The Purpose

The reason for this blog is so family and friends can follow along on my journey through cancer and treatments. Please check back regularly for updates and new happenings.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Chemoembolization Adventure #1

Friday, June 27 I had my first Chemoembolization at John C. Lincoln Deer Valley. The first thing that you do at the hospital is paperwork of course, that is after waiting for a while in the waiting room. So while getting signed up for this little adventure the woman doing the paperwork put my ID wristband on and told me that this was my pass for all the rides that were available, kind of like Disneyland. I asked if it even included the E ticket rides. She said absolutely.
Then I got to visit the vampires and they drew some blood to "run a rainbow" whatever that is, sounds very pleasant though. After a long wait I got assigned to my room, cubicle number four. Not really a room just a bed with curtains around it with neighbors on both sides. The neighbor on the right had her TV loud enough that I could watch mine on her channel and not need any volume. The neighbor on the left was having a pacemaker put in that day and I heard all of his history and his doctor's advice and the DVD they watched on pacemakers.
Meanwhile my adventure began with a costume change. I got to wear one of those gowns that when I walked down the hall to go to the bathroom I had to hold it in the back to make sure I wasn't Mooning the room. Then it was into the bed and hooked up to blood pressure and temperature, pulse and other kinds of machines. Then came the IVs, two. Both in the left-hand. I was told I was going to get a lot of drugs today. Antibiotics, anti-inflammatory, anti-fungal, anti -nausea, Benadryl, some kind of dye to help with the procedure and then some kind of sleep aid. Then my first E ticket ride was to receive a catheter, something you could describe as a wet your pants experience.
There was a shift change for the nurses and the new nurse came in and wanted to put a red allergic band on my wrist and I asked her, "what was I was allergic to" she said, "you don't know what you're allergic to" and I said, "I'm not allergic to anything that I know of" and she checked the chart and gave me a little thrill when she said, "I have the wrong chart". Actually throughout the day she proved to be a fairly good nurse. She started administering all the drugs that I needed to get taken before surgery. Then the surgical nurse came and got me. My next ride was in the bed rolled through the hallways. We stopped in the hall outside of the x-ray surgery room. This is where Dr. Palstrant came and talked to us. He reviewed everything with us reminding us of the risks, one of which was that I could die, but he put it into perspective by saying you could tell me that I've might die on my way home from work tonight in a car accident. Keri asked if she could watch the procedure and was politely told no. They showed her to a waiting room. She was well prepared with her little suitcase on wheels that she had wheeled around with her food, her sewing and other projects.
I was pushed into the surgery room.The surgery table was a couple feet higher than the bed that I was in, they asked if I wanted a step stool to get up on the table, I just stood up, lifted by rear end and laid down, they were duly impressed. Then they start making adjustments for my height and not quite fitting the table. At this point there was lots of activity and I started getting very nervous. I was getting shaved where they were to do the incision not to gently by some gentleman named John. There was machinery being moved around people walking around doing various things, the nurse working on my arm and IVs to administer the drugs. It was a little cold and being nervous I started shaking all over and shivering. Then they started to give me something, it was more Benadryl or the beginning of the Benadryl. After one session of that I was a little bit calmer but still breathing heavy through my mouth being nervous. She gave me a second dose. I was much calmer but still awake and conscious. I remember the nurse telling Dr. Palstrant that I had two doses. He told her to give me another one of something I don't think it was Benadryl this time but he wanted me conscious enough to be able to hold my breath when he told me to. I don't remember the incision or the insertion of the catheter into the artery, glad I missed it. I do remember several times having to take a little breath and hold it, pause, okay breathe. It didn't seem to take that long and I heard him say okay we are finished.
Then came the next E ticket ride, the not too gentle John took the catheter or the tube that had been used to deliver the chemo out of my femoral artery. This is where there's blood, pressure points, pain from those pressure points and a constant wiping or swabing of the area. Thankfully I was still a little dopey, but not nearly enough. They finally put bandages over it, as it turns out very very sticky bandages. Then they put what they call a pressure bandage which went all way across my hips from one leg to the other, when I was all ready to go to recovery I got to be pulled and slid down a board onto the bed and pushed down the hallways again for my next ride. Then I was back in good ole cubicle number four. I was instructed not to move my leg and lay flat and not lift my head so that I wouldn't bleed. I really didn't want to bleed so I did as I was told. I slept the first hour or so, at least dozed in and out. Keri sat with me. She fed me lunch, not too bad for hospital food. We waited around for four hours. Finally got unplugged, dressed and got to go home. I was instructed to continue to lay flat, not to sit for long periods, not lift anything heavier than 10 pounds and to take it easy for the next 48 hours.
Other than tearing the hair off as I removed the sticky bandages I have felt fine, very little side effects, no pain. There is a little paranoia about bleeding, but no incidents. So my day at the amusement hospital was a success. I know that I'm wimpy and squeamish about the little things like needles and bleeding but maybe that keeps me from worrying about the tumors in my liver and the chemo that is necessary. The best part is we get to do it all over again on July 9. They did the right side of my liver this time and will do the left side next time.

