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What to Eat
National Cancer Institute has a publication Eating Hints for Cancer Patients Before, During and After Treatment available for free online at: www.cancer.gov/cancerinfo/eatinghints
or call for a copy: 800.4.CANCER
It would be wonderful if we could say that all side effects from chemotherapy end when chemotherapy ends. However, that is generally not the case. Side effects tend to continue for a while. In some unusual situations, effects such as chemo brain can last up to 10 years.
For a list of various side effects and what to do about them if they continue after the end of chemo, see the documents in "To Learn More."
If you took anti-nausea medication during chemotherapy, continue it for a while after in case of delayed nausea. Ask your doctor how long is a reasonable period of time.
Ports and Catheters
If you received your chemotherapy through a port or catheter in your skin, consider keeping it in until you are sure there is no additional chemotherapy in the near future. Experience indicates that a second port often does not work as well as the first one.
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