I got recalled after routine mammogram, went to the appointment today and was told I had microcalcifications. From what I've read many of these are dismissed as benign after a second mammogram, but after the doctor looked at my mammogram, he said I needed a biopsy. He didn't tell me much, and the breast care nurse was away so I had nobody to ask questions. I ended up having a mammogram, then a second one, then an ultrasound, then a biopsy, then another mammogram, and felt like I was being pushed from pillar to post with no real explanation of what was going on.
I had been in two minds whether to have the routine mammogram at all: it seems like a lot of women end up having invasive treatment for conditions (DCIS) that may never have been an issue in their lifetimes, but now I'm on the treadmill it seems there's no getting off. I eventually went for it thinking I'd get the all clear and it would give me peace of mind: instead, I'm now having to wait two weeks to hear whether it's something or not, and I'm stressed out of my head. I'm so worried that they'll say it's DCIS and I'll have to have possibly totally unnecessary treatment. But how can you know? Lots of my friends don't go for routine mammograms for precisely the reason of over diagnosis, and now I'm really wishing I hadn't gone either. I asked the doctor whether it was likely to be something pre-cancerous, but he was very evasive which made me feel even worse. Any tips for dealing with two weeks of stress? (as an aside: I'm a hospice nurse so spend my working life looking after people with late stage cancer, which is not helping my stress levels).