Forum Discussion

Twiggyjumps's avatar
8 years ago

Portacath Advice

Hi Lovely Ladies, I'm scheduled to have a portacath inserted as I've got Herceptin every 21 days until April '18.

I've read some past Portacath discussions here but I'm scared to have another scar, reminder and unnatural  irritating device put under my skin. I'd done 6 chemo sessions and veins all fairly good without one.  But Last Herceptin infusion was 21 days ago and I'd finished chemo 3 weeks prior. I had some fluid retention after chemo and took Onc nurses 1 Hour to find a vein. Finally found one at the back of my thumb, worked but unbearable pain I begged it be removed. It was and my Dr came and said I could have the infusion done for this round in my right arm that had 4 nodes removed but ONLY for this session. Before Next infusion Dr suggested I have a portacath and I'd have less anxiety. For the sake of 40mins every 21 days until April 2018 I'm having second thoughts about a portacath and should try harder, hydrate the night before and in the morning prior. And take 1/2 lorazepam to relax. Maybe a Jim Beam to!  My veins hid for the first time so not sure what to do?
Your thoughts ....  xxx Anne

12 Replies

  • I was really upset about my scar. However 12 months on it is barely noticeable and it no longer bothers me. I do understand how you feel about it though as it did me. I however found chemo much easier with it, knowing I needed 17 chemo sessions and then a further 13 herceptin after..
  • Hi there @Twiggyjumps . I had a portacath put in prior to my treatment starting around this time last year. I have an autoimmune disease which affects my skin thickness, and makes inserting an IV very difficult.I had also been on warfarin for eighteen years prior to my diagnosis, needing my blood being tested every fortnight. This had resulted in severe scarring which was also a huge factor. Finding a vein for chemo (and ongoing herceptin) was going to be a nightmare, so portacath it was. Best idea ever. After so many sessions of "hunt the vein" for my blood tests, it has now been a matter or..."right, there's the port...whack it in". The port lies directly under the skin on my upper chest, and quite frankly, I get more twitchy about having a finger prick to check my blood sugar, than the small prick to access my port. At first, I was very aware of it, much like one is aware of a new filling in a tooth where your tongue constantly pokes at it, but soon pretty much ignored it. I'm obviously aware of it but the pros for me, way outnumber the cons. The small 1cm scar is hardly noticeable and the underlying device looks just like a slightly fat $2.00 coin under the skin.