MESO: The Mesothelioma Podcast

Surviving Peritoneal Mesothelioma

31 min · I går
episode Surviving Peritoneal Mesothelioma cover

Description

A routine surgery turns into a life-changing phone call, and suddenly you are the rare case no one around you has seen before. We sit down with Julie Russell, a nurse and nearly 20-year survivor of peritoneal mesothelioma, to tell the full story of how an incidental pathology finding led to a diagnosis, a scramble for answers, and a decision to travel for the right care when “close to home” was not enough. Julie walks us through what it’s like to hear specialists speak bluntly, to face radical surgery, and to go through intraperitoneal chemotherapy while trying to protect your quality of life. She also shares a pivotal moment: listening to her body when her kidneys started taking a hit, and choosing to stop chemo one treatment early, a decision later validated by nephrology. It’s a powerful look at patient advocacy that stays honest about uncertainty, risk, and the pressure to follow a protocol when your gut says something is wrong. We also dig into survivorship after mesothelioma, including CT scan frequency, lung nodules, and the anxiety that can come with long-term surveillance at Dana-Farber. Along the way, we unpack possible asbestos exposure sources, the growing conversation around talc, and even a surprising lesson about cosmic radiation from flying that reframes how we think about exposure and risk. If you or someone you love is navigating peritoneal mesothelioma, pleural mesothelioma, or any rare cancer, this conversation offers practical guidance and real hope. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more families can find support. MESO: The Mesothelioma Podcast is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano, a nationwide mesothelioma law firm with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. For a free consultation, visit Dandell.com.

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23 episodes

episode Surviving Peritoneal Mesothelioma artwork

Surviving Peritoneal Mesothelioma

A routine surgery turns into a life-changing phone call, and suddenly you are the rare case no one around you has seen before. We sit down with Julie Russell, a nurse and nearly 20-year survivor of peritoneal mesothelioma, to tell the full story of how an incidental pathology finding led to a diagnosis, a scramble for answers, and a decision to travel for the right care when “close to home” was not enough. Julie walks us through what it’s like to hear specialists speak bluntly, to face radical surgery, and to go through intraperitoneal chemotherapy while trying to protect your quality of life. She also shares a pivotal moment: listening to her body when her kidneys started taking a hit, and choosing to stop chemo one treatment early, a decision later validated by nephrology. It’s a powerful look at patient advocacy that stays honest about uncertainty, risk, and the pressure to follow a protocol when your gut says something is wrong. We also dig into survivorship after mesothelioma, including CT scan frequency, lung nodules, and the anxiety that can come with long-term surveillance at Dana-Farber. Along the way, we unpack possible asbestos exposure sources, the growing conversation around talc, and even a surprising lesson about cosmic radiation from flying that reframes how we think about exposure and risk. If you or someone you love is navigating peritoneal mesothelioma, pleural mesothelioma, or any rare cancer, this conversation offers practical guidance and real hope. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more families can find support. MESO: The Mesothelioma Podcast is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano, a nationwide mesothelioma law firm with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. For a free consultation, visit Dandell.com.

Yesterday31 min
episode Cancer Nutrition That Actually Helps artwork

Cancer Nutrition That Actually Helps

Googling “what to eat after a cancer diagnosis” can send you into a panic spiral fast. One page says cut all sugar, another says buy a shelf of supplements, and somehow you’re supposed to do that while managing appointments, side effects, and real life. We wanted a clear, evidence-based voice, so we sat down with Nicole Andrews, a registered dietitian who specializes in oncology nutrition, to talk about what actually helps people stay strong through treatment. We dig into why nutrition during chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery is not about perfection, it’s about being well-nourished enough to tolerate full-dose care and recover between appointments. Nicole explains why the “sugar feeds cancer” myth causes real harm, how cancer metabolism really works, and why cutting carbs often backfires when your body needs energy the most. We also talk through the practical stuff families face every day: metallic taste, appetite loss, nausea, and when water suddenly tastes terrible. Nicole shares flexible, realistic strategies like using citrus or mint, changing proteins when favorite foods become intolerable, trying smoothies for calorie and protein boosts, and making hydration easier without shame. We also go straight at supplements and cancer risk reduction. Nicole outlines why high-dose supplements can be risky unless a true deficiency shows up in labs, and what matters more for long-term health: fiber, movement, sleep, and reducing alcohol and processed meats. If you want a simple framework you can actually use, plus myth-busting you can trust, you’ll get a lot out of this conversation. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs steady guidance, and leave us a review with your biggest cancer nutrition question. MESO: The Mesothelioma Podcast is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano, a nationwide mesothelioma law firm with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. For a free consultation, visit Dandell.com.

6. juli 202635 min
episode Mesothelioma Support That Actually Helps artwork

Mesothelioma Support That Actually Helps

A mesothelioma diagnosis doesn’t just change a treatment plan, it rearranges an entire family’s life. We talk with seasoned members of a mesothelioma care team about the moments that hit hardest right after diagnosis and the quiet, practical choices that help patients and caregivers keep going when everything feels urgent. We dig into the real-world stressors families face beyond medical care: travel to a specialist, time away from work, bills that don’t pause, and the emotional whiplash of learning the cancer is often tied to asbestos exposure. When that exposure is occupational or even secondhand from a loved one’s work clothes, the grief can come with anger and a deep sense of betrayal. We also share what support can look like when it’s done well, from caregiver groups to daily check-ins that make people feel seen. You’ll hear a simple idea that carries a lot of power: head and heart have to work together. When mood drops, it’s harder to eat, walk, recover, and stay engaged with care, so emotional support becomes part of the treatment path. We close with grounded advice for the first weeks, like limiting panic scrolling, bringing someone to appointments, taking notes, asking direct questions, and seeking a mesothelioma center of excellence when possible. If this conversation helps, subscribe, share it with someone who needs support, and leave a review so more families facing mesothelioma can find us. MESO: The Mesothelioma Podcast is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano, a nationwide mesothelioma law firm with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. For a free consultation, visit Dandell.com.

30. juni 202623 min
episode VA Benefits And Mesothelioma artwork

VA Benefits And Mesothelioma

Filing for VA benefits after a mesothelioma diagnosis feels like the obvious first move but it can be the wrong move if you don’t understand how asbestos exposure is argued across systems. We sit down together and walk through the real-world “should I file?” decision, especially for veterans who served for a few years and then spent decades in high-risk civilian jobs like shipyards, refineries, boiler rooms, HVAC, and industrial plants. When the record gets messy, the VA and companies can start pointing fingers at each other, and that confusion can cost families meaningful compensation. We also talk through practical steps that protect both care and financial stability: getting guidance from a mesothelioma lawyer or advocate who handles asbestos claims and VA claims, using a VA placeholder claim when it helps, and what to do when a VA disability claim gets denied. We share how appeals work, why regional VA service centers can be a powerful resource, and where families can look for strong treatment options through major VA medical centers and affiliated specialists. Finally, we outline the “big three” financial paths families ask about most: Social Security Disability benefits with mesothelioma fast track, asbestos trust funds with payments that often arrive in stages, and lawsuits against viable companies outside bankruptcy trusts. We answer common questions about timelines, whether compensation is taxable, and what “no upfront cost” contingency fees really mean. If this helped, subscribe, share with a veteran’s family, and leave a review so more people find support when they need it most. MESO: The Mesothelioma Podcast is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano, a nationwide mesothelioma law firm with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. For a free consultation, visit Dandell.com.

3. juni 202613 min