Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Two Weeks Down, Two Months To Go 
“If you start to take Vienna – take Vienna!!”
Napoleon Bonaparte – on keeping focused on a goal, applying overwhelming force, and not getting distracted.
 

Please check out my formal journal at CURE Magazine, a world wide publication found in every oncologist's office. They have asked me to share my transplant experience. I also encourage you to read this post: How My Cancer Might Save Your Life. It's a quick read, and if you pay close attention, you'll be a different person afterwards. 100% guaranteed, or triple your money back.



March 25, 2015

Tomorrow will start my third week out of the hospital, five weeks since my transplant, and six since I left Titusville for Tampa. The difference in my health and lifestyle from my last post, a week ago, is remarkable. Meaning I'm going to remark on it. Literally. More than I just did.

A week ago, I was blessed to participate, via remote control, as my group of friends, co-workers and fellow runners/walkers did the KSC Runway 5K/2 Mile walk. They did it at KSC, I phoned it in from Moffitt. Last Thursday, my feet were still too puffy for shoes, so I did the hallways at Hope Lodge, 30 laps for two miles, in my slippers. I was also still tied to my IV pump, so I carried it in its fetching over the shoulder case. What a great boost it was for me to see pics of my team, many of whom were part of last year's run, together and remembering me.

The next morning, Friday, my feet were back to almost normal. I managed shoes, and did a short walk outside. Now, we walk every morning, and I'm up to 1.3 miles outside. The USF campus is "Florida hilly" meaning there are some noticeable slopes. I have to be careful pushing up those, but still get there. It's beautiful, with lots of trees and green spaces, ponds, fountains, ducks & geese, and lots of great landscaping. It helps me forget I'm in the middle of a major city.

Which, I realized last weekend, is one of my problems. Not only am I homesick for my family, house, town, friends, and job; I'm here in the middle of a major city. A short trip to the store, just down the street, involves a car trip with 8 lanes of traffic, 2-3 light changes per intersection, and tens of thousands of people. I'm pretty much a small town creature, living my whole life in suburbs of places like the far edge of Titusville. I get twitchy with all this humanity packed around me. So the walks around the quiet tree covered campus really help.

My eating is getting better all the time. I get a sudden urge for something and we go for it. Burrito from Taco Bell, a melted sandwich from Subway, and last night it was Pizza Hut. Sandy and I went to a matinee movie yesterday (Tuesday at 1:45, we were the only ones in the theater, which is part of my plan to keep away from germ laden crowds.) It was a rare day without a planned clinic visit so we took advantage of it. Popcorn was good, too. I still have to think through what I can, can't, and won't eat, but each day it's a little bit more, something a little bit different, and I'm working to increase my protein level every day. Remembering to drink enough is also a challenge. 

My latest unplanned trip to the clinic, today, to investigate a minor side effect was probably caused by not getting enough to drink the last two days. So I'm back to forcing down water, Gatoraid, and other juices.

I've thoroughly enjoyed visits from my family over the last two weekends. Being isolated from them is one of the biggest things I struggle with. I really appreciate all the texts and Emails I get from all of you, and really light up when I get one.

The doctors say I am doing very well, completely on track. The next month is one of gaining stamina, regaining my appetite, and staying healthy. Then we start the countdown, in early May, to see if I escape Graft vs. Host disease, or if I don't, how serious it is. Until then it's drink, eat, sleep, walk, and try to get my mind back in the game. I find that my brain is keeping parallel with my body - slowly recovering my old energy, and adding a new task or "to do" item each day. I overload, mentally as well as physically, pretty easily so I'm trying to pace myself despite my eagerness to just have this all over with.

Again, thank you for the stunning support Sandy and I are getting from all of you.

Kevin

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Same Game, Different Facility 
“If you start to take Vienna – take Vienna!!”
Napoleon Bonaparte – on keeping focused on a goal, applying overwhelming force, and not getting distracted.
 

Please check out my formal journal at CURE Magazine, a world wide publication found in every oncologist's office. They have asked me to share my transplant experience. I also encourage you to read this post: How My Cancer Might Save Your Life. It's a quick read, and if you pay close attention, you'll be a different person afterwards. 100% guaranteed, or triple your money back.



