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I am disabled because of a TRAM Flap breast
reconstructive surgery that
I underwent in 1997 at age 42, because of breast
cancer.
In this type of surgery, plastic surgeons cut open the
abdomen from hip
to hip and sever the abdominal rectus muscle, just
above the pelvic
bone, tunnel it up under the skin and attach it to the
chest.
Plastic surgeons now claim that these "cosmetic"
surgeries are a part of
breast cancer treatment.
My story began after I was diagnosed with breast
cancer.
(I believe my cancer developed because of
birth-control pills and x-rays
from a mammograms).
I was encouraged by the leader of a local breast
cancer support group to
go to a national cancer center in Tampa, Florida.
At the center, the program leader for breast cancer
unit, pressured me
during a two-hour appointment to have a mastectomy and
breast
reconstruction.
I asked about a lumpectomy but he said that I wouldn't
like the look of
my breast after a lumpectomy.
The doctor ignored my objections to surgery and made
an appointment with
a plastic surgeon at that hospital the very same day.
When I went to see the plastic surgeon, he pinched my
nipple,
photographed my naked breasts, and tossed two papers
to me about breast
reconstructions, but told me no details.
Although his records state that we reviewed various
forms of
reconstruction, I had no papers to take home to my
family and was
totally confused about breast reconstructions.
The doctors scheduled me for surgery without my
knowledge or consent.
Consequently, I went back to the hospital for a second
opinion from a
female plastic surgeon.
I showed her a book with a picture of a completed TRAM
Flap. The woman
in the photo looked beautiful, as if she had no
mastectomy.
I asked the plastic surgeon for photos of completed
TRAM Flap surgeries,
but was told that there were no photos.
The plastic surgeon asked me if I smoked cigarettes or
drank alcohol,
but neglected to inquire about my chronic bowel and
back problems, which
should have disqualified me from the TRAM.
It is the rectus muscles, which hold in the bowels and
support the
spine.
The plastic surgeon neglected to inform me about
complications of a
TRAM, such as hernias, tissue death, injury to the
pubic area, and the
possibility of spreading cancer cells to other parts
of my body.
The plastic surgeon gave me the name of a satisfied
patient to talk with
whose medical condition was different from mine, and
who had the TRAM
Flap for only a short time (not long enough to
discover post-complications).
The plastic surgeon told me that the TRAM Flap was
like a "tummy tuck,"
and I would be able to swim, dance and do sit-ups
after the operation.
I agreed to have a TRAM Flap and went to the hospital
in December 1997
for the surgery.
The plastic surgeon did not give me a consent form
until minutes before
the operation when I was under stress.
That generic form listed none of the complications
specific to the TRAM.
The consent form from that date states that I was
offered alternatives
and understood the risks.
This is not true.
I was not offered alternatives to the TRAM Flap; on
the contrary, I was
deceived and tricked into the operation (most likely
for my insurance money).
I was not informed of the risks such as hernias, fat
necrosis, asymmetry
of the abdomen, and possible spreading of cancer cells
to my pectoral
muscle.
During the surgery, the plastic surgeon severed the
wrong muscle, taking it from the same side as the
reconstructed breast, rather than the
opposite side.
When I woke from the mastectomy and the immediate TRAM
Flap, I experienced pain that was beyond imagination.
I felt as if I had been hit by a truck and shot in the
gut by a sniper.
The plastic surgeon prescribed a narcotic (Percocet)
for the pain, which kept me in a euphoria for months,
and caused severe depression.
The narcotic caused constipation, but the plastic
surgeon neglected to
prescribe a laxative (causing me to herniate 3 months
later from
straining).
In March 1998, I had a bulging in my abdomen, but the
plastic surgeon
refused to tell me it was a hernia.
I had a severe depression brought on by the Percocet
and the TRAM
complications. I had to take antidepressant
medication and go to weekly visits with a
psychotherapist.
Another doctor told me I had a hernia.
In the fall, I returned to plastic surgeon and was cut
me open again.
Marlex Mesh (a polypropylene plastic) was inserted in
my abdomen.
The repair operation caused nerve damage in my pelvic
and the plastic
surgeon referred me to a pain-management doctor for a
nerve block at the "left ilio-inguinal genital femoral
nerve for pain."
When I visited doctors in my HMO group and complained
of the problems,
they treated me as if I was imagining the problems.
I had two years of continuous bleeding from the
uterus, but no Florida
doctor would help me. I believe I was black-listed by
doctors in the
HMO.
As a result of all the illness from
the TRAM Flap, I lost custody of my
only child, and totalled my car in an accident.
