today no cancer. I grieve for your sweet family. God take care of you all: Prayers for your family. GJ~ Mammographer.
I had one mammogram at 40 and never again. Smashing your breast like that makes no sense. I am now 66 and I get breast thermography annually. I don't want the radiation either. This is much better than mammogram in my opinion and the opinion of my doc. Look into it ladies.
Please read my comments this section. I am so very sorry you had a bad experience. I hear horror stories like these daily.(I am registered in Mammography) I would encourage you to find a breast center with 3D mammography and tell them you want the best and most experienced technologist. Let them know of your experience. Mammography is not done the same it was years ago and even when I started 40 years ago. Today much-MUCH less compression is done. A skilled technologist can really do a beautiful job of both performing the mammogram and addressing your fears. Please do go. GJideoforR.T.(R)(M)
@@alicedobbeleare3971 typically no unfortunately. Price ranges but typically a few hundred dollars. I got a full body one and it was around $600 but just an upper body was cheaper. I used HSA money.
I am a 6 year survivor of Triple Negative breast cancer. Get whatever screening you can afford and do those self breast exams. I found my cancer in my right breast almost under my arm. 💗
Thermography is great at showing major hormone imbalances in breast tissue so I still think it’s a good tool to use as part of an early detection protocol. Mammograms can only pick up cancer after it’s grown to a certain size where thermography can detect vascular changes that can’t be seen on a X-ray. Please look more into this ❤
Mine was teeny tiny when caught by my very first mammogram. That was 22 years ago; I was 41 at the time. Most of it was in the duct with a such small portion outside that they could not even measure it. Thankful for that!
@@Margo714P yup! Mammos can pick up growths but therms can pick up even sooner if there is a mass draining energy from the body. So glad it worked out for you! ❤️
@@theresajopson4157 agreed it’s so disappointing but there are options out there. I got my breast study for $200. I had to save money to do it but it was worth it.
@@theresajopson4157 agreed it’s so disappointing. My breast study was two hundred dollars so I had to save up but it was worth it so I could treat the hormone imbalances. my breast pain has gone down a lot since.
You are better off, because ultrasound or sonograms are used after mammograms to see tissue better. All that radiation from mammograms may cause cancer.
I had one mamogra in my twenties! Never had another one, I'm 72. They never made sense to me. I am so sorry for all of you who have breast cancer. It's heart breaking. 😢❤😢
My 26 year old cousin found a small lump that was painful. Saw the doc and he told her she was too young and cancer does not cause pain. For 2 years she kept pushing back and begging for a mammogram. If her doctor had ordered it, her insurance would have covered, but he would not order a diagnostic one. She finally found a doc that would order the tests. She was stage 4 by that time. I don't remember what kind. Six years of treatments, scans and living like some kind of zombie. Oh and her husband divorced her. She did find a new love, who was there for her during all of the worst of it. It was all for naught. She was dead at 32.
Oh, I'm so sorry to hear of this. It is disgusting and ridiculous of how awful the medical establishment is anymore. Sincere condolences to your family. It is ridiculous that the mindset of the medical establishment is that if one is young, there are no health issues... like too young for cancer, too young to have a stroke, etc etc etc. It is terrible that we have to fight the medical establishment to get tests, to get someone to listen. I have personally experienced this, as has my husband ( it took nine years to get a diagnosis, which ended up being a rare muscle disease) and children. Everything is a fight, and it should not be that way. My mother-in-law had breast cancer, and I had it as did 2 of my first cousins. I worry about my daughters.
a lump is a symptom. MOST insurance will pay for a Diagnostic ( versus a routine 'screening' ) Mammogram in a symptomatic patient both male and female at any age. The Radiologist may decide to do an ultrasound instead of Mammogram depending on age and clinical info about the lump; but either way, at the discretion of the Radiologist the correct diagnostic exam would be done.
Self exam is so important. I have had breast cancer twice and found the lumps during self exam. Each time I caught the cancer at Stage 1. Ultimately, had DMX and living life flat.
YES LADIES DO YOUR SELF EXAMS... it is so sad when women come to get their mammogram and we ask " How long has that lump been there" and they start crying " I don't know" and we ask "are you doing a self breast exam every month?" and they say that they read somewhere that they should not or my doctor told me I dont have to. No one benefits from the entire population to stop doing breast exams. Once a year at your Doctors office is not enough. If you have had a hysterectomy and no longer get a female exam every year, You MUST do your breast exams at least every month or every other month. You know your breasts best. Thanks for the reminder~ Ladies, take care of what you have.
@@gaylejideofor6198 Hysterectomies don't make one menopausal--------it the ovaries stop producing estrogen, one is technically menopausal. It's all in the ovaries.
First biopsy at 21. Continued hard cysts and continued biopsies until I skipped one year of screening. At 51 I chose a different facility to screen, found lump, did biopsy, cancer. Performed MRI found more aggressive cancer in opposite breast. Thankfully it was caught early!!!
I had a lump in my left breast since I was a baby.... when I was older my mother said that I had an abcess in my breast shortly after birth and that the doctor used a syringe to pump out the pus. So I figured out that it was scar tissues. In my 40's my doctor insisted for a biopsy, even I explained to her that the lump had not change over the years....well I was right, they found only a small cist. What upset me is that the biopsy was made under total anesthesia when it could have been done with a local one.... I think the surgeon was quite disappointed when she annonced to me that it was not cancer and I just said "I know, I had that lump since I was a baby". I'm 74 and I don't want to have mammograms anymore.... I used to have fibrocystic breast and that was a painful exam but after being keto/ketovore, no more fibrocystic breast!
Same here. I had fibrocystic breasts prior to going carnivore & 3 times a doctor wanted to biopsy me (I refused as I knew it was nothing) & now I’m 13 months into carnivore and no more fibroids! I made the decision to never have a mammogram again about 15 years ago. Painful, dangerous and pointless!
Itchy breast/nipple is what i had months before i found a lump in my armpit. The lymph glad was showing disfunction causing just the breast cancer breast to itch. I rarely hear this as a very early sign. Very good Video Dr.Berry
Yeah...I had issues for YEARS before a lump showed up. I didn't think much of it and neither did my doctors...not even after the lump showed up. "Too young," "otherwise healthy," "no family history," "it's just an infected cyst." *IT'S NOT JUST LUMPS!!!!!!*
I have drainage and severe itching, and stinging in one nipple, Been wondering if I should get it checked out. The drainage literally came through the bra and out on my t shirt
@@carla5830 Get it checked out if you haven't already. Better safe than sorry. If something is going on, it's better to catch it early on than to wait. If your doctors try to downplay it, don't let them. Don't leave until they have given you referrals for tests. Sadly, oftentimes, many doctors like to downplay things, leaving patients who are suffering with something to deal with. Something later than it should have been dealt with, lowering their survival rate.
Thank you for this Dr Berry. I was diagnosed with stage 1 breast cancer (estrogen receptor positive) 18 years ago, and received chemotherapy. I noticed that the armpit on the side that the cancer was present, had an almost metallic scent. In addition to self exam and mammogram/ultrasound, I do a smell test. Bless you Dr Ken. ❤
Breast lumps are super common in women of menstruating age. It's a lot of headache to have to go to the doctor to get every sore lump checked out. I can't even imagine doing that on a regular basis. I get lumps in my breast all the time. Add in pregnancy, and yeah. I'd be seeing my doctor monthly.
At my recent gyn annual exam my dr felt under my armpits along with normal exam. I don’t recall having that ever checked before, so I’m glad he did! Everything was fine! I am 63 and haven’t missed an exam since my twenties. I had a scare last year when a nurse practitioner felt something that concerned her, but after diagnostic mammogram and ultrasound at breast care center at my hospital, the dr found it to be only breast tissue. Thank you, Lord!
I had constant breast cysts and dense breast tissue. After I stopped dying my hair with chemicals , the cysts and firm tissue completely dissapeared. Since 2014 the never came back!
I have a friend whose Doctor told her if she kept dying (isn't the word ominous?🤔) her hair, she would be very likely to get breast, or bladder cancer. Scary! She stopped dying it, and is rocking a mane of white hair now! Take care, and God bless you and your family. 😊👍💖🙏
great news! Also the normal aging breast changes density.. The glandular tissue gets more and more replaced with fat as we get older, even after hysterectomy or menopause. Even people with very dense and lumpy breast will have this change to some degree and at different levels depending on their lifestyle. Did you know that inflamitory foods such as caffine and dairy and foods that some people are sensitive to for inflamation make some women have more tender breasts? I am so very happy to hear of your improved health. God bless G.J. Mammographer of over 40 years.😇
Actually Dr berry, some doctors are now saying that mammograms are ineffective and do more damage than good. Like everything else in the pharma field it's about the money.
Sure is. I was a mammo tech. They scared poor women into believing they had something and needed a biopsy just for the money. It is outrageous what they do in the medical field
When I had breast cancer, the only symptoms that I remember is feeling extremely tired, and a bit irritable. After the diagnosis, and looking back, I recall my breast changed in size...it was suddenly larger than my other breast, and they were always very symmetrical prior to the cancer. I hope this helps.
3b survivor here. Diagnosed at 47. Pay attention! Don't let your doctor say, "we'll keep an eye on it." Instead of acting immediately. Still recovering 4 years later. Exhausted all the time and lost so much on this terrible journey. On chemo pills still and struggle daily. You don't want this life -believe me. Get help.
I’ve seen a few PubMed articles about the possible correlation between *Vitamin D deficiency* and dense breast tissue and incidences of breast cancer. Same goes for prostate cancer. If you can do an episode on that possible link that would be great. Thank you, Dr. Berry 🙏
Dr. B, I sure wish you had included a warning to men. Just because they do not lactate does not exclude them from getting breast cancer. We all need to be checking our bits and pieces.❤
1% of all breast cancers occur in men. So Men, if you have a lump, you can get a mammogram and most likely will have an ultrasound. Have both breasts imaged to compare. Also men with gynecomastia can have painful breasts. Gynecomastia can be confirmed with mammography. Nursing Women can NOW get 3D mammography if they have a lump. Years ago they were told to wait. Now the dose is so very small they can nurse/pump - have a 3D mammogram and go right back to nursing/pumping with no risk to milk. YES the dose is THAT small. GJideofor~MultiSpecialty Technologist Radiology/Mammography.
Yes! Had breast cancer twice myself and my sister also had it. My doctor told me that even our son's should watch for it. Neither of us have daughters.
I have had breast cancer twice. Stage 3, 6 surgeries and 8 chemo. I was so fatigued with both. 20 years later had symptoms in right breast. Caught at stage one. Both had full mastectomy and reconstruction. People do pay attention to your body. I found both had great care and now 10 years out from second. As I look back good old hindsight, I should have had a better diet, more exercise and no alcohol. Did not drink a lot but several drinks a week. Know your body. Be good to yourself and live a long and full life.
