The side effects of chemotherapy.
Today we’ll talk about some side effects of chemotherapy. Many friends, hearing the word chemotherapy, think of the cancer as a terrible thing, a most critical factor in preventing him from successfully carrying out his treatment. It is true that the effects that we all hear, such as taking off, like vomiting, eating, bone marrow inhibition, cold, weakness, are the side effects of a chemotherapy that is common to us. But actually with. Now there’s an increase in research on chemotherapy, a strengthening of one of his treatment-aided treatments, and now there’s less of a side effect of chemotherapy, but today I’m going to tell you about one of our greatest concerns about breast cancer. And guess what, you know, the thing that everybody hates most or doesn’t want is to take off their hair, but actually, the principle of chemotherapy is that it’s inside us and the drugs help us kill the enemy. But it doesn’t matter. So when you see this cell growing fast, it attacks. Besides our tumor cells grow fast, so do our hairs. So that’s why there’s a side effect of this kind of disemboweling during chemotherapy, and especially, this cyst, red water, or our purple sand. So this may be what we have to face. I want you to be ordinary, to say one of the most critical points, and after 1 to 3 months of chemotherapy, your hair will come back. It’s reversible to grow this hair. It’s not a lifelong thing. So let’s get this off the ground. And the second point, he could say, “Autumn and winter,” and I would buy a nice wig, change a different hair or hat, and so on, during chemotherapy, that doesn’t affect our beautiful look. If I still care, or my job needs me, I can’t change too much, I have to keep my image as I am now. Then we have a little tool, the ice cap. If, for example, the chemo goes into the skin of our body, you put an ice cap on the head, which reduces the circulation of blood to the head, so that the damage to our fur cell is smaller, so it can be reduced. In general, as a doctor in oncology, I suggest, first of all, that we are not afraid to know that this is not permanent, and that we can grow our hair once we have finished chemotherapy. Second of all, if we really are. In the face of this, we suggest that we cut your hair short so that every time a hair falls off, it doesn’t affect you. A nice wig, or a nice hat, is perfectly possible, and if the third thing is a special desire to avoid it, the use of ice caps during chemotherapy can also reduce the incidence of it.
Breast cancer