Mastectomy
In most cases, recovery from a mastectomy is straightforward and without complications.
It's normal to experience certainside effects, such as short-term pain and swelling of the tissue over your chest wall. You'll also have a Scars .
You may have swelling at the site of your operation due to body fluid collecting underneath the skin. This is called seroma. It often disappears without treatment, although it may need to be drained with a needle and syringe. Speak to your surgeon or breast care nurse if you think you're developing seroma.
If you've had the lymph nodes removed under your arm, you may experience numbness and tingling aroundthis area. This often goes away as the area heals, but in some cases it's permanent. There's also a small chance thatany pain you experience after having a mastectomy will be long-lasting.
Other complications include infection and a condition called lymphoedema (a side effect of mastectomies, that involve the armpit). Speak to your specialist or breast care nurse immediately if you think that you may be experiencing any of the symptoms described below.
Your wound may be infected if the wound site:
This can be treated with antibiotics .
If you've had some lymph nodes removed, you're more at risk of developing a condition called lymphoedema . This usually starts some time after surgery, but it can also develop many months or years later.
Lymphoedema is a build-up of fluid in the arm that causesswelling, painand tenderness in your arm and hand.
Your nurse will tell you how to prevent lymphoedema using skincare techniques and exercises. If it occurs, lymphoedema can be controlled with early treatment in a specialised lymphoedema clinic.
If a breast implant was put in after your mastectomy, there's a slight riskof itbecoming infected. If this happens, the implant may need to be removed.
The implant may also be removed if your skin fails to heal properly. The risk of this happening is higher in people who have diabetes or smoke.
A mastectomy is an operation to remove the breast. It can be used to treat breast cancer in both men and women.
A mastectomy is mainly used as a treatment for breast cancer or as a way of preventing breast cancer developing.
There are several different types of mastectomy, depending on the areas that are removed.
Most people who have a mastectomy recover well after the procedure and do not develop complications.
In most cases, recovery from a mastectomy is straightforward and without complications.
Story of a patient diagnosed with breast cancer twice in four years, once in each breast.
Pauline Polley, from Dorset, had a mastectomy after she was diagnosed with breast cancer. She had a breast reconstruction 18 months later.