I genuinely hope that whatever is bringing you pain or stress will pass for everyone who is reading this. May clarity and understanding replace your negative ideas, unnecessary anxieties, and doubts. I hope you have a life full with love, serenity, and quiet.
My only sign was being tired. As part of my physical at 41yo I got a mammogram...stage 1 breast cancer with tumor growing...had "lumpectomy" and then 5 weeks of radiation. 25 years later I am ok!
I was diagnosed with breast cancer 7 years ago today. They found it through a mammogram. The lump was so deep in my breast you couldn't feel it from the outside. I caught it early, but it was already metastisizing. After a double mastectomy and chemo I have been cancer free. In hindsight though, I wouldn't have done the chemo.
I'm a DES Daughter and I have a Mammogram & Ultrasound once a year, an MRI every year, alternating 6 months time frame. I have a pap smear and vaginal swabs yearly. My sister had stage 4 metastatic breast cancer & passed in 2019. My two paternal aunts had full mastectomies in their 60s. I have nodule, etc findings in both breasts and going to a General Surgeon to recheck MRI and pray I am in a safe zone. Please check your breasts and axillary area every month!
@karenmorelli258 Nurse for 40 yrs. Lost my mom at 87 to met. breast cancer. I will just suggest that you go to a Breast Surgeon instead. Best of luck to you.
@@susanmurrell635 The General Surgeon here reviews past tests then suggests ultrasound before she suggests a breast surgery. She's very thorough. I have more eyes on me...
Untreated breast cancer will kill you. My mother routinely got the mammograms. When she was 86 she was diagnosed with breast cancer, which had already spread within her body. She choose not to have any surgery or treatment and died within 2 months of that diagnosis. We found a medical report from the year prior when this was actually discovered, that she had hidden so no one in the family knew. - she had choosen not to do anything about it. There was no history of any cancer in her family we know of, however she had been living with chronic pain from other ailments for a very long time. Personally I think chronic pain can wear down the immune system and make you more vulnerable to cancer.
@@pinkplum3379 It was not the mammogram to blame. Every Radiologist report should have the phrase, not all cancers can bee seen on mammography. or 'No mammographic evidence of cancer' That does not mean there is none but that it cannot be seen. I am so sorry about her choice of treatment and what to disclose to her family. Some countries stop mammography at 75. In this case it would never have been 'discovered'. There is a population that does not want surgery or the risk of surgery and recovery. There are many types of breast cancer and not all are seen on mammography. Even an obious lump can sometimes not 'appear' different on a mammogram, that is why a 'lump' is followed up with an US. But many elderly do not disclose if they feel a lump or even do breast exams on themselves.... not knowing how long something was amiss. So sorry for your loss. Please do continue to get your own screening mammograms and take care of your health. God bless your family.
I had no symptoms. The way I found mine was I laid down on my stomach and my left breast felt bunched up or puckered. I couldn’t get comfortable on my stomach. Went for a mammogram and it showed it. I told my stepmom how I found mine and she laid on her stomach and had the same problem. She found hers that way too. We are both 10+ years survivors.
I was diagnosed with IDC breast cancer in 2019. After my double mastectomy, I was staged at 2 because it had gone to a sentinel node. My cancer was caused by bioidentical hormone treatment. I had my first treatment 18 months before diagnosis. I had asked specifically about the huge influx of hormones causing breast cancer and was assured it wouldn't happen. I believe the surprise second tumor was caused by the second treatment. I had a total of 16 lymph nodes removed...4 sentinel nodes in my chest and 12 from my armpit. I now have lymphadema. Chemo would not have worked for me so I had 30 rounds of radiation. I will be 5 years NED Oct 25th.
Mine spread due to them brushing it off as nothing and then making me wait until September that year because of all the teachers on summer break getting the Angelina Jolie Special (didn't have it...just scared they will...) got priority over me, an actual active cancer patient.
It takes years for breast cancer to start, like 10 on average before you can detect the cancerous cells. Most likely it was there before you started the hormones. The WHI study follow-ups showed less breast cancer as time went on. Alcohol is a bigger risk factor as is metabolic disease. Where I grew up, the women all thought the deteriorating water pipes was causing, more breast cancers. My dad, a doctor, always thought it was obesity related, and this was about 40 years ago. Now of course it's well known obesity is a significant risk factor. Another risk factor is low iodine.
Dr Berry, I saw an article a few months ago about Sweden, or Switzerland....I don't remember which one...banning mammograms. Reasons being misdiagnoses of breast cancer, and that trauma to the breast can cause it. I remember, I think it was in high school, I got hit in the breast by a baseball. Hurt like hell. A teacher told me to be careful that trauma to the breast can cause breast cancer. I totally forgot about that until I saw this article. I think it was on google. 🤷♀️
trauma does not cause breast cancer. Wearing underwire bra does not cause cancer, and a host of other myths.Please read through my replies above. There is a lot going on in EU. in the USA Mammography is extreemly and very highly regulated to the most excellent of standards with the goal of lowest dose. Mammography is also not being performed the same way. 40 years ago the paddle was lowered with a foot peddle and up to 40 pounds of pressure was applied, THIS IS NOT THE CASE. The technologist can use the peddle, stop and hand lower the plate onto the breast. compression is just enough to even out thickness and to hold in position. It can be uncomfortable, but is NOTHING like what it used to be. Ive been Registered in Mammography for ove 40 years. I am proud to say, my patients think Im great and leave very happy, newbies relieved that all the horror stories were not true.
Had a mammo last year - all clear, then 4 months later I found a lump which turned out to be 26mm invasive cancer. I was told it was slow growing and caught early but how can it grow to 26mm in 4 months? 🤔
Dr. Berry, you could have mentioned also the groundbreaking research of Prof. Thomas Seyfried at Boston College, because it is closely related to the ketogenic (carnivore too) diet you recommend.
I’m a survivor of stage 1 hormone + breast cancer this year! I had PAIN!! Now the drs want me on aromatase inhibitors for 5 years. I don’t want to take this. Mammo missed mine 5 mo before mri. Thank you Dr Berry
@emmy-j the first inhibitor I took destroyed my ulner nerves in 3 weeks causing me to have carpel tunnel surgery. I’m afraid! Please share your supplements and diet with me.
If your diet is high in veggies (i.e tomatoes, broccoli, carrots, zucchini, dark leafy greens, cucumbers, celery, etc.), your microbiome becomes fortified and can dispel excess estrogens from your system. Also eating soy (tempeh, tofu), can do that. New research has recognized the plant steroid has a slightly different stereochemistry from the estrogen produced by the human body, so the systemic effects are different.
I do worry about the added risk of cancer due to the mammo radiation. It's a roulette game. Radiation which may add risks, vs not getting diagnosed. But what if you're one of those who had nothing to worry about, but now with radiation you do?! 🤔 🤯
There is nothing to worry about. Take care of yourself. Get your mammogram and if possible get a 3D mammogram. Please go through my replies in this section. The dose/ exposure of 'Radiation' is incredibly small. It is NOT the same radiation as Radiation Therapy, Nuclear Power, it is a electrically produced highly controled radiation. You can think of it this way: A single chest x-ray exposes the patient to about 0.1 mSv. This is about the same amount of radiation people are exposed to naturally over the course of about 10 days. A mammogram exposes a woman to 0.13- 0.4 mSv, or about the amount a person would expect to get from natural background exposure over 7 weeks. [ the average background radiation that people are exposed to in a year in the USA is 3mSv and in Colorado{because of high altitude and mountains-the oar} is 4mSv[milliSeiverts a unit of measurement] I hope this helps and I hope you will get that mammogram, I am proud of you and you will be happy you did.😇 GJ~ Mammographer for over 40 years.
@@PS-qn4oz It's worrisome though. My mom and really none of the women in my family had ever had a mammogram and no one got cancer. But they didn't live in a world surrounded by cancer causing chemicals and foods either. That's the issue for me. To mammo or not to mammo. I'm 47. I think I may just do the ultra sound, try to eat healthy (carnivore) and check myself regularly. No way I'm saying for anyone to stop getting a mammo. I'm just thinking out loud in regards to me as I'm low risk with no one in my family having had any cancers and I didn't get the jab.
Let go of their Fear modality. Look into ways you can clean your body along with reasonable assist for MD. But do Not Rush into any "OMG Surgery ASAP" crap until you catch a breath and do some homework, OK??
I did not have inflammatory, no noticable lump... but grade 3 triple negative BC at age 35. I felt like something was just a bit off... a bit uncomfortable at times that didn't correlate to a menstrual cycle. *ask your gyno*! I trusted mine - she was great.
Yup! No jab here! As someone who is a Respiratory Therapist, not only do I have knowledge of such things, I also understand what I know! Can't fool someone with fear when you understand the subject. It exposes the narrative further.
Swedish pathologist dr. Ute Krüger has 25 years of experience in pathology and 18 years in breast cancers diagnostics. As a pathologist, she not only analyzes tissues from the dead, but also from the living. Dr. Krüger is finding the same disturbing dramatic rise in cancer among the COVID vaxxed as dr. Ryan Cole. Her vast experience allows her to differentiate less and more aggressive tumors. Over the last year she has seen the following trends: 1. Cancer in younger and younger people, even as young as 30 years 2. Tumors seem to be larger than before. Tumors of 3 cm in diameter used to be rare, but now even tumors of 8 cm size are no longer rare, and even tumors of up to 12 cm occur with outliers up to 16 cm which took up the whole breast! 3. It is not uncommon to see multiple tumors in the same breast or tumors in both breasts at the same time (bilateral). 4. The tumors grow much more aggressively than before 2021: they have less connective tissue, larger cells, and more actively dividing cells as indicated by Ki-67. This could theoretically be due to lack of early treatment, since patients might be reluctant to seek care. However, this phase is clearly over and the trend did not abate, so it's likely not due to delayed treatment. 5. More and more who have previously been cured from cancer, sometimes for even 20 years, are getting cancer again (recurrence). Relatively soon after COVID injection, tumors 'explode'. They spread extremely fast in the body and the patient dies within a few months. 6. Patients with tumors arising in different organs at the same time, which was very unusual before 2021. An example case was a woman who had been diagnosed with breast, lung and pancreatic cancer at the same time, which is very remarkable and unusual. 7. An increase in rare tumors. (This specific point was mentioned at the end of the video.) Dr. Krüger reports all cases of cancer suspected to be caused by the jabs to the authorities. One clinical investigator was interested and wanted to find out more, but a meeting that was being planned was canceled the next day. The person was soon replaced. Apparently the Swedish authorities don't like to know about jab injuries. They prefer to stick their head in the sand, just like basically all other 'health' authorities in the world. Ute has requested help from fellow pathologists. They could for instance share data and insights, which would help them to learn faster. Unfortunately, but not unexpectedly, she has received very little response. She has had a conversation with Miriam Reichel, a woman with cancer who was given only 8 weeks to live, but who has survived for 16 years and counting due to a combination of mental training, specials diets and other interventions. It's clear that allopathic cancer treatment is at best only a partial answer. The video has received more than 1300 comments, with many noticing a likely connection between the COVID injections and turbo cancer. She has since been "silenced" here in Sweden by the Medical Establishment and Big (p)Harma cartels... You can find the video in Swedish ( English subtitles ) on uncensored/ free speech Rumble.
