Sunday, November 28, 2010

Saturday ...

... came and went.

Not much changed.  The morphine was gradually turned up to combat the pain and seems to be properly dialed in now.  Alex wasn't very comfortable but the pain is a tolerable 2 on the old 0 to 10 scale.  These are pretty modest doses of morphine - he's not stoned or dopey from it or anything.  He slept a fair bit and we watched the early hockey games.  Montreal won - and Toronto lost-  which made me happy.  He drank a little glass of powerade which made me foolishly pleased but sad at the same time that something so trivial ... isn't.  We sure take a lot for granted  in our daily lives.

This morning he is perhaps a touch brighter and says while the pain in his throat is still there, it feels like it's  in a smaller area. We're going to watch the Grey Cup.  Montreal is favoured by three and a half. Hard to believe Calvillo has been to eight Grey Cups.  I know it's the CFL but has any athlete in any sport ever been to the championship game or series eight times?  Quite remarkable.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Okay then ...

Another pretty rough day on Friday, I am sorry to report.

A common side effect of many chemotherapy drugs but Methotrexate in particular is mucositis.  You can get all the gory details in Wikipedia if you are so inclined but in summary it is is "the painful inflammation and ulceration of the mucous membranes lining the digestive tract".  You get mouth sores.  You get sores in your throat, and Alex has them there quite badly which makes drinking and eating pretty much impossible in the short term.  Another characteristic is that the body produces a lot of sticky, thick saliva that clogs up the throat, makes one gag,  and is just generally gross.  It lasts three or four days.

How painful?  Painful enough that Alex is on a continuous morphine drip to help cut the pain.  He has also started getting nutrition intravenously as his weight is very low so the jungle vines of IV bags are hanging down once again.

Doctor figures we're here for another week.

Okay then.

Friday, November 26, 2010

No One Said It Would Be Easy

No one said it would be easy
But no one said it would be this hard
- Sheryl Crow




Apologies for the lack of updates.  When I wrote last Friday that I would update soon, I meant it ... but then the wheels fell off.  We didn't really know it on Friday or maybe Saturday, maybe not Sunday but at some point they came off.

We had been used to going into the day unit of BCCH on Wednesdays but a couple of weeks ago, Alex entered a new phase of treatment called "interim maintenance."  In this phase, Alex has chemo every ten days so if we are then on a Wednesday it will be coincidental.  Alex had chemo last Friday, a dose of Vincristine and big dose of Methotrexate.  He was fine until that evening but started throwing up around 5 or 6 p.m.  Nothing unusual in that - chemo makes one barf, or most of us anyway, and that was about the right time. 

He kept right on being sick through the night into Saturday - we were up all night Friday.  Things calmed a little late Saturday and I thought we might be over the hump but, whammo, we were up all Saturday night as well.

I made a  big mistake on Sunday.  I should have taken Alex in to the hospital.  I didn't because he had stopped throwing up, or at least it had abated a lot and again I thought we had bottomed out and should be turning up.  But on Sunday night the nausea returned again and didn't really let up until early Monday morning.  This was now night number three in which Alex and I hadn't really slept very much.  He seemed a bit better Monday morning but he wasn't drinking anything and I thought we should go in and get checked out.  I thought he was a bit dehydrated and that we would get him some IV fluids for a few or several hours and then be right as rain.  The chemo should have been well clear of his system, get him caught up on fluids and we'd start bouncing back. 

It was a mistake not going in sooner but Alex had been that sick before, a few times he had been very sick for 48 hours or so.  And then he would turn up.  But this time he didn't.  In fact I thought I was calling time out more as a preventative measure by going in.  Wrong. 

That was Monday morning, it's Thursday night now and we're still here.  And we'll likely be here a while yet.

That's not all because of dehydration.  Alex has, his doctors think, been this dehydrated before but it really seemed to hurt his kidney function this time or was it the Methotrexate?  Or both? The kidneys were severely stressed in any event and the doctors were playing with his fluid balances and electrolytes and despite, in the words of our main doctor, having had enough anti-emetics to stop an elephant, Alex was still being very sick all through Monday night at the hospital.  We were in a small room on "2B" and again we were up pretty much all night.  Four nights with little or no sleep and I felt awful.  But I hadn't had chemo, I wasn't throwing up and feeling  miserable and being poked by nurses and doctors, I can't imagine how Alex felt.

(It sounds a bit absurd now (how can you be so stupid as to stay up four nights in a row?  Idiot!)  but of course you don't plan on being up for four nights - if you knew that ahead of time, of course you'd plan differently, let someone else take a turn.  You don't plan on being up for one night but you are so what are the odds you'll be up for two, then three?  And now we're in the hospital, things will settle down and Alex and I will get some sleep ... wrong.  Wrong again.

