How It Is Done
You will need to take off clothing near the biopsy site. You will
wear a gown for a covering during the test.
If you are very anxious during the biopsy, you may be given a
medicine (sedative) to help you relax.
Before a sentinel node biopsy is done, the dye or tracer is put
into the area, and a special camera (lymphoscintigraphy) takes pictures of the
lymph nodes. The dye may turn your skin blue for a few days after the
biopsy.
The first lymph node or nodes to absorb the
tracer are called the sentinel nodes. This node or nodes and the
tissue around them are taken out. You may have a numbing medicine
(local anesthesia) or go to sleep for the biopsy. The
lymph node sample is cut into many thin slices and looked
at under a microscope for cancer. You will have some stitches and a bandage
over the biopsy site.
A sentinel lymph node biopsy usually takes 30 to 60 minutes but may
take longer. If you have general anesthesia, you will be watched by a nurse in
the recovery room until you are fully awake.
Your doctor will give you specific instructions to take care of
your biopsy site. During your follow-up visit, your doctor will discuss the
results of your biopsy with you and take out your stitches.