I had a golf ball size hard lump show up out of the blue and had MRI they said it was " just a cyst," and i increased my iodine to 50 mg, and it went away. 🙏
when you say you increased iodine to 50mg... so do you take that by mouth? another comment said they apply it to breast... I don't have any experience with iodine is why I'm asking, thank you.
@@carolineleemon2562 i didn't apply at first bc of pain but after being on the iodine tablets (by mouth) i tried it on the skin with a carrier oil but just a few weeks bc i couldn't take the smell 😂 Lynne Farrow's book The iodine crisis is great for information!
@@PS-qn4oz I can't think that it could show up just a few days after the mammogram. They obviously missed it during the exam. She had to have a full removal of at least that breast.
They found a 12cm sarcoma on my husband’s shoulder January 2024. A rare type of cancer. Came out of nowhere. It has been an absolute nightmare. Surgery was not an option because of how large it was, had chemo and radiation which have devastated him and God willing the surgery will be done this month.
So sorry about that! Please do look up Care Oncology. They prescribe non-toxic medications for different types of cancers! Also soursop & essiac tea, bitter apricot seeds and black seed oil! 🙏❤️
@@plainvanillabeanasmrI’ve heard mixed things about soursop that it is a neutoxin. So much conflicting info . Plus the seeds , I have them but just never really knew how many is enough for me to take each day.
30 year survivor. Diagnosed at age 46. Lumpectomy, chemo. Radiation. I also sought care from a naturopath after all the other treatments were done. Among other things, he put me on the Dr Hoxey protocol. I’d say it all contributed to an excellent outcome.
Male, 36. I have every symptom. Even before this video, I suspected I would be the lucky one to get it. Am seeing specialists, but things are abysmally slow, started last year, looks like it will be resolved next year. I am thinking of doing an experimental protocol with fenbendazole and ivermectin to cure it before they are able to do anything about it. EDIT: my suspicions were confirmed. I have breast cancer. Am in day 6 of an IVM fenben, vitamin C, and baking soda regimen. Am doing OMAD + carnivore. Now waiting more time for surgery
There's a term I can't remember that labels the phenomenon of thinking you're living longer when you catch something early when you're really just learning about it earlier. Some says this applies to some breast cancer survivors. I also wonder how helpful all this fear is. I began to hate my breasts and see them as enemies out to get me. Yet, other diseases are more common as killers of women.
Look up Otto Warburg, M.D. , Ph.D. and his research on the physiology and metabolism of all cancers. Cancer cannot exist in an alkaline pH and adequate tissue oxygen level. Since cancer cells metabolize sugar by fermentation instead of by glycolisis like healthy cells. He published his research findings in 1923 and got a Nobel Prize in 1931.
My doctor told me the reason for my cancer was a genetic mutation. Im not saying sugar is good but when you're fighting for your life you shouldn't have to in addition feel responsible and guilty at the same time.
@@boink800 wow, you have some nerve asking me about my A1c. More judgemental victim blaming? My chances of getting cancer with this genetic mutation was 87 percent. Karma.....
I am one of those women who had a biopsy from a spot on the mammogram. It was absolutely nothing. I swore to never have another mammogram. Now that I was forced to take a certain thing to keep my job, I might get another mammogram. I might not. I just turned 60.
Yrah...that was a weird one I had no idea about. So sick of every October "check for lumps, check for lumps" IT AIN'T JUST LUMPS!!!!!!! I didn't have a lump til WAY later...had other symptoms for years tho
Can you talk about breast implant illness one day. When I was told saline implants were safe they didn’t tell me that the shell of the implant is made of silicon.
Implants are not permanent. Once inserted, no matter what they are made of; they should be replaced after the lifetime recomended by manufacturer. Breast-Implant Illness can come from any number of ways your body reacts: to materials, foreign object, the way the breast heals OR scars both internally and externally( like encapsulization) Illness can come from placement problems: Implants can be placed above muscle, below muscle and can migrate. Like any surgery that is done by choice there are many risks and reactions that can or could occure. The results will vary by each person and their body as well as the approach to the choice of procedure. Even the most skilled surgeons have patients who's body will react negatively or their immune system will become compromised. This is an unknown variable and there is no telling which patients will experience this. As a Mammographer I image women with implants.(I have been doing this for 40 years) Some are successful surgeries, other patients are not happy. I personally do not recomend them. Even with the special way we do Mammography for implants, not all of the actual breast tissue can be seen on the images, even with implants displaced, there will be some tissue not visualized. A routine screening mammogram is 4 images, a routine screening mammogram with implants is 8 images. An MRI may be more useful but may not be covered by your insurance! Routinely screening with MRI can be expensive. If this is a concern , then I would not recomend getting implants. They are afterall your 'Breasts' and will require aftercare for your entire life. G.Jideofor R.T.(R)(M)
All medical devices come with risks. I had the well documented PIP implants, I was unaware of the issues surrounding them. French company! I simply opted to have them replaced, I had no issues but decided to remove them anyways. I now have ones that are made in the uk and I am aware there are questions around them but they appear to be performing well. If we all dwell on what we hear or are told then l yeah, highly likely i would get unwell. Look up psychosomatic. It’s a thing, I know someone who had the same implants.She’s allowed it to rule her life with anger. And she’s so unwell I think more due to the anger she carries for not being compensated
I had Pre- cancerous DCIS 9 years, found with screening mammogram very very early on . Had mastectomy , no further treatment , nothing had gone to lymph nodes . Get a mammogram , there’s no way it would have been caught that early otherwise.
I had no symptoms, was physically examined and my early stage 1 was only diagnosed by my mammogram. I only had 1 in my 50's and the second in my 60's and then I was diagnosed. A small .05 lump with clear markers and lymph nodes. I had a lumpectomy and radiation. I rejected the estrogen blocker and am doing it naturally instead. I go for my yearly check this July.
Dr. Berry, if thermography doesn't detect early breast cancer, do ultrasounds? I really don't like the radiation of mammograms and that they often give false concerns and even put women through unnecessary biopsies. I was set on only using thermography, but that doesn't sound like a good option now. What do you recommend? And, do you have recommendations for treatment if detected?
please go and read through my comments in this section. Thanks. In the USA Mammography- preferably 3D is still the best and the very lowest dose. The Radiation is not the same as Radiation Therapy, Nuclear Radiation or other types. Hope this helps.
@@katharinapaulina2685 But are Ultrasounds used in Germany for routine screening of the entire breasts bilaterally and done every year. I do not think so. Yes for a symptomatic young patient. Here, ultrasounds ARE used in the USA for screening/diagnosing a palpable lump, but not for routinely screening the entire breast bilaterally.
I just found out I have breast cancer. I have been on carnivore and butter diet for 6 months. I read an article that butter increases breast cancer. Mine is estrogen type, BRCA negative. I also took MCT oil in the mornings. Is this true. Thank you for your help and information. Debbie L.
this is related to traces of GROWTH HORMONE in the product but not the dairy itself. If you follow Keto Content creators they all agree on organic, grass fed dairy products, aged unprocessed cheeses and meats grown without hormones .
What gets me is the contradiction. Doctors will say you want to catch it early, so you go to the doc and say such and such maybe cancer. The doc will sometimes look at you and say well you only X age so don’t believe it’s cancer. How can you find a problem early if they ever use the mindset of issues only possible by age. You just can’t find anything early if the age logic is ever used. It’s a very flawed mindset.
Have been on that bumpy ride and only finished 18 months of treatment recently and yes catching it early adds to a good outcome! The same should be shared with men as they too are susceptible to this awful disease!
saddly 1% of all breast cancers occur in men. So Brothers, if you have a lump, gynecomastia or a painful breast: Go get a mammogram and or ultrasound. Take care of yourself for your family and those who love you. Early Detection Saves Lives.
Reading comments is a great leaning tool. When I lived in Atlanta one of my neighbors had breast cancer. She went to her doctors and the hospital with a plan to reach out to young women to teach breast exams starting in their teens. Her program worked so well. At the time I went to a fund raiser and several young women had found cancer at 19 and twenty years old. Also in Atlanta a survivor could not find all the help she needed for support after surgeries and chemotherapy and started a none profit for survivors with help on nutrition, exercise and physical therapy. I used the wonderful place for help with limpademia in my left arm. Even my oncologist group now offers nutrition and support for all kinds of cancer patients.. There is much more out there now than 20-30 years ago, but you still need to be your own advocate..
Dr Berry I am 62, have had "suspicious areas," had biopsies that exploded, had mamograms given to me with mastitis ( excruciating !) but the worst thing is this new " position you have to be in so the breast can dangle" in the MRI Lay on your ribs across a firm frame. Lay your sternum on a 3" x 9 " padded arch over a void. Lay your arms to the sides of your head, elbows out. YOUR STERNUM holds ALL THE WEIGHT (53%) OF YOUR UPPER BODY FROM THERE. I was bruised on the lowest ribs, and it hurt so very much I made them stop. I think a man can lay on his chest, but this position is absolutely not made for women. ________________________ Men need to know they can get breast cancer too. My GFs Husband had breast Ca in 1988. It was ductal Ca, 😢
I am actually surprised he recommends routine mammograms. My understanding is that some of the lumps found may be slow growing and never amount to anything, however smashing it and dosing it with radiation may cause it to actually wind up being a problem. If mammograms are so effective, why do incidents of breast cancer continue to rise?
I had two mammograms before I turned 40 because my obgyn felt some lumps then I got letter on the mail telling me that I have dense breast so suggested me to do mammograms every year. I really don’t know if I should continue doing it because I felt like electric pain afterward.
I’m glad you mentioned inflammatory breast cancer. However, there is a sign to look out for with it. A mosquito bite looking spot that isn’t going away in the expected amount of time. Inflammatory Breast cancer is an aggressive form.
I am an eight year breast cancer survivor. Diagnosed at age 38. I went to my doctor for,about a year prior complaining of a feeling of fullness in my left breast, rib pain, and my bra fitting differently on that side. I was dismissed, and ignored because I was told I was “too young”. Thank God I listened to my gut and demanded a biopsy. I was told even after having a 3-D mammogram, that I was fine. Moral of the story, be your own advocate. No one else will advocate for you!
My mother died from breast cancer at the age of 34. Most doctors are idiots.
Exactly. Catch it early but when you go in early they say to young to need to look. The logic is like 5 iq. Can’t catch something early if you won’t look till a set age. Its ridiculous
Ditto but 29 and no lump until it was way too late...ignored all other symptoms because I'd always been taught it's just lumps and only for 45+.
6 years ago.
I have a friend who was in the same situation.
