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#20471 05-19-2006 02:00 AM | Joined: Feb 2005 Posts: 2,019 Patient Advocate (old timer, 2000 posts) | Patient Advocate (old timer, 2000 posts) Joined: Feb 2005 Posts: 2,019 | Not while fighting heart complications. I had to fight two cancers at once--including separate surgeries and radiation for each (fortunately the breast cancer was small enough and nonaggressive enough that it wasn't recommended that I have chemo for that too--that *really* would have left me in a little puddle). It was not easy, especially part about having biopsies and surgeries kind of back-to-back.
As a bit of encouragement, however, there are many people here who have had their oral cancer treated entirely by chemo and radiation, without having surgery because their tumor is on the base of the tongie in a spot where surgery could cause permanent speaking or swallowing difficulties--and the rad and chemo get the whole thing! If your father's tumor, like mine, is on the upper part of the tongue, my sense is the preferred way of working is to remove the tumor surgically before radaition. But just because they can't go that route, doesn't mean he won't be OK the other way.
Nelie
SCC(T2N0M0) part.glossectomy & neck dissect 2/9/05 & 2/25/05.33 IMRT(66 Gy),2 Cisplatin ended 06/03/05.Stage I breast cancer treated 2/05-11/05.Surgery to remove esophageal stricture 07/06, still having dilatations to keep esophagus open.Dysphagia. "When you're going through hell, keep going"
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