I lost my teaching job in Florida, and my husband told
me to leave the
house -- our marriage broke up.
I returned to my home town in Ohio to live in a
homeless shelter until I
could receive Social Security Disability, Medicaid,
and Food Stamps.
The only doctor with an objective viewpoint who would
help me was a
doctor of Complementary & Alternative medicine in
Ohio.
I have had crippling pain near the
underarm where nerves were cut for the lymph node
dissection and the abdominal rectus muscle was sutured
in the chest muscle. I can no longer carry groceries
using that arm.
My medical records state:
"The flap was then inset to the pectoralis major
muscle using 3-0 Vicryl sutures after hemostatis had
been obtained. The flap was then secured to the skin
flaps using 4-0 Vicryl and 5-0 PDS subcuticular
suture."
I can no longer sit up without help, and must roll to
get off a couch or
bed.
I cannot stand for any length of time because the
diffuse weakening in
my abdomen.
I have damage to my pubic area (rectus sheath).
My abdomen is distorted with my intestines pushing
forward on my left
side, and my quarter-like sized belly button off to
the right where my
abdomen feels sunken in.
This asymmetry is due to the removal of one left
rectus muscle and to
weight gain and bloating, which pushes my left side
outward.
I see a Christian Counselor for the emotional trauma
and post-traumatic
stress.
My family doctor prescribes Ativan for my depression
and panic.
I have MRI reports from 2001, which indicate spurs in
my lower spine and
degenerated discs.
My lymph nodes were negative for cancer in 1997. But
in 2001 the cancer
was found in my chest muscle where the TRAM flap was
inserted.
Because of the TRAM Flap surgery, I believe the cancer
has been seeded
into my chest muscle.
My records from the gynecologist report that my uterus
is "asymmetric."
I wear two binders to hold in my lower and upper
abdominal area. I have
to use a cane to walk. I need a wheel chair if I go to
a large store.
The plastic surgeon recorded the following
complications from the TRAM
FLAP that she performed on me:
1.) Ventral Hernia;
2.) Fat Necrosis of the Abdomen;
3.) Fat Necrosis of the Left Breast;
4.) Cellulitis of the Left Breast;
5.) Nervousness, Depression, and Anxiety;
6.) Weight gain after the TRAM Flap;
7.) Nerve Damage;
8.) Asymmetry of the Abdomen;
9.) Abdominal Weakness;
10.) Bulging in the Left Rectus Sheath;
11.) Swelling in the Left Periumbilical Area;
12.) Distortion of the Umbilical Area.
All this damage was done to my body because of
infiltrating lobular
carcinoma (1.5 x 0.7 x 0.7 cm.) found in my breast
(months after a
biopsy).
If the plastic surgeon had informed me of the
complications and risks of
the TRAM Flap, I would have never consented to having
it done.
I didn't receive the rights listed in the Nuremberg
Code of 1947, of
free choice without deceit, duress, and knowledge to
make an enlightened
decision.
The Social Security Administration declared me
disabled after this
surgery.
The Plastic Surgeon, was irresponsible by performing
this surgery because of
the following reasons:
1.) My immune system was fighting cancer and not
strong enough to handle
a mastectomy and the immediate pedicle TRAM Flap,
during the same
surgery.
2.) Complications from immediate reconstruction can
delay adjuvant
cancer treatment. Consequently, I did not receive the
proper cancer
treatment, because I was constantly fighting the
complications from the
plastic surgery.
3.) I had chronic bowel problems and a family history
of diverticulitis.
I needed the rectus muscle to hold in my bloating
bowels.
4.) I had degenerated discs and spurs in my spine. I
needed the rectus
muscle to support my already weak back.
5.) I worked in public education as a Library/Media
Specialist and needed my rectus muscle to lift books
and equipment.
6.) Performing immediate tissue transfers on patients
with breast cancer can seed cancer cells in other
parts of the body.
My cancer was seeded in my chest muscle, but I found a
radiologist-oncologist in Cleveland, Ohio who is also
a Naturopath.
He was the only oncologist I have met who has an open
mind and will
listen to his patients.
He successfully managed my pain with acupuncture,
rather than with
drugs.
He used radiation to sterilize and kill much of the
cancer tumor cells
that had grown in my chest muscle/axillary area, after
the TRAM Flap.
All that suffering from the TRAM was for nothing!
I have now rejected Allopathic medicine and its
rationalistic philosophy.
I embrace wellness through Complementary & Alternative
therapies.
Thank you,
Ms. Pam Young
Ohio (USA)
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