March 17, St. Patrick’s Day, 2015



Week One Out of the Hospital

On Thursday, March 12 I moved from Moffitt as an inpatient to Hope Lodge as an outpatient. It was a tough day, taking most of the afternoon to get released, then going to the Lodge, checking in, then we had to shop for groceries. Later that night, a home health nurse came in to get me set up on a portable IV pump, since I’m still on antibiotics to clear up an infection I got on March 5th. By the time she left, and we cooked dinner, it was very late and I was very exhausted.

The next couple of days were great, in that there was no hospital routine, and I could manage my own schedule somewhat, especially at night. It was still very tough, and it took me a few days to figure out why. I expected, leaving the hospital, to suddenly feel better. Turns out, I felt just the same, but in a new place. No miracle cure from moving across the street.

We visit the outpatient clinic at Moffitt every day. Sometimes for labs, sometimes to see a P.A., sometimes just to flush my central line. We are able to take a little golf cart shuttle, which is convenient, but then are immersed in the same old clinic routine of sign in, wait, see someone, wait, etc..  It usually occupies half our day, either morning, midday, or afternoon.

Otherwise I’m sleeping 9-11 hours a night (up 5-10 times for bathroom); napping 2-3 times a day for an hour; and trying to eat. Getting food in my body is my #1 healing step right now, but it’s hard. I have no appetite and nothing tastes even vaguely appealing. So I sit there and shove food in, treating it like medicine, knowing I need to do it. Losing the joy of eating is one of cancer treatment’s biggest downers.

Other than some residual swelling in my feet and legs (still going everywhere in slippers), I’m doing OK overall. Managing fatigue, trying to eat, and getting some exercise are the big things right now.
I have started hall walking here at Hope Lodge, like I did at the hospital. 15 laps is a mile. Boring but necessary. In a short while I hope I’ll be able to do some outside while the weather is still nice. Today I’m remotely participating in the KSC Runway Walk/Run. I’m doing my 2 miles inside the hallways today, about 120NM west of Runway 33. I sure miss all the great gang of Space Coast runners I’ve come to know, and especially those in my group. We had such a great time last year.
I see my main transplant doctor on Thursday, and expect nothing but good news. That will be a week after getting out of the hospital, and a month after the transplant.

In the meantime, the support we're receiving from friends, family, co-workers, and strangers humbles and awes us. Thanks to you all.

Thursday, March 5, 2015

The Long Long Waiting 
“If you start to take Vienna – take Vienna!!”
Napoleon Bonaparte – on keeping focused on a goal, applying overwhelming force, and not getting distracted.
 

Please check out my formal journal at CURE Magazine, a world wide publication found in every oncologist's office. They have asked me to share my transplant experience. I also encourage you to read this post: How My Cancer Might Save Your Life. It's a quick read, and if you pay close attention, you'll be a different person afterwards. 100% guaranteed, or triple your money back.

WARNING WARNING WARNING - I'll keep this "PG" rated, medically speaking, but  I can't tell my story without some Pretty Graphic (thus the PG!) stuff.
Day +9, Saturday , February 21

My friends Kimberly Budnick and Rory Duncan came over to give the results of a surprise =fundraising luncheon held at the Kennedy Space Center. Over 137 pounds of taco meat makes a LOT of salads. Sandy and  are humbled that a small group, headed by Myrha Tubriday could put this  together and hundreds of people from around the Center took their own time to attend. Others kicked in gift cards as well.  Space Center people are the best, and this continues to prove it. One of the idiosyncrasies of the Be The Match Grant Program is that you can't even apply until you've had your transplant!


Another problem is the worst chemo brain I've ever had. I mistype the simplest words. It feels a lot like dyslexia, and isn't helped any by our smart phones auto-correcting. I found my iPHone 5 hiding under a pile of Depends yesterday, having  a heart to hear conversation with an Android in Swaili.

An even bigger problem is that in trying to correct my nausea, they gave me several  mind altering drugs, like Ativan, and several of the other more powerful ones. They were also treating my continuous diarrhea and rampant hemorrhoids with drugs that can alter the mind.