The mammogram didn't "read" it, but she could feel the lump.
Finally, it was realized she had breast cancer. They said because she wasn't menopausal and had a denser breast, it was difficult for them to see detect it on imaging.
@@belindapaysinger1874 Yep. 2 ultrasounds and a 3D mammogram...nothing. Doctor had same exact diagnosis as I did at 33 but told me at 29 that I'm too young. Didn't want to send me for MRI but I'm glad she relented. My boob lit up like a dang Christmas tree. Other doctor I saw (she also finally agreed to biopsy) didn't want to do a biopsy but I pushed. Sure as sht...I wasn't "fine." I wasn't "too young."
I had other symptoms for years before finally going in because a lump finally showed up. Doctors thought it was a cyst and so did I. Guess not.
Couldn't breastfeed any of my children no matter how hard I tried. Pretty sure this was why. And now if I am ever blessed with more (in my mid30s now) I can't even try again cuz I got them chopped off. I regret it SO. MUCH. Had I known the alternatives....
This is what irks me so much about the whole "trans" crap...these poor souls have NO IDEA how badly they're screwing up their bodies. Forever. 😢
On June 20, I will be a 5-year survivor of stage 2 breast cancer. I had one lump in my left breast and several lumps in my left armpit. I had four rounds of chemo, then surgery, and no radiation. I was 71 when diagnosed, and I will soon be 77.Just this year I discovered your videos about the proper human diet and eating right for cancer prevention and so much more, and I immediately changed my way of eating and have lost 43+ lbs. and am feeling so much better. I think I might just live another 20 years, maybe more!
Here's to another let's say 25 years and then we'll review again 😉😂❤❤
OMG D r Berry. You identified pain with breast cancer. Yes!! THANK YOU!!! It took 2 years for my Dr to diagnose my cancer because she insisted cancer doesn’t hurt. It does. Excruciatingly & increasingly over time. When finally diagnosed it was bad, caused by delay. Thank you for alerting women to the truth.
Pain is a symptom and unresolved pain is a reason to seek medical treatment. If young women are not old enough for a mammogram, there are other modalities such as ultrasounding the region of the breast with pain. If the ultrasound reveals suspicions, then a Mammogram can follow or MRI.
Among breast specialists we used to think electrical shock or shooting pains, heaviness or dull aches were caused by either nerves in the breast or a strain to the coopers ligaments in the breasts, but we no longer have that understanding. Pain that does not come and go with your monthly cycle or hormone fluctuation, but is persistent and localized to one area can be imaged. I am so sorry it took you so long to get help. God bless you and continue to heal you.
G.J. Mammographer.
My mom had breast cancer that she found because of pain.
It's linked to inability and pain with breastfeeding, too, which is likely why I couldn't do it and the little bit I did manage HURT. The "tingling" I was supposed to feel was pins and needles. I cried trying to feed my children because the "letting down" of the wee bit of milk I could produce before it dried up completely hurt so much. No one talks about this! It's so frustrating.
PS- I have a high pain threshold...and I'm not just saying that. I really do.
I also had pain no lump, the dr gave me a script for gas, I said I need a mammogram, sure enough I had breast cancer.
Dr. Berry, I am a retired mammography tech. The same money making BS was going on with scaring these poor women telling them they needed biopsies when they simply did not.
Thank you for sharing your experience. There’s a lot of corruption
I agree! I’m a victim of this - total of 3 breast biopsies, all benign. LOTS of stress, anxiety & fear.
No more!
That happened to me. The dr who did the biopsy didn’t understand why I was in tears. She thought I was afraid I had cancer. I said that No, I don’t want to go through the biopsy because I know I’m okay. I trust my gut a lot and maybe I shouldn’t when it comes to health, but I do take all into consideration.
I had 2 in my left where I did have cancer and 1 on the right when they said it was suspicious since I had already had breast cancer. I personally would rather be safe than sorry, I have 2 markers, 1 in each breast.
I refuse mammograms. I have done thermography and ultrasound. Much safer and more effective at finding issues.
As a breast cancer survivor, I disagree with the screening recommendations. You don't have to have mammograms that crush and irradiate the breast and OVER diagnose. Mammograms are terrible and there's a reason the allopathic system promotes them so heavily whilst the stats tell a different story. Stage 0 is not cancer and, for most women, does not progress. Thermography was my saviour, indicated an issue to be investigated that, because of covid, I didn't follow up for 2 years. When I did, ultrasound showed stage 3, biopsy confirmed the diagnosis at 52. When diagnosed, I refused poisonous radiation and chemo and treated myself with massive lifestyle changes (including animal based therapeutic ketosis). Be your own doctor, be your own advocate and, most of all, trust your instincts. Over 2 years later, now NED.
And don’t take expirmental jabs
Say No to MRNA
so true you are very smart woman.
Did you fast for autophagy?
@@fazole Yes, I started with an extended fast, then did a 5 day fast every month and IF daily.
Amen sister!!!!
I have never and will never do a mammogram. I have done thermograms. ZERO radiation, the cancer is detected much sooner than with a mammogram.
he says what was scientifically proven and recommended by WHO
My mom’s was caught on a mammogram at less than 1 cm. Very tiny. Stage 1 with no lymph nodes involved. Fortunately she was still going for her mammograms at 77.
I had the exact same experience as pbj91. My baseline mamogram at age 40 found cancer. Refused a lumpectomy and insisted on a mastectomy. Fast forward to 2024....l am 77 and have had no further issues.
I did thermography every year for over 10 years, and it missed the cancer developing in my breast because it was slow growing. I felt a lump and had a mammogram followed by a biopsy and was diagnosed with stage 2 cancer. I had a lumpectomy and have radically changed my diet and am now 3 years NED. But my point is that thermography doesn't catch all cancer, so alternate and get a mammogram every other year or so.
@@vdincher It doesn't matter that it was slow growing, thermography identifies the differences between the breasts as well as year on year changes between thermograms. The person reading them made a mistake for you. Mine was slow growing and picked up because there was a very slight difference between the breasts that I was advised to check out. They didn't do that for you...
Was 32 years old when I caught a palpable lump, thought it would never be me. 53 years of age now thanks to early detection
I found my aggressive cancer that didn’t show on any mammogram. I had a lump that felt like a pebble and discharge from my nipple (I was 44 and not pregnant) I was told they didn’t see anything on the mammogram and dismissed me but I aggressively advocated for further testing. I went through 2 surgeries, a years worth of 2 chemos and 25 rounds of radiation and I’m going on 5 years with no evidence of disease. 🎉 Please do self exams - they can save your life. ❤
palpable lumps should ALWAYS be Ultrasounded. Not seeing anything on a mammogram does not mean it is nothing. If you 'feel it' it CAN be imaged. My aunt called me saying she found a lump. I said- get a mammogram, She said she had just had one 3 months ago, I said you did not have a lump 3 months ago, go back and get another one AND ask for an ULTRASOUND. A lump could be a cyst but the technologist can see by width to height ratio and if there is any debri or contents inside the lump. These are what will determine if a biopsy or lumpectomy is needed. An experienced technologist will know what is abnormal. I am so sorry you went through this. I am happy you strongly advocated and are now cancer free.
Yep. Mammograms don't always show. My MRI however had me lit up like a Christmas tree. It was aaaaaaaall up in there! And I was 29 so "too young." Ugh.
@@Digitaldream1116 I also had nothing show up on my mammograms and I get them annually. I got an mri last year and this year and now I have a change and a sticky discharge from my right nipple. Now I’m doing a mri guided needle biopsy. What color was your discharge? Mine is a white/yellowish one . I hope everything is still going well for you!
@@stephenandchristiparsons251 Mine was white/yellow and the more I messed around with the nipple some blood began to streak in it. I wish you the best and I truly hope it ends up being nothing of concern. 💕
@@Digitaldream1116 thank you so much!
Iodine sufficiency is very very importante to prevent breast cancer. Also breast painting with iodine (a carrier oil like jojoba with a few drops of Lugol's Iodine) apply to your breast is a very good way to deliver iodine to the breast tissue on a regular basis.
Wow, I take 2 drops of 5% Lugols in water every day but never thought about direct onto breast tissue!! How often do you apply, and how many drops for 2 breasts, each application?
Ty
Turbo cancer is becoming so common. Could the "safe and effective" treatment be the cause?
The UNDERLYING cause may be an inactive microbiome.
Nooo..... all Vaxxxines are safe and effective.
It's the elephant in the room...
100%
No, the jab is the cause
Im a stage 3 breast cancer survivor with the BRCA2 mutation. I had a modified bilateral mastectomy, radiation and chemotherapy. Mine started as a rash. Thank you for addressing this and mentioning ALL these symptoms. I never thought it could happen to me. I can't stress enough how important it is to be diligent. Once again Dr. Berry does not disappoint.
I have the BRCA1 mutation. Nice to see a fellow survivor. I also had a bilateral mastectomy, but no radiation or chemo. When found, mine was almost all in the duct. This was 22 years ago. I opted for the bilateral because my surgeon said if it were her, she would do that (pretty radical, but I'm thankful she spoke so openly about it. Oddly enough, I did not know of my BRCA status at the time.). I'm glad now that I went that route. Have you had your ovaries out? I did that a couple years ago since they were pretty much useless at age 60!
God bless your good health!
Thank God you are a survivor!
@@Margo714P yes, I did , everything is out. Bless you and glad to meet you.
What did the rash look like?
I am a survivor of breast cancer twice. The first was stage 3. I found on A. Tuesday had mammogram on Friday and surgery on Tuesday. Reconstruction with Transflap. Insurance would not cover both breast. Eight chemo treatments and follow up surgery. Twenty years later after 3 years of mammograms and just knowing something not right. Stage 1 in right breast. Again mastectomy but did not need radiation or chemo. Learn your body and be your own advocate for your health. I am fine good life and had great doctors and support. Your diet and attitude are very important. Watch your diet sugar feeds cancer.
Congratz Survivor! God bless your good health.
What kind of side effects did you experience from chemo? My sister suffered terribly from neuropathy in her hands.
I had breast cancer in all of 2021 stage 3 double mastectomy and all the limp nodes from right under arm removed! My little sister Marlene got me to over two dozen appointments and cared for me in her home for a week after surgery. She passed away with sepsis March 19,2023. I was heartbroken from her loss. I did well in 2022 until she was in a coma for 11 days after her open heart surgery to replace a broken heart valve. She came back to us fine but she wasn't fine. Anyway I've been through a lot. Now getting my life together. 66yrs old 5'1" tall A1c was 8.4 now 5.2...weight 425 now 225. Still doing Carnivore and OMAD.
