‘Leave your bodies alone’ – Actress regrets implants after breast cancer diagnosis

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Actress Nicole Eggert, who recently announced her breast cancer diagnosis said she regrets going under the knife for a breast augmentation at 18 while starring on the “Baywatch” show.

“I look at all these younger girls doing it and think, ‘God, leave your bodies alone!’” she told People in an interview published Saturday, according to a report in Page Six.

“But when you have to put on that one-piece and it’s like, you’re so flat that it’s like, pleating — you got pleats across the front — You’re like, ‘What is this?’” she recalled.

“Nothing you can do. You can’t stuff it with anything. You can’t do anything.”

Eggert was not physically or mentally prepared to film in a tiny swimsuit every day.

The “Charles in Charge” alum said she had no idea she landed a spot on “Baywatch” and at the time thought she would be acting on a spinoff series about high school students in Malibu.

“It was a stupid 18-year-old decision,” she said.

Eggert, 52, has since undergone a series of breast augmentations — including a reduction that was documented on the E! show “Botched” in 2015.

Earlier this month, the mom of two’s chest was in the news for a different reason — she revealed she had stage 2 cribriform carcinoma.

At the time of her announcement, Eggert said she was waiting to get into the operating room to have the painful lump in her left breast removed and to find out when she could start chemotherapy.

The “Blown Away” actress admitted she often “panics” knowing that the cancer is “growing” inside her with “every second that passes.”

The most difficult part for her is the thought of leaving her daughters, Dilyn, 25, and Keegan, 12.

“[Dilyn’s] an adult, but I have a 12-year-old at home where I’m the only caregiver. I have no family. I have nothing,” she explained.

“It’s just so overwhelming, and I’m just doing everything I can not to spiral.”

Eggert’s close friend Mindy Molinary has created a GoFundMe page for her to help with her costly upcoming treatments.

“[Eggert] is tenacious and has always found a way to get by, but this is different,” the pal wrote on the crowdfunding platform.

“She will be unable to work while undergoing surgery and treatments. She has a long, scary road ahead and has a terrible time asking for help.”

“I implore you to help my friend afford her medical bills as well as feel secure that she won’t be left without a home for her family during this extremely trying time,” Molinary added.

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