Local woman, Catherine Fraser has
become the first client of new Exeter business Thermalogica to be diagnosed
with breast cancer following abnormalities revealed on her Thermal Imaging
scans. Thermalogica launched earlier this
year, and provides a ground-breaking health screening service to clients at
various venues across the South West. Exeter-based
business partners Terri Bainbridge and Lisa Portman offer revolutionary Digital
Infrared Thermal Imaging (DITI) which detects heat to measure the physiological
activity in the body using a sophisticated camera to create a map or thermal
fingerprint of the infrared patterns within the body.
Catherine Fraser |
Still relatively new to the UK, Thermal Imaging is widely established
throughout America and some parts of Europe and is supported by 30 years of
research and over 8000 published medical studies. Thermal Imaging is used as an aid for
diagnosis and prognosis for various health issues including strokes, heart
disease and cancers. The thermal scans
also provide an insight for people who have incurred injuries and wish to
monitor their rehabilitation. This non-invasive
procedure is painless and emits no radiation therefore it is safe for use on
children. Images are taken by Terri and
Lisa; both fully trained clinical thermographers before being sent via a
secured server to a professional group of physicians trained in the protocols
of reading thermal images. A full medical report is then produced by the dedicated
team of doctors who are registered Thermologists. The images are archived in a
secure data base and future scans are compared to the earlier images to monitor
any changes over a period of time.
Following a series of breast scans, which showed abnormal activity and
upon the advice of Thermalogica, Catherine aged just 46, took her report and
images to her Doctor and was referred for a mammogram and ultrasound – a biopsy
confirmed she had breast cancer. She comments: “I have agreed to go public with
my story in the hope that more women will contact Thermalogica for thermal
image scans.”
Catherine’s story:
“It seems strange to be writing as being
a success story because of a diagnosis of breast cancer – but thanks to the
early detection of changes happening in my breasts through thermal imaging, I
have become Thermalogica’s first “win”. Thermalogica recently opened in Exeter,
and offers thermography to detect physiological changes (shown up as heat
activity) in the body and is run by Terri Bainbridge and Lisa Portman.
My connection with Terri goes back
a couple of years, when, as a writer for a local newspaper, I did the first
interview with her about her own struggle with breast cancer which was
happening at the same time as she and her husband, Sam, received the
devastating diagnosis that their four-year-old daughter, Billie, had an
inoperable brain tumour. Terri was a
friend of a friend and while the family’s first instinct – understandably - was
to not do an article and to try and raise the money to send her to America for
pioneering treatment themselves, I knew that if we could get the story out
there, people would take this family to their hearts. And boy did they! After the first interview
was published, the story was picked up by other local and then national media
and the ‘Billie Butterfly Fund ‘ took wing and soon raised enough money for her
treatment, even getting people like comedian Peter Kay involved.
There was, sadly, to be no happy
ending for Billie, who died almost a year to the day after her diagnosis, but
Terri, a self-confessed “research geek” continued to battle for more
information on cancer, its early diagnosis and ways to combat it. So when she sent a Facebook invitation to her
friends offering us a special opening offer on a scan, I jumped at the chance.
In my forties, I am still some distance from the age to be invited for
mammograms by the NHS and as I had been going through some cyclical lumpiness
and pain over the preceding couple of months – all part of the winding down
process, I thought - I signed up.
The scan was taken at the relaxing and
comfortable Radiance MediSpa located near Exeter Central. The first scan came back showing some
heightened thermal activity, which the doctors said could be normal fibrocystic
changes, but recommended a repeat in three months. The notes which accompanied
that repeat scan suggested I made a doctor’s appointment for clinical evaluation.
My GP could feel nothing out of the
ordinary, but referred me to the breast clinic at the RD&E to be sure.
Government guidelines mean you get
seen within two weeks, so I turned up expecting to be checked over and sent
home: there is no history of breast cancer in the family, I had no hard,
pea-sized lumps – surely it was just a routine appointment.
A couple of hours’ later, when I
was having a biopsy in the ultrasound department after a mammogram, it began to
dawn on me that this wasn’t routine. I quizzed the radiologist on what he was
looking at on the screen. He told me that it wasn’t easy to see exactly what it
was, but he “wouldn’t fall off his chair” if the biopsy came back as cancer.
And, indeed, it did. In both
breasts, which apparently is quite common in the type of cancer I have, lobular
carcinoma. This type – and who knew there were so many different ones –
accounts for around 10% of all breast cancers and doesn’t present as a hard
lump, just more a feeling of thickening tissue, which is difficult to
differentiate from normal ageing changes.
At the start of next month (note:
Dec) I am going for a double mastectomy, with reconstruction surgery being done
at the same time. The care I am receiving from the RD&E is fantastic: the immediate
mastectomy choice was mine – I didn’t fancy six months of chemo beforehand as I
don’t want to have to live with my cancer for that time, nor lose my hair in
the winter - but I have felt nothing but fully informed and supported in my
choices all the way.
I am also in the fortunate position
of having an extremely supportive employer in Exeter City FC – I work for the
Football in the Community department – and the club have become extremely
interested in the work of Thermalogica and the application of thermal imaging
in the area of sports injuries.
There is a strange sort of symmetry
in my original interview with Terri and the position I find myself in today.
Although the Billie Butterfly campaign didn’t have the happy ending we all so
desperately wanted, that connection I made with Terri which led me to
Thermalogica has made my story a positive one. Not to put too fine a point on
it, it has saved my life - which is a success story in anyone’s book.
Thanks to the early detection of my
breast cancer, my prognosis is extremely good, but had I waited a few years
until I was called for a mammogram, things could have been very different
indeed.
I’m not much of a one for hidden
meanings and symbolism, but the day I got home from the hospital after making my
decision to have the surgery and was brushing my hair at the dressing table, a
butterfly landed on the bedroom window sill.”
www.thermalogica.com
No comments:
Post a Comment