Jesus loves you both ❤
I’m so sorry about your sister… Praying for you🙏🙏🙏
My sister is dying from stage 4 metastatic breast cancer - even though she rang the bell. 6 to 7 years ago my sister near 40 had already had a mammogram - it was negative. She got sick with bronchitis and pneumonia at the same time. 3 months on and she was not getting better at all and her armpit blew up. She went to the dr., and they told her that she's just very sick and it will go down. She had gyno exam and told the gyno what was going on. Gyno took one look at my sisters armpit and said this is cancer we need to biopsy you right away. 2 days later my sister is getting a biopsy and yes it was cancer. It was stage 3 at diagnosis. She goes through all the treatment, testing surgeries, is told she is in remission - rings the bell. 6 months later she is not feeling great - this goes on for about 2 years where she is telling the oncologist about pain and weird things and they say well your body is still healing from all it has been through. She has a full body scan and they say all is good. 2 years ago my sister is in the bathroom brushing her teeth and she gag coughed at the same time then screamed a scream her children had never heard in their lives. Her ribs broke away from her spine in one spot. The full body scan she had - the technician missed that my sister had metastatic bone cancer from the breast cancer, so my sister had cancer growing through her body for 2 Effing years and was literally ignored when she kept telling these doctors something was wrong. They did a ton of genetic testing on her to see where this all started. My sister's breast cancer is hormonal and per the geneticists, she was always destined to get it. She explained to me that they did a genetic study to see where the genes broke and they told her it was at conception or just shortly after - possibly our mother contracted a virus or something early on and it caused a genetic blip for my sister. Either way, women - I tell you my sisters story because there are people out there that listen to doctors as if they speak the holy gospel. Reading my sister's story above - you can see how many times doctors let her down. Now she will lose her life. The cancer is all over - from the occipital bone in her skull down to her pelvis. She has lung cancer, liver cancer, nasopharyngeal cancer, her lymph nodes in her abdomen started lighting up recently as now cancer, she still has breast cancer because they didn't get it all the first few times she had surgery, she has skin cancer as well. She is in liver failure because she has hundreds of tumors in her liver and is on tons of meds to keep her liver going because no liver means death. My sister is going to be 47 years old and will die prematurely because of a microscopic devil she can't see. A devil that if she doesn't have chemo for as little as 2 weeks will see a massive spike in the growth of the cancer. Early detention does not always matter, but you fighting for your life does. Make sure to be your own advocate if you feel something is not right.
I wanted to add to this because I have milk duct papilloma's and a doctor I was seeing almost forced me to have surgery that I didn't need. That surgery is a partial mastectomy. Me and my sister both go to Sloan Kettering currently - but I was seeing another dr before Sloan. This surgeon scared the shit out of me by telling me that I had the start of breast cancer and was demanding I have immediate surgery. I told my sister who then spoke to her team at Sloan and they said no - have her come here because partial mastectomy isn't the protocol any more. I fired the doctor I was seeing and I went to Sloan - I'm fine, no cancer, just a couple of calcified/papilloma milk ducts which are caused my milk duct cysts I used to get, my genetic testing is fine too. So, please don't have surgery without a second opinion if you fall into the category I am in.
Any woman afraid to have their titties squished - so what, get it done any way because you don't want the battle that my sister and other women and even men have to go through. I had a breast biopsy with scar tissue that makes that test cause me serious immense paid for a few days after a mammogram, but I deal with it to make sure I will not go through what my sister and other women and men do. Not all breast cancer is cleared up in a year or 2. Some will have it until the day they die like my sister. So, make sure to get tested right away - any delays in getting a biopsy - call someone else and tell them what you are up against 9 out of 10 times you'll get a sooner appointment with someone new.
So sorry about your sister. Unfortunately, health insurance companies are not helping. You are so right about advocating for yourself. You must push to get them to do certain testing. But, unfortunately, ins companies don't always agree, and you may have to pay directly for said testing. I know because my husband just had open heart surgery 4 months ago, and we had to deal with this issue. Some things we paid for out-of-pocket. Ugh. 😡
That is really a very sad story. Have you heard about Prof. Thomas Seyfried at Boston College? I highly recommend to google him out. There are many videos on YT about his cancer research and a metabolic therapy not only for the treatment of cancer, but for the prevention as well. It also explains why are conventional treatments very often unsuccessful.
I recommend reading and watching YT videos about the groundbreaking cancer research of Prof. Thomas Seyfried at Boston College.
Thank you for taking the time to write this. I am so sorry for what your family is going through.
Im so very sorry your family is going through this. Early Detection is not 100% like you just shared. But we still want to encourage women to take care of themselves and listen to their gut. I agree we must advocate for ourselves and not let medical professionals convince us it is all in our head. That is such a 1950's mentality.
God bless you and your precious sister. My grandmother, Mumm, Aunt and her daughter all had breast cancer and different lives and outcomes. I have had 2 lumpectomies-and till today no cancer. I grieve for your sweet family. God take care of you all: Prayers for your family.
GJ~ Mammographer.
I feel that cancer is more prevalent in the elderly because of our weak immunity. Stay strong spiritually strong, eat well, exercise, and be joyful.
risk for all types of cancer increase with age, but so does risk for stroke, heart disease, diabetes and more.
Yes, D3 and lugols iodine
I had one mammogram at 40 and never again. Smashing your breast like that makes no sense. I am now 66 and I get breast thermography annually. I don't want the radiation either. This is much better than mammogram in my opinion and the opinion of my doc. Look into it ladies.
Please read my comments this section. I am so very sorry you had a bad experience. I hear horror stories like these daily.(I am registered in Mammography)
I would encourage you to find a breast center with 3D mammography and tell them you want the best and most experienced technologist. Let them know of your experience. Mammography is not done the same it was years ago and even when I started 40 years ago. Today much-MUCH less compression is done. A skilled technologist can really do a beautiful job of both performing the mammogram and addressing your fears. Please do go.
GJideoforR.T.(R)(M)
I just never want any of it
Is thermography covered by insurance. If not approximate cost? Thx
@@alicedobbeleare3971 typically no unfortunately. Price ranges but typically a few hundred dollars. I got a full body one and it was around $600 but just an upper body was cheaper. I used HSA money.
Mamogram is very bad and damaging.
Did once, nevef ever again.
I do ultrasound and MRI.
Mamogram is crime.
I am a 6 year survivor of Triple Negative breast cancer. Get whatever screening you can afford and do those self breast exams. I found my cancer in my right breast almost under my arm. 💗
Thermography is great at showing major hormone imbalances in breast tissue so I still think it’s a good tool to use as part of an early detection protocol. Mammograms can only pick up cancer after it’s grown to a certain size where thermography can detect vascular changes that can’t be seen on a X-ray. Please look more into this ❤
Mine was teeny tiny when caught by my very first mammogram. That was 22 years ago; I was 41 at the time. Most of it was in the duct with a such small portion outside that they could not even measure it. Thankful for that!
@@Margo714P yup! Mammos can pick up growths but therms can pick up even sooner if there is a mass draining energy from the body. So glad it worked out for you! ❤️
Unfortunately insurance does not cover Thermography.
@@theresajopson4157 agreed it’s so disappointing but there are options out there. I got my breast study for $200. I had to save money to do it but it was worth it.
@@theresajopson4157 agreed it’s so disappointing. My breast study was two hundred dollars so I had to save up but it was worth it so I could treat the hormone imbalances. my breast pain has gone down a lot since.
They no longer do mammograms in Europe too much radiation so they do ultrasounds we are so behind the times here.
I'm in uk and we still do mammograms.
Thermograms
Widely available here
Do them not mammo
That is not correct. In Germany, invitations are still sent out for free mammograms. Anyone who wants an ultrasound has to pay for it themselves.
You are better off, because ultrasound or sonograms are used after mammograms to see tissue better. All that radiation from mammograms may cause cancer.
I had one mamogra in my twenties! Never had another one, I'm 72. They never made sense to me. I am so sorry for all of you who have breast cancer. It's heart breaking. 😢❤😢
My 26 year old cousin found a small lump that was painful. Saw the doc and he told her she was too young and cancer does not cause pain. For 2 years she kept pushing back and begging for a mammogram. If her doctor had ordered it, her insurance would have covered, but he would not order a diagnostic one. She finally found a doc that would order the tests. She was stage 4 by that time. I don't remember what kind. Six years of treatments, scans and living like some kind of zombie. Oh and her husband divorced her. She did find a new love, who was there for her during all of the worst of it. It was all for naught. She was dead at 32.
Oh, I'm so sorry to hear of this. It is disgusting and ridiculous of how awful the medical establishment is anymore. Sincere condolences to your family.
It is ridiculous that the mindset of the medical establishment is that if one is young, there are no health issues... like too young for cancer, too young to have a stroke, etc etc etc.
It is terrible that we have to fight the medical establishment to get tests, to get someone to listen. I have personally experienced this, as has my husband ( it took nine years to get a diagnosis, which ended up being a rare muscle disease) and children. Everything is a fight, and it should not be that way.
My mother-in-law had breast cancer, and I had it as did 2 of my first cousins. I worry about my daughters.
a lump is a symptom. MOST insurance will pay for a Diagnostic ( versus a routine 'screening' ) Mammogram in a symptomatic patient both male and female at any age. The Radiologist may decide to do an ultrasound instead of Mammogram depending on age and clinical info about the lump; but either way, at the discretion of the Radiologist the correct diagnostic exam would be done.
I'm sorry 😔
Not sure who is worse…..her doctor or her low life husband…….although men leaving their wives when the wife is seriously ill is common.
That is horrible & that Dr should be sued.
It’s shocking how many 30 somethings are getting breast cancer. Diet, stress, environment. Scary.
Self exam is so important. I have had breast cancer twice and found the lumps during self exam. Each time I caught the cancer at Stage 1. Ultimately, had DMX and living life flat.
YES LADIES DO YOUR SELF EXAMS... it is so sad when women come to get their mammogram and we ask " How long has that lump been there" and they start crying " I don't know" and we ask "are you doing a self breast exam every month?" and they say that they read somewhere that they should not or my doctor told me I dont have to. No one benefits from the entire population to stop doing breast exams. Once a year at your Doctors office is not enough. If you have had a hysterectomy and no longer get a female exam every year, You MUST do your breast exams at least every month or every other month. You know your breasts best.
Thanks for the reminder~ Ladies, take care of what you have.
Sigh. Yes but IT'S NOT JUST LUMPS.
@@gaylejideofor6198 Hysterectomies don't make one menopausal--------it the ovaries stop producing estrogen, one is technically menopausal.
It's all in the ovaries.
First biopsy at 21. Continued hard cysts and continued biopsies until I skipped one year of screening. At 51 I chose a different facility to screen, found lump, did biopsy, cancer. Performed MRI found more aggressive cancer in opposite breast. Thankfully it was caught early!!!
COngratz Survivor. God bless your good health.
I had a lump in my left breast since I was a baby.... when I was older my mother said that I had an abcess in my breast shortly after birth and that the doctor used a syringe to pump out the pus.
So I figured out that it was scar tissues.