Monday, June 16, 2008

Chemoembolization

1st Chemoembolization; June 27th 1PM John C. Lincoln Hospital North / out patient
2nd Chemoembolization; July 9th 9AM John C. Lincoln Hospital North / out patient

Saturday, June 7, 2008

The Radiologist

Keri and I went to meet the radiologist. We were both delighted with him. Keri because he asked the same question that she had asked at Dr. Roberts office, “Why aren’t we doing surgery on the primary tumor in the abdomen first?” Dr. Roberts answer was that he is very concerned about the liver and wants to attack it first. I read into his meaning that the tumors in my liver will kill me a lot faster than the one in my abdomen. Dr. Palestrant weighed the different things that Dr. Roberts may be thinking out loud to us.

I liked him because of his sense of humor. After I expressed my absolute terror of claustrophobia, he said, ”We will take very good care of you, when we do your procedure I will sing lullaby’s to you and of course you will be sedated.”

The plan is for me to receive two treatments of Chemoembolization. Once for the right half of the liver then a couple of weeks later the left half. They do half at a time in case something goes wrong and the liver fails, I guess you can live on half of a liver.

The procedure as they explained it to us is: they put a catheter in the femoral artery in the groin and run the line up through the network of blood vessels right to the liver and the tumor and inject chemo drugs right into the tumor, they also block off the blood vessels feeding the tumors and the little suckers die!

The first chemoembolization will happen Friday, June 27th.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

The begining

For years I thought that I had an ulcer. Maybe I use to. I have had occasional bouts of intense pain in the abdomen sending me to the emergency room or urgent care.

2-19-08 After having moderate abdomen pain I go for checkup at Dr. Johns, my regular care physician. After a blood test he refers me to Dr. Mills, a gastroenterologist.

3-13-08 Appointment with Dr. Mills. He wants to do an ultra sound to look for gall stones which he suspects could be causing the pain. He sees in my records from Dr. Johns that I had an ultra sound done in 2004 that was clear.

3-14-08 Ultra Sound on abdomen. Spots on my liver. Dr. Mills wants to do CAT Scan. No gall stones at least.

3-20-08 Have CAT SCAN done at Metro Lab. Phoenix Diagnostic. I had to pick up a kit the day before the scan. I got three quart size bottles of white goo that looked exactly like Elmer’s glue. I got the choice of “Berry or Vanilla” flavored. I chose berry.

4-10-08 Biopsy at Good Sam for lesions on my liver found with CAT Scan.

4-14-08 Cancer Day. Dr. Mills calls with bad news about biopsy. The tumors in the liver are Carcinoid. I took some satisfaction in the fact that at least this is supposed to be a “Rare” cancer.

4-23-08 Appointment with Oncology Doctor Michael Roberts. Confirmed Carcinoid tumors in liver. They moved there from somewhere else. Where is the primary source of cancer? About 50% of the time (according to my reading) the primary is in the intestines. To find the primary and see the extent of all tumors I will have to have an Octreoscan. A $7000 test where they inject you with radiation that is attracted to the tumors.

May 12, 2008
Experienced my first Carcinoid syndrome symptom of Flushing. I started to get nauseous then real hot, broke out in sweat. Quite unpleasant but did not last too long, a few minutes.

Octreoscan has three parts:
May 15 receive injection of nuclear isotope, first scan.
May 16 The long scan it is supposed to take one and half hours, it actually took nearly 4 hours.
May 22 final scan.
I suffered with terrible claustrophobia each time, I decide I need to be sedated for any kind of close scans. I know I can not do an MRI while conscious. The thought of having a MRI even unconscious gives me the willies.

May 29, 2008 Appointment Dr. Roberts we get the report of Octreoscan.
Calcified tumor in lower abdomen, probably the primary, not 100%. Two suspicious nearby lymph nodes. Again confirm those in the liver.

Treatment:
Monthly shot of Sandostatin.
Stint thru liver directly to tumor for chemo therapy. Consult with Dr. Palestrant, the radiologist that will do the treatments.

June 3, 2008 First shot of Sandostatin, one sore butt cheek.

June 6, 2008 Appointment with Dr. Palestrant.