We finally went to oxycodone, since part of my eating problem was that my stomach hurt. Fortunately I have a hair trigger stomach for oxycodone, so that experiment ended quickly.

Then, I got an infection (possible) in one of my chest lines (Like Caleb) which means more antibiotics.

I tried to count the non-chemo drugs and ran out of focus around 30. Then because of not eating, I needed lot fluids and electrolytes. An then there was a possible sinus infection that turned out to be OK, but that took to "Field Trips" to CT rooms and some more extra meds to take.

The neupogen, which encourages white cells to grow, must be doing its work because I can barely move a shuffle a second. I also can't bend over too far.

I have had 4-5 platelet transplants and a whole blood transplant, to bridge until things start happening. Doc say my side effects are fair to normal, progress if good, and that two years spend getting ready are paying off every day.

I'm not kidding about how badly my typing had gotten. The draft of the previous seven paragraphs I saved before I crashed late this night had over 26 major spelling or word use errors.

Day +10 Sunday through +14 Thursday

Well it's been a rough week. By Sunday morning, I could barely breathe, move, or get out of bed. I was on continuous oxygen and my medical team turned from much more of a formality into a full court, multi arm diagnosis that took until Tuesday night. Pulmonary doctors were added too. They were concerned about my huge fluid retention, possible blood clots, some sort of medicine interactions, and my sudden lack of mobility. I went from walking 3-4 miles a day to one where I was transferred from gurney to gurney. I was also having severe hallucinations and other mental stability issues.

On Tuesday, when Sandy arrived to serve as my medical advocate, since I was no longer competent to make my own decisions, I spent every spare minute between appointments telling her everything I could about what I noticed, what Doctors said, nurses noticed, and things I thought they were missing. They settled on the fluid retention as the most likely cause, as results from more critical tests came back. They started a course of diuretics, as well as fluid limitations. By Wednesday morning thing were slowly returning to the right direction. I was able to be off oxygen when sitting, could walk with spotters and support, and was able to integrate two of the four worlds I'd been living in. Nurses noticed by Wednesday afternoon I wasn't answering questions out loud from people not in the room.

Today, Thursday, was even better. All major tests are negative, I've been off oxygen almost all day, and have re-integrated fully three of my four environments. I walked, with a walker, almost a mile in total. More diuretics tonight, more fluid limitations, and hopefully tomorrow will be better.

Things are still pretty rugged. Chemo patients will tell you that mucosa, the linings of the lips gums and tongue are savaged. "Cotton mouth" can be agony when your lips, teeth, tongue, and cheeks are glued together constantly. Usually patients use saline washes, ice chips, and things like club soda to lubricate constantly. Limiting that brings serious physical and mental stress. That's still a big problem for me.

My diarrhea and hemorrhoids have yet to be conquered after three weeks. I'm not expected to engraft for another week, which is when things really start to climb back up.

Still, when you've been to the bottom, halfway up starts to look pretty darned good.


Through Monday, Day +18

Things, overall, keep trending up. Had a wonderful weekend. Sandy was already here, and three of our kids were able to come for a visit. Being together as most of a family, even for a few hours, was so refreshing. Then on Sunday I had a visit from a nice young man who lives in the area, who I've known since he was three. Seeing all these "20's" adults, who have turned out so well, makes me feel a bit of gratification for the years of hard work we've invested. Later, most of the family went to the Orlando City Soccer Club opening game. Sandy and I were each at our respective "homes" and missed being able to go, but watching together on TV via texting was at least a nice substitute.

Medically, it's been a roller coaster. Friday, which was, according to my plan, supposed to be a "getting better" day instead brought a nosebleed, a very serious event when you have no clotting ability. Getting that under control was an all day activity best not described in public.

Then this morning, I came down with a urinary tract infection, an incredibly painful experience. We are in the early stages of getting a handle on this one. On my blog for CURE Magazine,these last few things inspired a pretty good post, which you might check out.

This is my 24th day in the hospital, and supposedly I am going to be released to outpatient at the end of the week. I am really getting cabin fever, and hopefully I'll breath fresh air pretty soon.