In my 40's my doctor insisted for a biopsy, even I explained to her that the lump had not change over the years....well I was right, they found only a small cist. What upset me is that the biopsy was made under total anesthesia when it could have been done with a local one.... I think the surgeon was quite disappointed when she annonced to me that it was not cancer and I just said "I know, I had that lump since I was a baby".
I'm 74 and I don't want to have mammograms anymore.... I used to have fibrocystic breast and that was a painful exam but after being keto/ketovore, no more fibrocystic breast!
Same here. I had fibrocystic breasts prior to going carnivore & 3 times a doctor wanted to biopsy me (I refused as I knew it was nothing) & now I’m 13 months into carnivore and no more fibroids!
I made the decision to never have a mammogram again about 15 years ago. Painful, dangerous and pointless!
Itchy breast/nipple is what i had months before i found a lump in my armpit. The lymph glad was showing disfunction causing just the breast cancer breast to itch. I rarely hear this as a very early sign. Very good Video Dr.Berry
Yeah...I had issues for YEARS before a lump showed up. I didn't think much of it and neither did my doctors...not even after the lump showed up. "Too young," "otherwise healthy," "no family history," "it's just an infected cyst."
*IT'S NOT JUST LUMPS!!!!!!*
Yes my right boob itched alot before I found my lump.
I have drainage and severe itching, and stinging in one nipple, Been wondering if I should get it checked out. The drainage literally came through the bra and out on my t shirt
@@carla5830 Get it checked out if you haven't already. Better safe than sorry. If something is going on, it's better to catch it early on than to wait. If your doctors try to downplay it, don't let them. Don't leave until they have given you referrals for tests. Sadly, oftentimes, many doctors like to downplay things, leaving patients who are suffering with something to deal with. Something later than it should have been dealt with, lowering their survival rate.
Thank you for this Dr Berry. I was diagnosed with stage 1 breast cancer (estrogen receptor positive) 18 years ago, and received chemotherapy.
I noticed that the armpit on the side that the cancer was present, had an almost metallic scent. In addition to self exam and mammogram/ultrasound, I do a smell test.
Bless you Dr Ken. ❤
My niece said her urine smelled off until she was cleared of the cancer.
Breast lumps are super common in women of menstruating age. It's a lot of headache to have to go to the doctor to get every sore lump checked out. I can't even imagine doing that on a regular basis. I get lumps in my breast all the time. Add in pregnancy, and yeah. I'd be seeing my doctor monthly.
At my recent gyn annual exam my dr felt under my armpits along with normal exam. I don’t recall having that ever checked before, so I’m glad he did! Everything was fine! I am 63 and haven’t missed an exam since my twenties. I had a scare last year when a nurse practitioner felt something that concerned her, but after diagnostic mammogram and ultrasound at breast care center at my hospital, the dr found it to be only breast tissue. Thank you, Lord!
Checking the armpits is standard procedure in Germany, also looking at them with the ultrasound, although this costs some etxra 50 bucks.
Odd. My doctor (Netherlands) did that even 42 years ago.
Dr Berry, will you look into the downsides of cancer screening? Please read the books by dr Gilbert Welch and others, for instance.
I had constant breast cysts and dense breast tissue. After I stopped dying my hair with chemicals , the cysts and firm tissue completely dissapeared. Since 2014 the never came back!
I have a friend whose Doctor told her if she kept dying (isn't the word ominous?🤔) her hair, she would be very likely to get breast, or bladder cancer. Scary! She stopped dying it, and is rocking a mane of white hair now! Take care, and God bless you and your family. 😊👍💖🙏
Wow, interesting.
I had that too but the cysts disappeared when I stopped eating processed food .
great news!
Also the normal aging breast changes density.. The glandular tissue gets more and more replaced with fat as we get older, even after hysterectomy or menopause. Even people with very dense and lumpy breast will have this change to some degree and at different levels depending on their lifestyle. Did you know that inflamitory foods such as caffine and dairy and foods that some people are sensitive to for inflamation make some women have more tender breasts?
I am so very happy to hear of your improved health. God bless
G.J. Mammographer of over 40 years.😇
The chemicals in the hair dye, must have been estrogen receptors
Actually Dr berry, some doctors are now saying that mammograms are ineffective and do more damage than good. Like everything else in the pharma field it's about the money.
Sure is. I was a mammo tech. They scared poor women into believing they had something and needed a biopsy just for the money. It is outrageous what they do in the medical field
My doctor discussed that with me, at one of my appointmemts.
When I had breast cancer, the only symptoms that I remember is feeling extremely tired, and a bit irritable. After the diagnosis, and looking back, I recall my breast changed in size...it was suddenly larger than my other breast, and they were always very symmetrical prior to the cancer. I hope this helps.
Cancer originates in the mitochondria of the cell---NOT the genes.
The "changes" in gene expression, are consequence of a dysfunctional mitochondria.
3b survivor here. Diagnosed at 47.
Pay attention!
Don't let your doctor say, "we'll keep an eye on it." Instead of acting immediately. Still recovering 4 years later. Exhausted all the time and lost so much on this terrible journey. On chemo pills still and struggle daily. You don't want this life -believe me. Get help.
I’ve seen a few PubMed articles about the possible correlation between *Vitamin D deficiency* and dense breast tissue and incidences of breast cancer. Same goes for prostate cancer. If you can do an episode on that possible link that would be great.
Thank you, Dr. Berry 🙏
Dr. B, I sure wish you had included a warning to men. Just because they do not lactate does not exclude them from getting breast cancer. We all need to be checking our bits and pieces.❤
1% of all breast cancers occur in men. So Men, if you have a lump, you can get a mammogram and most likely will have an ultrasound. Have both breasts imaged to compare. Also men with gynecomastia can have painful breasts. Gynecomastia can be confirmed with mammography. Nursing Women can NOW get 3D mammography if they have a lump. Years ago they were told to wait. Now the dose is so very small they can nurse/pump - have a 3D mammogram and go right back to nursing/pumping with no risk to milk. YES the dose is THAT small.
GJideofor~MultiSpecialty Technologist Radiology/Mammography.
Yes! Had breast cancer twice myself and my sister also had it. My doctor told me that even our son's should watch for it. Neither of us have daughters.
Men can actually lactate a small amount, it’s not common but it does happen.
Yes men do get breast cancer.
I have had breast cancer twice. Stage 3, 6 surgeries and 8 chemo. I was so fatigued with both. 20 years later had symptoms in right breast. Caught at stage one. Both had full mastectomy and reconstruction. People do pay attention to your body. I found both had great care and now 10 years out from second. As I look back good old hindsight, I should have had a better diet, more exercise and no alcohol. Did not drink a lot but several drinks a week. Know your body. Be good to yourself and live a long and full life.
I genuinely hope that whatever is bringing you pain or stress will pass for everyone who is reading this. May clarity and understanding replace your negative ideas, unnecessary anxieties, and doubts. I hope you have a life full with love, serenity, and quiet.
I love your channel of all the carnivore channels because your delivery is so easy to understand
44, my body is 23 again, 4 months.. listen carefully, Dr Berry one of the best 👌
My only sign was being tired. As part of my physical at 41yo I got a mammogram...stage 1 breast cancer with tumor growing...had "lumpectomy" and then 5 weeks of radiation.
25 years later I am ok!
I was diagnosed with breast cancer 7 years ago today. They found it through a mammogram. The lump was so deep in my breast you couldn't feel it from the outside. I caught it early, but it was already metastisizing. After a double mastectomy and chemo I have been cancer free. In hindsight though, I wouldn't have done the chemo.
Congratz Survivor. God bless and keep you in good health.
Why no chemo
I'm a DES Daughter and I have a Mammogram & Ultrasound once a year, an MRI every year, alternating 6 months time frame. I have a pap smear and vaginal swabs yearly. My sister had stage 4 metastatic breast cancer & passed in 2019. My two paternal aunts had full mastectomies in their 60s. I have nodule, etc findings in both breasts and going to a General Surgeon to recheck MRI and pray I am in a safe zone. Please check your breasts and axillary area every month!
@karenmorelli258
Nurse for 40 yrs. Lost my mom at 87 to met. breast cancer. I will just suggest that you go to a Breast Surgeon instead. Best of luck to you.
@@susanmurrell635 The General Surgeon here reviews past tests then suggests ultrasound before she suggests a breast surgery. She's very thorough. I have more eyes on me...
Why aren’t they warning women about the risk of drinking alcohol and breast cancer?
My aunt caught a lump and got diabetes almost at the same time.
It ended up in metasthasis...
but at least I see the connection now
Untreated breast cancer will kill you. My mother routinely got the mammograms. When she was 86 she was diagnosed with breast cancer, which had already spread within her body. She choose not to have any surgery or treatment and died within 2 months of that diagnosis. We found a medical report from the year prior when this was actually discovered, that she had hidden so no one in the family knew. - she had choosen not to do anything about it. There was no history of any cancer in her family we know of, however she had been living with chronic pain from other ailments for a very long time. Personally I think chronic pain can wear down the immune system and make you more vulnerable to cancer.
Makes me wonder about the mammograms.
Chronic pain plus all the drugs to treat chronic pain
@@pinkplum3379 Same
@@pinkplum3379 It was not the mammogram to blame. Every Radiologist report should have the phrase, not all cancers can bee seen on mammography. or 'No mammographic evidence of cancer' That does not mean there is none but that it cannot be seen. I am so sorry about her choice of treatment and what to disclose to her family. Some countries stop mammography at 75. In this case it would never have been 'discovered'. There is a population that does not want surgery or the risk of surgery and recovery. There are many types of breast cancer and not all are seen on mammography. Even an obious lump can sometimes not 'appear' different on a mammogram, that is why a 'lump' is followed up with an US. But many elderly do not disclose if they feel a lump or even do breast exams on themselves.... not knowing how long something was amiss. So sorry for your loss. Please do continue to get your own screening mammograms and take care of your health. God bless your family.
@@pinkplum3379 please go through the comment sections and read my replies about Mammography/Mammograms/ Radiation and Standards.
I had no symptoms. The way I found mine was I laid down on my stomach and my left breast felt bunched up or puckered. I couldn’t get comfortable on my stomach. Went for a mammogram and it showed it. I told my stepmom how I found mine and she laid on her stomach and had the same problem. She found hers that way too. We are both 10+ years survivors.
I was diagnosed with IDC breast cancer in 2019. After my double mastectomy, I was staged at 2 because it had gone to a sentinel node.
My cancer was caused by bioidentical hormone treatment. I had my first treatment 18 months before diagnosis. I had asked specifically about the huge influx of hormones causing breast cancer and was assured it wouldn't happen. I believe the surprise second tumor was caused by the second treatment. I had a total of 16 lymph nodes removed...4 sentinel nodes in my chest and 12 from my armpit. I now have lymphadema. Chemo would not have worked for me so I had 30 rounds of radiation.
I will be 5 years NED Oct 25th.
Susanne Somers was taking a regular dose of bioidentical estrogen, AFTER she had beat her first cancer.
