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Originally Posted by Deb401 I had an FNA biopsy for an enlarged lymph node on the left side of my neck - after a week of waiting, I finally got the results that the sample appears normal and no evidence of T-cell or B-cell lymphoma - nor do they know what it is at this point other than an enlarged node - my doctor is recommending that I have the whole node removed and so is the doctor who did the biopsy. I'm going to see an ENT tomorrow with my CT scan slides and biopsy results for another opinion. I dont' want to have surgery on my neck if it's not necessary - why would they recommend that I have the whole node removed if the FNA came back normal? Any thoughts or suggestions would be appreciated? Is there a benefit to me having this surgery? Thanks.
Debbie |
In most cases FNA is sufficient to rule out cancer or lymphoma in particular, even if it's not 100% accurate. In your case perhaps the results weren't conclusive - this is not unusual at all. If your node is palpable you may not need to undergo general anesthesia for this surgery, but of course you will have to consult your doctors about it. This is a very minor surgery, especially if the node is not deep under the skin (which I assume it is not, since you already underwent FNA).
The benefit is, you will know for certain your results are indeed normal.
Hope this helps.