They are Special Medical Stickers.
I will say, I don't know how people with very little breast tissue actually do get it in there.
'Beneath You'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
They are Special Medical Stickers.
I will say, I don't know how people with very little breast tissue actually do get it in there.
I've never had a mammogram (I know, I know) because I'm very scared of it. I'm afraid the machine won't stop and it'll crush my tit. I'm afraid anxiety will make me light-headed and I can't sit down, and then I'll faint and fall down and rip my tit off. Seriously, this is what I'm scared of. Can that even happen? Do they leave you all alone in there with the squishy machine?
I've never had one either, Zen, and I really should at my age.
The technician is there with you during the process. For me, the painful part was having the machine pressing against my sternum.
Yeah, the sternum press is obnoxious. The pressure of the plates squishing the tit can be uncomfortable. But you are not alone, and the tech is standing right next to you. I imagine there's an emergency release if needed.
Zen, you should be able to take an anti-anxiety med before a mammo. My doc prescribed a Valium before I got this bump excised from my arm, and that required a local.
When I had it, the tech was awesome -- she had a great manner, designed to make you feel comfortable (also she apologized at every step). She positioned the plates and my body parts by hand while she stood touching me, until everything was in the right places. Then she walked to the other side of the room to hit a button or whatever, and then she came back. Very little risk of machines going berserk, and none at all of you being left alone.
I had one in my 40s I think. They supposedly have better less uncomfortable systems now. Mine really was no big deal.
I had one a while ago and am due for another soon (a bit early, but I have relatives on both sides of the family with breast cancer, so my MD agreed I should probably do it a bit more often) and it was a complete nonevent, very fast and barely uncomfortable at all; I think I was in and out from check-in to dressed and back in the car in ten minutes, max (in case any Bayistas are in need but avoiding getting one, it was at CPMC on California in San Francisco -- the tech and the practice were incredibly awesome).