Mine spread due to them brushing it off as nothing and then making me wait until September that year because of all the teachers on summer break getting the Angelina Jolie Special (didn't have it...just scared they will...) got priority over me, an actual active cancer patient.
It takes years for breast cancer to start, like 10 on average before you can detect the cancerous cells. Most likely it was there before you started the hormones. The WHI study follow-ups showed less breast cancer as time went on. Alcohol is a bigger risk factor as is metabolic disease.
Where I grew up, the women all thought the deteriorating water pipes was causing, more breast cancers. My dad, a doctor, always thought it was obesity related, and this was about 40 years ago. Now of course it's well known obesity is a significant risk factor.
Another risk factor is low iodine.
Dr Berry, I saw an article a few months ago about Sweden, or Switzerland....I don't remember which one...banning mammograms. Reasons being misdiagnoses of breast cancer, and that trauma to the breast can cause it. I remember, I think it was in high school, I got hit in the breast by a baseball. Hurt like hell. A teacher told me to be careful that trauma to the breast can cause breast cancer. I totally forgot about that until I saw this article. I think it was on google. 🤷♀️
Correct; One of reason is the inflammation caused by now chronically blocked or damaged milk ducts
trauma does not cause breast cancer. Wearing underwire bra does not cause cancer, and a host of other myths.Please read through my replies above. There is a lot going on in EU. in the USA Mammography is extreemly and very highly regulated to the most excellent of standards with the goal of lowest dose. Mammography is also not being performed the same way. 40 years ago the paddle was lowered with a foot peddle and up to 40 pounds of pressure was applied, THIS IS NOT THE CASE. The technologist can use the peddle, stop and hand lower the plate onto the breast. compression is just enough to even out thickness and to hold in position. It can be uncomfortable, but is NOTHING like what it used to be.
Ive been Registered in Mammography for ove 40 years. I am proud to say, my patients think Im great and leave very happy, newbies relieved that all the horror stories were not true.
Had a mammo last year - all clear, then 4 months later I found a lump which turned out to be 26mm invasive cancer. I was told it was slow growing and caught early but how can it grow to 26mm in 4 months? 🤔
Are you covid vaccinated? After jab, breast cancer got discovered and big. Korean doctor shared the situation with her patient right after jab.
@@HappyJiyoung yes, I am vaccinated
Radiation from mammogram
Poor
Technician and also look at your diet estrogen dominance this is something that I think we all need to educate ourselves about
Dr. Berry, you could have mentioned also the groundbreaking research of Prof. Thomas Seyfried at Boston College, because it is closely related to the ketogenic (carnivore too) diet you recommend.
I’m a survivor of stage 1 hormone + breast cancer this year! I had PAIN!! Now the drs want me on aromatase inhibitors for 5 years. I don’t want to take this. Mammo missed mine 5 mo before mri. Thank you Dr Berry
I refused the inhibitors and take supplements instead and changed my diet. Those things can cause cervical cancer so and bad side effects so no thanks
@emmy-j the first inhibitor I took destroyed my ulner nerves in 3 weeks causing me to have carpel tunnel surgery. I’m afraid! Please share your supplements and diet with me.
God bless you and continue to heal you in your journey of good health and life.
If your diet is high in veggies (i.e tomatoes, broccoli, carrots, zucchini, dark leafy greens, cucumbers, celery, etc.), your microbiome becomes fortified and can dispel excess estrogens from your system.
Also eating soy (tempeh, tofu), can do that.
New research has recognized the plant steroid has a slightly different stereochemistry from the estrogen produced by the human body, so the systemic effects are different.
You must be a vegan
I wised up in my forties and said, no more.
I do worry about the added risk of cancer due to the mammo radiation. It's a roulette game. Radiation which may add risks, vs not getting diagnosed. But what if you're one of those who had nothing to worry about, but now with radiation you do?! 🤔 🤯
That's why I have never had a mammogram, and I will not unless I have symptoms. Age 48.
There is nothing to worry about. Take care of yourself. Get your mammogram and if possible get a 3D mammogram.
Please go through my replies in this section.
The dose/ exposure of 'Radiation' is incredibly small. It is NOT the same radiation as Radiation Therapy, Nuclear Power, it is a electrically produced highly controled radiation. You can think of it this way: A single chest x-ray exposes the patient to about 0.1 mSv. This is about the same amount of radiation people are exposed to naturally over the course of about 10 days. A mammogram exposes a woman to 0.13- 0.4 mSv, or about the amount a person would expect to get from natural background exposure over 7 weeks.
[ the average background radiation that people are exposed to in a year in the USA is 3mSv and in Colorado{because of high altitude and mountains-the oar} is 4mSv[milliSeiverts a unit of measurement]
I hope this helps and I hope you will get that mammogram, I am proud of you and you will be happy you did.😇
GJ~ Mammographer for over 40 years.
@@PS-qn4oz It's worrisome though. My mom and really none of the women in my family had ever had a mammogram and no one got cancer. But they didn't live in a world surrounded by cancer causing chemicals and foods either.
That's the issue for me.
To mammo or not to mammo. I'm 47. I think I may just do the ultra sound, try to eat healthy (carnivore) and check myself regularly. No way I'm saying for anyone to stop getting a mammo. I'm just thinking out loud in regards to me as I'm low risk with no one in my family having had any cancers and I didn't get the jab.
I've had pain in my right breast for a year, a year! Directly caused from the mammogram I got. Never again.
Please people, check your breasts. I was diagnosed a week ago and was in the theatre the next day. I'm still in shock.
Let go of their Fear modality. Look into ways you can clean your body along with reasonable assist for MD. But do Not Rush into any "OMG Surgery ASAP" crap until you catch a breath and do some homework, OK??
@@weekendatbernies2265 okay 👍 thank you
I did not have inflammatory, no noticable lump... but grade 3 triple negative BC at age 35. I felt like something was just a bit off... a bit uncomfortable at times that didn't correlate to a menstrual cycle. *ask your gyno*! I trusted mine - she was great.
Yup! No jab here! As someone who is a Respiratory Therapist, not only do I have knowledge of such things, I also understand what I know! Can't fool someone with fear when you understand the subject. It exposes the narrative further.
Thank you for standing strong!❤
No jabs my whole life.
Now I sit and watch everyone around the world getting turbo cancers since 2021
Swedish pathologist dr. Ute Krüger has 25 years of experience in pathology and 18 years in breast cancers diagnostics. As a pathologist, she not only analyzes tissues from the dead, but also from the living.
Dr. Krüger is finding the same disturbing dramatic rise in cancer among the COVID vaxxed as dr. Ryan Cole.
Her vast experience allows her to differentiate less and more aggressive tumors. Over the last year she has seen the following trends:
1. Cancer in younger and younger people, even as young as 30 years
2. Tumors seem to be larger than before. Tumors of 3 cm in diameter used to be rare, but now even tumors of 8 cm size are no longer rare, and even tumors of up to 12 cm occur with outliers up to 16 cm which took up the whole breast!
3. It is not uncommon to see multiple tumors in the same breast or tumors in both breasts at the same time (bilateral).
4. The tumors grow much more aggressively than before 2021: they have less connective tissue, larger cells, and more actively dividing cells as indicated by Ki-67. This could theoretically be due to lack of early treatment, since patients might be reluctant to seek care. However, this phase is clearly over and the trend did not abate, so it's likely not due to delayed treatment.
5. More and more who have previously been cured from cancer, sometimes for even 20 years, are getting cancer again (recurrence). Relatively soon after COVID injection, tumors 'explode'. They spread extremely fast in the body and the patient dies within a few months.
6. Patients with tumors arising in different organs at the same time, which was very unusual before 2021. An example case was a woman who had been diagnosed with breast, lung and pancreatic cancer at the same time, which is very remarkable and unusual.
7. An increase in rare tumors. (This specific point was mentioned at the end of the video.)
Dr. Krüger reports all cases of cancer suspected to be caused by the jabs to the authorities. One clinical investigator was interested and wanted to find out more, but a meeting that was being planned was canceled the next day. The person was soon replaced. Apparently the Swedish authorities don't like to know about jab injuries. They prefer to stick their head in the sand, just like basically all other 'health' authorities in the world.
Ute has requested help from fellow pathologists. They could for instance share data and insights, which would help them to learn faster. Unfortunately, but not unexpectedly, she has received very little response.
She has had a conversation with Miriam Reichel, a woman with cancer who was given only 8 weeks to live, but who has survived for 16 years and counting due to a combination of mental training, specials diets and other interventions. It's clear that allopathic cancer treatment is at best only a partial answer. The video has received more than 1300 comments, with many noticing a likely connection between the COVID injections and turbo cancer. She has since been "silenced" here in Sweden by the Medical Establishment and Big (p)Harma cartels... You can find the video in Swedish ( English subtitles ) on uncensored/ free speech Rumble.
I had a golf ball size hard lump show up out of the blue and had MRI they said it was " just a cyst," and i increased my iodine to 50 mg, and it went away. 🙏
when you say you increased iodine to 50mg... so do you take that by mouth? another comment said they apply it to breast... I don't have any experience with iodine is why I'm asking, thank you.
@@carolineleemon2562 i didn't apply at first bc of pain but after being on the iodine tablets (by mouth) i tried it on the skin with a carrier oil but just a few weeks bc i couldn't take the smell 😂 Lynne Farrow's book The iodine crisis is great for information!
Did your cyst hurt?
@rmel2843 yes, especially if a doctor examined it 🥲
I agree we need to do US instead! Mammograms are so unhealthy and so painful! I don’t understand why it doesn’t get changed!
@@Kelly-bn8mu Because most men don't have to go through it at all.
Would never do mammogram
My cousin had a mammogram one week and found a lump the next and it was cancer.
Any suspicion that the mammogram was part of what caused it?
@@PS-qn4oz
I can't think that it could show up just a few days after the mammogram.
They obviously missed it during the exam. She had to have a full removal of at least that breast.
@@nancygorham5908 I see. I hope she's well again now. If that happened to me, I'd probably be wondering. I just don't trust the radiation.
They found a 12cm sarcoma on my husband’s shoulder January 2024. A rare type of cancer. Came out of nowhere. It has been an absolute nightmare. Surgery was not an option because of how large it was, had chemo and radiation which have devastated him and God willing the surgery will be done this month.
Prayers and positive vibes to you and your husband. Sarcoma is a tough fight!
@@LilyBean82thank you ❤
So sorry about that! Please do look up Care Oncology. They prescribe non-toxic medications for different types of cancers! Also soursop & essiac tea, bitter apricot seeds and black seed oil! 🙏❤️
@@plainvanillabeanasmrI’ve heard mixed things about soursop that it is a neutoxin. So much conflicting info . Plus the seeds , I have them but just never really knew how many is enough for me to take each day.
Was he covid vaccinated?
30 year survivor. Diagnosed at age 46. Lumpectomy, chemo. Radiation. I also sought care from a naturopath after all the other treatments were done. Among other things, he put me on the Dr Hoxey protocol. I’d say it all contributed to an excellent outcome.
