Aimmommannommenl To Life! imummammummiummormi Health Fighting Cancer Patient hopes for new procedure to prevent hair loss during treatment. ROBIN SCHWARTZ Special to the Jewish News I n the blink of an eye, life changed dramatically for 35- year-old Robyn Tink of Birmingham. "I felt a lump. It was hard, like a marble, and very close to the sur- face," Tink said. The outgoing, active member of Detroit's Jewish social scene says she immediately knew something was seriously wrong. At first, doctors thought the small, 1.8-centimeter mass in her breast was a cyst, but an ultrasound confirmed it was a tumor. A biopsy came back a few days later with even more fright- ening news — the tumor was cancer- ous. "Cancer — it just sneaks up on you — there are no signs, no symp- toms," Tink said. Still, she insists, she's prepared to fight. Breast cancer runs in Tink's family. Both her maternal grand- mother and great-grandmother had the potentially deadly disease. Her mother, Linda Tink of Farmington Hills, had been urging Robyn to get a mammogram. But, as it turns out, the family says the test would not have detected the tumor. The lump was not visible in a mammogram done after doctors knew it was there. "It showed up in an ultrasound, but most people don't get ultra- sounds," Tink said. She's now urging her friends and anyone who will listen to be vigilant about getting checkups. "I'm encour- aging everyone to get exams, give yourself exams, go get checked out, request ultrasounds," she said. In the month or so since her diag- nosis, Tink says life has been a whirl- wind filled with ups and downs, deci- sions, doctor visits and some oppor- tunities to reflect. "Without my friends and family's support and the community's sup- port, I wouldn't be able to get through this," Tink said. "It definite- ly puts priorities in place, and I just feel loved." She's also received a great deal of encouragement from co-workers at WCS Lending in Southfield, where she is a mortgage loan officer. Two surgeries have been performed to remove the tumor, but Tink still faces Keeping Her Cool Cancer patient tries experimental caps to help prevent hair loss. lia ileen Bradley of Farmington Hills suc- ceeded in retaining her hair after seven rounds of zhemotherapy last December by using the Penguin Cold Cap. She went directly to the developer in London and has been working with him to bring the experimental caps — and hope — across the Atlantic to cancer patients in Michigan. She used the cap system again this month as she finished the last of her chemotherapy treat- ments July 22 for a second cancer that appeared. There's a 20-day waiting period after the chemotherapy to see how effective the treatment has been to prevent hair loss this time. The three-pound insulated caps, designed to fit any head size and shape, are filled with a spe- cially formulated Crylon gel that helps them retain the cold. The cap fits snugly, yet comfort- IN 7/28 2005 16 "Cancer — it just sneaks up on you there are no signs, no symptoms. radiation and chemotherapy treat- ments — an aggressive plan doctors say is warranted because of her age. "The fortunate thing is that she found it at a young age, but the problem is cancer is much more aggressive at a younger age," said her sister-in-law, Jocelyn Tink of Birmingham. One bit of good news is that Tink found the tumor before the cancer spread. Spreading The Word Looking for a way to lend support, some of her closest family members and friends wrote a letter and e- mailed it to a small group of people. "We have been wondering what we can do to continue to help her Robyn Tink through the coming months, which we know will be quite difficult for her both physically and emotionally," the e-mail read. The message went on to say Tink has expressed interest in an experi- mental procedure being used to help prevent hair loss for patients going through chemotherapy, and money is ably, on the head and transfers the cold to a per- She says they already are popular in Europe and son's hair follicles, which aids in cutting the tox- in California. icity of the drugs to the scalp. Bradley says the "I would like to see it in every hospital here," caps are worn prior to, during and after treat- she said. "I get phone calls from all over from ment. They must be changed every 35 minutes people wanting to know about it. It's motivated for a fresh one from a freezer. me, and I want people to benefit from this." "It's very cold, but Robyn Tink of an even cold; you Birmingham (see can endure it," she accompanying story) said. She has a total was one who called of 14 caps because Bradley to learn more. some of her treat- Bradley plans to ments involved high work with her oncolo- doses of drugs and gist to have them longer time periods. available for rent in Bradley has been his office, where a negotiating with special freezer can be Frank Fronda, who kept to keep the caps developed the super-cold. The Penguin Cold Cap in hypoallergenic caps 1992, to bring to can be cleaned with caps to Michigan, an alcohol wipe and where she says she's re-used. El the first to use them. Eileen Bradley without and with the Penguin Cold Cap