Lisa Royle warned the world of just how subtle breast cancer can be, in a photo that’s now gone viral. (Photo: Facebook)
When
we think of breast cancer, we tend to think of a lump or mass. But
sometimes a cancer can present in the subtlest of ways — something Lisa
Royle of Manchester, United Kingdom, now knows well.
The 42-year-old mother posted a photo of her breast to Facebook
just before her mastectomy, which has
now been shared more than 57,000
times and liked 35,000 times. She wanted to share the single symptom
that tipped her off to a growing cancer: a measly dimple.
“Ok so I never thought I’d post a boob picture on Facebook but I thought I would before it gets chopped off next week,” Royle writes.
“So here it is….. This all that I found on my boob. Very subtle dimples
underneath that could easily be missed when we’re all rushing round
getting ready in a morning.”
Luckily, though, Royle noticed that tiny little indicator that something was off in her body. According to The Daily Mail,
she had her mastectomy this week and is now recovering. “Please take
time to check your boobs,” she writes. It could save your life.”
According
to Susan K. Boolbol, MD, Chief of the Division of Breast Surgery at
Mount Sinai Beth Israel, even a subtle dimple should send off an alarms.
“As a cancer grows, it can pull the skin in,” she tells Yahoo Health.
“It is the same thing that can cause the nipple to become inverted.”
Royle and her husband. (Photo: Facebook)
The
lesson here, however, is not just the dimpling. It’s that any and all
changes in the breast, even subtle ones, needs to be evaluated. “Women
need to get familiar with their own bodies and breasts,” Boolbol says.
“Even a small change needs to get checked out, and you don’t have to
wait six months to do it.”
Boolbol
says that most women expect to feel a lump with cancer, but other signs
should be noted, as well. These subtler, lesser-known symptoms includes
growing redness, a change in the skin texture (almost like an orange
peel), a sudden change in the size of one breast, a rash on the nipple,
or leakage from the nipple that occurs without squeezing or applying
pressure.
Breast cancer has been in the news a lot lately, from Angelina Jolie’s important insights on BRCA mutations to Rita Wilson’s pursuit of a second opinion on pathology – which eventually led to her diagnosis.
Boolbol
says that, although there hasn’t been an increase in breast cancer
diagnoses, we’re all doing a better job of getting the word out about
the many ways breast cancer can touch us. “It’s a better awareness,” she
says. “And this allows women to pick up on even the subtle signs.”
From Angelina Jolie to Lisa Royle, continuously reopening the conversation about breast cancer is what saves lives.
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