It’s hard
for me to believe that this month will mark 6 months since I ran the Boston
Marathon. Granted it wasn’t fast enough to requalify
but it wasn’t my slowest time either. Given
the warm weather and what I had been through the previous year, I was a happy
camper. This past week I was content to
just make 20 laps around the hospital floor (about a mile). One thing the disease has taught me over
the last year and a half is to redefine my expectations.
I’ve
mentioned before that I tend to be a goal oriented person, one of those people
who believes in the mantra “If you don’t know where you are going any road will
get you there”. Goals lead to planning
and planning leads to setting milestones.
Once you set milestones (I’ll need to save this much money by next month
in order to save enough for my vacation in 6 months) there is a certain
expectation that if you stick to your plan and meet your milestones everything
works out. With Leukemia, not so
much. Oh sure, the goal is easy…to get
cured. But the plan to get there at
times seems like a series of suggestions subject to change. Kind of like using WAZE when you are stuck in
a traffic jam and it is constantly rerouting you.
As you might
imagine, this reeks all kind of havoc with a “planning guy”. We have a plan, I know the milestones, I
have certain expectations locked and loaded, I’ve psyched myself up…and then
everything changes.
You may
recall the plan from the beginning of the summer…three months of week-long
chemo treatment called hypomethylation (prevents/slows down the leukemia cells
from being generated) followed by a Stem Cell Transplant in Sept/Oct
timeframe. The first treatment went
fine and as we approached the second treatment in August it was recommended we
put in a Port in my chest to avoid all the daily needles in my arms. On a Thursday they operated and put the
Port in but by Saturday I had a fever and my chest was red and bulging (kind of
looked like the hulk on one side).
When you don’t have any white blood cell defense one of the things that
scare the wits out of the doctors is a fever.
So back into the hospital on heavy duty antibiotics and by Monday they
operate to pull out the port. It takes
7 more days in the hospital to get the infection under control. The upside, we learned I’m allergic to one
of the high-powered antibiotics. When
you break out in an all over rash they decide it might be good to find
something else to give you.
Of course,
this means I missed my second hypomethylation chemo treatment, soooo, change of
plans. Now they want me back in the
hospital for a bone marrow biopsy so we can see how the disease is progressing
and maybe start planning to go directly to a late Sept transplant. We set a date at the end of Sept. for the
transplant and put the hospital plans in place.
Just to keep
things exciting, another change of plans.
The results come back from the biopsy and the leukemia is getting more
aggressive. In addition, there is a
problem with the timing with the donor.
We have to move the transplant to the end of Oct. but it means they need
to hit me with a round of chemo to attack the cancer in the interim. This is not the outpatient hypomethylation
chemo, this is the “in the hospital” HiDAC chemo (10x the amount of chemo twice
a day for 3 days).
I had
forgotten how much fun it could be to be in the hospital with all the concierge
care from the nurses (one button and they come running….my dog won’t even do
that), the regular wake up visits during the night just to see if you still
have a pulse (even my wife doesn’t do that), the broad menu of bland food, and
of course the stomach twisting, digestion stopping chemo. Five
days later they send me home 12 lbs. lighter, sleeping 16 hours a day and with
a shiny new Hickman Catheter in my chest (they put a tube directly into a major
vein in your chest and then attach three lumens/connectors that dangle out on
your chest so you can do all the “goesintta and goesoutta” stuff).
You may
recall that with HiDAC chemo you hit your low point (nadir) 10 days after your treatment. At that point your White Blood Cells,
Platelets and Neutrophils are significantly reduced and your ability to fight
off even the simplest of infections is gone.
A few days after I was home I started developing a sore throat and ear
ache (my Neutrophils were 0.0 and WBC count was almost 0). By a week I had developed a fever soooo,
back into the hospital for some heavy-duty antibiotics and a bunch of tests to
determine if it bacteria, fungus or virus related.
As a side
note, these emergency trips always seem to happen on weekends which means I
have to go to the emergency room for initial treatment. After spending untold hours there if you
didn’t come in sick you are bound to pick up something before you leave. The waiting area looks like a scene from the
walking dead and once inside, the hallways are line with patients in beds
hacking, moaning and bleeding. Because
of the risk of infection, they always stick me in a private room and then
proceed to forget about me for several hours as they work on real
emergencies. Five hours later I get a ticket upstairs
where I spend the next 6 days poked, prodded and scoped (not fun) by doctors
from oncology, ear-nose-throat, infectious disease and internal medicine. The ear and throat never clear up totally
but by the end of the stay I’m able to swallow and get food down again. Final conclusion, I have some kind of viral
infection that will just have to run its course and given I’m no longer spiking
fevers I can go home.
That brings
us up to date on the last couple of months.
I have 2 ½ weeks before I go into the hospital for a week of chemo and
then the stem cell transplant. I have a
good donor so the doctors are optimistic.
Mean time I’m in isolation, taking my anti-fungal, anti-viral and
anti-bacterial medications, praying my blood counts recover and trying not to
go postal from boredom. I’ll try to
squeak in one more blog before I enter the hospital as I don’t think I’ll be
able to blog the first 3 or 4 weeks I’m in there. That may be a blessing.
1 comment:
Dave, I'm sure it seems wearing to go down all these sideroads. But you will prevail, and these diversions won't matter. Hang in there.
Ed DeJesus
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