Male, 36. I have every symptom. Even before this video, I suspected I would be the lucky one to get it. Am seeing specialists, but things are abysmally slow, started last year, looks like it will be resolved next year.
I am thinking of doing an experimental protocol with fenbendazole and ivermectin to cure it before they are able to do anything about it.
EDIT: my suspicions were confirmed. I have breast cancer. Am in day 6 of an IVM fenben, vitamin C, and baking soda regimen. Am doing OMAD + carnivore.
Now waiting more time for surgery
Good start. Add cannabis oil, essiac, soursop leaves
If it's an adenocarcinoma, I would consider cell-forte IP6, but not sure how well it works on other cancers. Best of luck to you.
How, exactly, do you purchase fenbendazole without a prescription?
Why not change Dr's or hospitals?
You shouldn't have to tolerate that.
@@susanmurrell635they are all the same from my experience in terms of wait times and other protocols,
There's a term I can't remember that labels the phenomenon of thinking you're living longer when you catch something early when you're really just learning about it earlier. Some says this applies to some breast cancer survivors. I also wonder how helpful all this fear is. I began to hate my breasts and see them as enemies out to get me. Yet, other diseases are more common as killers of women.
Look up Otto Warburg, M.D. , Ph.D. and his research on the physiology and metabolism of all cancers. Cancer cannot exist in an alkaline pH and adequate tissue oxygen level. Since cancer cells metabolize sugar by fermentation instead of by glycolisis like healthy cells. He published his research findings in 1923 and got a Nobel Prize in 1931.
People set up a feast of sugar for cancers and send out invitations. Why wouldn’t it show up?
It's like that all-you-can-eat-buffet-for-free for those cancers. The more glucose, the merrier.
@@boink800 Cancer has a pig out. I’m sorry to joke about it though.
My doctor told me the reason for my cancer was a genetic mutation. Im not saying sugar is good but when you're fighting for your life you shouldn't have to in addition feel responsible and guilty at the same time.
@@glendacornett2341 By the way, what is your A1c?
@@boink800 wow, you have some nerve asking me about my A1c. More judgemental victim blaming? My chances of getting cancer with this genetic mutation was 87 percent. Karma.....
I am one of those women who had a biopsy from a spot on the mammogram.
It was absolutely nothing.
I swore to never have another mammogram.
Now that I was forced to take a certain thing to keep my job, I might get another mammogram.
I might not.
I just turned 60.
Very helpful. Thanks.
Thank you,Dr. Berry
2 months after taking the safe and effective treatment my friend has terminal cancer brain, stomach, lymph nodes and uterus.
I'm so sorry to hear that.
So sorry to hear this!
😢😢😢
But, these mammograms are SO toxic. What else can we do besides the “normal” mammogram??
@@SewWhittle ultrasounds
Is the Carnivore diet useful in treating breast cancer?
Orange peel texture is a late sign of breast cancer.
Yrah...that was a weird one I had no idea about. So sick of every October "check for lumps, check for lumps" IT AIN'T JUST LUMPS!!!!!!! I didn't have a lump til WAY later...had other symptoms for years tho
Can you talk about breast implant illness one day. When I was told saline implants were safe they didn’t tell me that the shell of the implant is made of silicon.
Implants are not permanent. Once inserted, no matter what they are made of; they should be replaced after the lifetime recomended by manufacturer. Breast-Implant Illness can come from any number of ways your body reacts: to materials, foreign object, the way the breast heals OR scars both internally and externally( like encapsulization) Illness can come from placement problems: Implants can be placed above muscle, below muscle and can migrate. Like any surgery that is done by choice there are many risks and reactions that can or could occure. The results will vary by each person and their body as well as the approach to the choice of procedure. Even the most skilled surgeons have patients who's body will react negatively or their immune system will become compromised. This is an unknown variable and there is no telling which patients will experience this.
As a Mammographer I image women with implants.(I have been doing this for 40 years) Some are successful surgeries, other patients are not happy. I personally do not recomend them. Even with the special way we do Mammography for implants, not all of the actual breast tissue can be seen on the images, even with implants displaced, there will be some tissue not visualized. A routine screening mammogram is 4 images, a routine screening mammogram with implants is 8 images. An MRI may be more useful but may not be covered by your insurance! Routinely screening with MRI can be expensive.
If this is a concern , then I would not recomend getting implants. They are afterall your 'Breasts' and will require aftercare for your entire life.
G.Jideofor R.T.(R)(M)
All medical devices come with risks. I had the well documented PIP implants, I was unaware of the issues surrounding them. French company! I simply opted to have them replaced, I had no issues but decided to remove them anyways. I now have ones that are made in the uk and I am aware there are questions around them but they appear to be performing well. If we all dwell on what we hear or are told then l yeah, highly likely i would get unwell. Look up psychosomatic. It’s a thing, I know someone who had the same implants.She’s allowed it to rule her life with anger. And she’s so unwell I think more due to the anger she carries for not being compensated
Hi Dr. Berry, you should see the latest podcasts of Tom Cowan. He shines a completely different light on cancer.
The doctor who has those powders he produces and sells ?
And does he have suggestions on how to beat cancer that we haven’t heard before ?
@@SleeplessinOC he doesn’t sell anything against It.
Thank you Dr. Berry. 😎👍🏻
I had Pre- cancerous DCIS 9 years, found with screening mammogram very very early on . Had mastectomy , no further treatment , nothing had gone to lymph nodes . Get a mammogram , there’s no way it would have been caught that early otherwise.
I have stage 4 MBC that has Mets to my bones.
I had no symptoms, was physically examined and my early stage 1 was only diagnosed by my mammogram. I only had 1 in my 50's and the second in my 60's and then I was diagnosed. A small .05 lump with clear markers and lymph nodes. I had a lumpectomy and radiation. I rejected the estrogen blocker and am doing it naturally instead. I go for my yearly check this July.
Dr. Berry, if thermography doesn't detect early breast cancer, do ultrasounds? I really don't like the radiation of mammograms and that they often give false concerns and even put women through unnecessary biopsies. I was set on only using thermography, but that doesn't sound like a good option now. What do you recommend?
And, do you have recommendations for treatment if detected?
Ultrasounds are very common here in Germany for early detection of tumors, especially for women under 50
@katharinapaulina2685 Thank you for that!! For breast too?
please go and read through my comments in this section. Thanks.
In the USA Mammography- preferably 3D is still the best and the very lowest dose. The Radiation is not the same as Radiation Therapy, Nuclear Radiation or other types. Hope this helps.
@@katharinapaulina2685 But are Ultrasounds used in Germany for routine screening of the entire breasts bilaterally and done every year. I do not think so. Yes for a symptomatic young patient. Here, ultrasounds ARE used in the USA for screening/diagnosing a palpable lump, but not for routinely screening the entire breast bilaterally.
Thank you for this information ❤
I just found out I have breast cancer. I have been on carnivore and butter diet for 6 months. I read an article that butter increases breast cancer. Mine is estrogen type, BRCA negative. I also took MCT oil in the mornings. Is this true. Thank you for your help and information. Debbie L.
Look for interviews with Dr. Thomas N. Seyfried. He explains how cancer is a metabolic disease.
Antibiotics can also raise your risk of breast cancer. They are a mycotoxin
this is related to traces of GROWTH HORMONE in the product but not the dairy itself. If you follow Keto Content creators they all agree on organic, grass fed dairy products, aged unprocessed cheeses and meats grown without hormones .
Mine was found in a mammogram. It was tiny but still malignant. Had a double mastectomy and they got it all. Don’t skip mammograms!
Listening 6, June 2024
You forgot to mention ultrasound as a screening tool.
What gets me is the contradiction. Doctors will say you want to catch it early, so you go to the doc and say such and such maybe cancer. The doc will sometimes look at you and say well you only X age so don’t believe it’s cancer. How can you find a problem early if they ever use the mindset of issues only possible by age. You just can’t find anything early if the age logic is ever used. It’s a very flawed mindset.
Thank you for this video
Have been on that bumpy ride and only finished 18 months of treatment recently and yes catching it early adds to a good outcome! The same should be shared with men as they too are susceptible to this awful disease!
Guys need to do self-exams as well! I know 2 men who had breast cancer.
saddly 1% of all breast cancers occur in men. So Brothers, if you have a lump, gynecomastia or a painful breast: Go get a mammogram and or ultrasound. Take care of yourself for your family and those who love you. Early Detection Saves Lives.
Thank you for sharing Dr. Berry❤
Reading comments is a great leaning tool. When I lived in Atlanta one of my neighbors had breast cancer. She went to her doctors and the hospital with a plan to reach out to young women to teach breast exams starting in their teens. Her program worked so well. At the time I went to a fund raiser and several young women had found cancer at 19 and twenty years old. Also in Atlanta a survivor could not find all the help she needed for support after surgeries and chemotherapy and started a none profit for survivors with help on nutrition, exercise and physical therapy. I used the wonderful place for help with limpademia in my left arm. Even my oncologist group now offers nutrition and support for all kinds of cancer patients.. There is much more out there now than 20-30 years ago, but you still need to be your own advocate..
I am a stage two breast cancer survivor. Had no symptoms. It was detected during a regular mammogram.
Dr Berry
I am 62, have had "suspicious areas," had biopsies that exploded, had mamograms given to me with mastitis ( excruciating !) but the worst thing is this new " position you have to be in so the breast can dangle" in the MRI
Lay on your ribs across a firm frame.
Lay your sternum on a 3" x 9 " padded arch over a void.
Lay your arms to the sides of your head, elbows out.
YOUR STERNUM holds ALL THE WEIGHT (53%) OF YOUR UPPER BODY FROM THERE.
I was bruised on the lowest ribs, and it hurt so very much I made them stop.
I think a man can lay on his chest, but this position is absolutely not made for women.
________________________
Men need to know they can get breast cancer too. My GFs Husband had breast Ca in 1988. It was ductal Ca, 😢
Oh so sorry you had to go through that horrible pain !! Sounds like a torture device to me 😢😢
I am actually surprised he recommends routine mammograms. My understanding is that some of the lumps found may be slow growing and never amount to anything, however smashing it and dosing it with radiation may cause it to actually wind up being a problem. If mammograms are so effective, why do incidents of breast cancer continue to rise?
How many of you here were on long term / short term Contraceptives or had a root canal and was diagnosed Breast Cancer??
THANK YOU
I had two mammograms before I turned 40 because my obgyn felt some lumps then I got letter on the mail telling me that I have dense breast so suggested me to do mammograms every year. I really don’t know if I should continue doing it because I felt like electric pain afterward.
Thank you 😊
I’m glad you mentioned inflammatory breast cancer. However, there is a sign to look out for with it. A mosquito bite looking spot that isn’t going away in the expected amount of time. Inflammatory Breast cancer is an aggressive form.