"OCF Down Under" "Above & Beyond" Member (500+ posts) Joined: May 2010 Posts: 638 | Hi HockeyDad
I will just add that the nodes are broken into 6 geographical regions which are labelled I-VI (although VI is more associated with thyroid issues). SCC is predictable in where it is likely to go dependent on where your primary tumour is so in more recent years surgeons do "selective" or "modified" dissections as opposed to "radical" dissections. Radical is all of the zones except VI.
You have nodal involvement so they have the choice to "nuke" it or remove it surgically and to be safe they will nuke or remove the zone or zones associated with your primary tumour.
Your choice then, is to nuke or operate and only you and your doctors can realistically make that choice with all the information in front of you.
Ask about side effects. Ask about likelihood of lymphoedema and how severe it is likely to be (the more nodes they take the less places the detritus will have to go = more oedema), ask about what structures and nerves would be in the field and what would happen if they were damaged, and would the doctor expect them to recover. Ask the doctor how strongly they feel about one treatment over another and if it were their brother what would they recommend to him? If they recommend one treatment over another, ask them why they think that?
Karen Love of Life to Alex T4N2M0 SCC Tonsil, BOT, R lymph nodes Dx March 2010 51yrs. Unresectable. HPV+ve Tx Chemo x 3+1 cycles(cisplatin,docetaxel,5FU)- complete May 31 Chemoradiation (IMRTx35 + weekly cisplatin) Finish Aug 27 Return to work 2 years on 3 years out Aug 27 2013 NED  Still underweight
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