I just posted this on the main discussion page, but then found this forum for addressing questions specifically to doctors.
I just joined and haven't really found a discussion of the things I'm wanting to know. I'm in my mid 50's and started having trouble with pain under my left nipple about a month ago. It felt like a prickling type pain, like a sticker was under the skin. I thought I had scratched my nipple or something, but then the pain continued. Over the next 4 weeks, I have begun to actually feel a lump under my left nipple and it's very disconcerting. The left breast is noticeably swollen and is very painful. I also have burning and shooting type pains around the chest area and especially in both armpits. Is this a symptom of gynecomastia? I haven't seen anyone else speak of this.
In fact, PAIN is my main complaint with this condition, and from the things I've read about it, pain doesn't usually seem to be the main complaint from men who have it. Most everything I have read on the subject, men mainly complain about the size of the breast itself, and not so much the pain.
I went to my doctor about this a couple of weeks ago and he ordered a mammogram. It came back that I had gynecomastia on both sides, which surprised me because my right breast has no symptoms. I asked the radiologist what to do about it and she said "nothing". She said most of the time it's related to medication.
I went back to my doctor to discuss the results with him and to discuss what to do now. We went over my medications and the only one he thought might have a chance of causing my problem was Prevacid (for heartburn/GERD). That medicine, and others like it, are on the list of meds that can cause gyno. But I have been taking this medicine for several years now and you would think that if it was going to give me gyno, it would have done it long ago. Is it possible to develop gyno YEARS after being on a certain medication?
My doctor also started me on another medicine only 3 weeks before I started having gyno symptoms. The medicine is Welchol (for high cholesterol). He really didn't think my problem could be related to the medicine because not only is gyno not listed as a side effect of Welchol, it's also not absorbed systemically. It's not a statin and does not affect the body the way the statins do. However, since my problem started only 3 weeks after beginning this medicine, he told me to stop taking it for 6 weeks to see if my gyno symptoms went away or improved. He also took some blood to check my hormone levels, but I don't have the results yet.
So my questions are.....how common is SIGNIFICANT and ONGOING pain with gynecomastia? I know "tenderness" is listed as a symptom, but mine HURTS, and nothing seems to help it.
Anyone else think they might have developed gynecomastia as a result of their heartburn/GERD medicine? Is it possible that Prevacid could be causing my problem even though I've taken it for several years?
What about cholesterol lowering meds? Are they known to cause gyno? I know there is a direct relationship between our hormones and cholesterol, so if you mess with the cholesterol, it seems like it could throw our hormones out of whack, too. Am I grasping at straws here?
I also had a shot of Celestone (cortisone) for stopped up ears a couple of months ago. Could this have triggered the gyno?
Should one consider having surgery if they have only had the condition for a month? How long should you live with gyno before surgery should be considered? Would there be any problem with having the surgery if you're still having acute symptoms related to it (i.e., pain, noticeable feeling of fullness in the breast, active growing of breast tissue with swelling), or would it be better to see if the pain goes away and see how much swelling I'm left with?
How long should the acute symptoms of gyno last after the initial onset? I read all the time that it will "go away," but I'm not a teenager, I'm a middle aged guy. How long should I expect acute symptoms to last and will the unpleasant symptoms go away?
I've read that in older males, the cause of gyno is unknown only 25% of the time. So that means 75% of the time, the cause IS known. What IS that cause most of the time in a middle aged male who doesn't use steroids or pot?
Is it possible that initiating an exercise program and/or lifting weights could trigger a gyno outbreak? My son is a health nut and is semi into body building. He thinks gyno can run in families and he has had intermittent problems with gyno over the years. He says if he has laid off the weights for awhile and then starts them up again, he gets a flare-up of gyno. He takes Tamoxifen for it to shorten the course of it. I don't know where he gets it and I would be afraid to take it unless it was prescribed by my doctor. (My doctor just rolled his eyes when I asked about taking Tamoxifen for it.) Anyway, I thought it was odd that my son would ask me if I had recently started a weight program, because I had, indeed, done just that about a month prior to my symptoms. I had begun lifting barbells in my spare time. Anyone heard of weight lifting spurring a gyno flare-up?
Is it okay to exercise when you have gynecomastia? I'm talking about lifting weights and walking/light jogging? If weight lifting is what caused the problem, it would seem logical not to do it, but I've read that building the pectoral muscles can make the gyno not so noticeable.
Sorry this was so long, but I'm obsessed and worried about myself.
Thanks!