I think we all were a bit scared on Tuesday.  Cynthia, me, the doctors are too professional to be scared, and Alex doesn't get scared, but we were.  The newly developed Balfour/Miles Theory of Benign Neglect stipulates that when all of a sudden you have three doctors with you all the time, this is usually reasonable grounds for being alarmed.  When they say you're going for a chest x-ray and the chest x-ray gets done within 7 minutes, the technician and a radiologist are waiting for you and you go straight in ... that's not what you want.  Well of course it is, but really what you want when you're in hospital is to be largely ignored.  These docs are very good - and very busy.  So really, you want to be ignored, neglected benignly, this means you aren't very sick.  The radiologists and everybody else are incredibly busy too, so if you need an xray, waiting for four or five hours to get slotted in (a day is even better) is a good thing - it means you're not that sick.  But when you're getting a lot of attention, hmm, Alert!

Here's what happened Tuesday.  

One of the residents noticed some puffiness around the base of Alex's neck.  It looked like fluid was building up there but to the touch it felt ,,, different, spongy to me, I learned later that doctors often call it "Rice Krispies" because it sort of feels like that under the skin.  It didn't to me, but it did to them.  It sounds crackly through a stethoscope (I didn't listen myself, hey, their word's good enough for me.)

Its proper name is subcutaneous emphysema.  It basically means air that is trapped under the skin, usually in the neck and face, although Alex had developed some into first his left arm and then right arm as well.  So where does the air come from? Well that was my question, I'm sure everyone else already knows.  One of two places - either from the respiratory system (almost always the lungs) or the digestive system (even more almost always from the esophagus).  The chest x-ray would provide some clues. 

The theory was, and is, that violent retching can sometimes cause a tear in the esophagus or cause one or more of the little air sacks in the lungs to pop.  What was puzzling is that if it's the esophagus, there's usually a lot of pain associated with it and if it's pulmonary there are usually other respiratory issues like a collapsed lung or difficulty in breathing or a pneumothorax.  Alex had none of those.  And, if you have a perforated esophagus, your condition tends to deteriorate rapidly, Alex's wasn't.

If you have this condition , I think you want it to be from the lungs.  It's not great but it's reasonably straightforward and can often just heal itself.  You don't want to perforate or tear your esophagus.  We have a lot of nasty bacteria in our GI tracts and you really want that contained and not leaking into other parts of the body.  It doesn't get a lot more serious than that.  Google "perforated esophagus" and see.  And if you've just had chemo and your blood counts are starting to decline, that's not going to help.

"Now don't be alarmed,  but we're just going to bring the surgeons into this just in case, just so they're up to speed as well."  Okay, now we have three doctors, an x-ray technician, a radiologist (he's a doctor as well) and the surgeons are checking in.  This does not score well on the benign neglect theory.

We told ourselves, Cynthia and I, and I'm sure I was talking to my erstwhile brother-in-law Geoff the emerg doc guru by now, that it wasn't, couldn't be a perforated esophagus. You'd know.  It would hurt.  But one can't be too careful.  There was this very small possibility, tiny possibility that it was, but if it was, then there was a very, very high probability that it would be very, very bad.  And that thought gnaws at you.

I thought we were here for leukemia.  Where did perforated esophaguses (esophagi?) and subcutaneous emphysemas come from?  Nobody said anything about that.  Whiskey Tango Foxtrot?

The xray didn't show anything conclusive on the lung side.  Often one would expect to see a "pneumothorax" in a case like this which is air trapped between the chest wall and the lung, then that air seeps out into the tissue.  Not this time, the lungs looked fine. There was no indication of fluid having leaked out of the esophagus so that was good.  So the theory was that the retching had caused an air sac or two to burst, likely near the top of a lung and that's where the air had come from.

But just to be sure, the surgeons wanted to do a barium swallow test.  You drink a barium based liquid while they xray your esophagus and see if there are any leaks.  

I feel so badly for Alex so often, it's heart wrenching and often harrowing for a parent to watch their child go through something like this.  You feel so helpless and inadequate and useless and frustrated.  A lot of the time.  Most of the time? But it was a real low point going down to radiology on Tuesday evening for this test.  The poor guy hasn't slept for four days now, was throwing up constantly  (oh, somewhere during the afternoon in there he got a blood transfusion as well as his haemoglobin had dropped to a very low level from the chemo.)  He'd been through a hellish day already and now he was being strapped to a table to be xrayed and asked to drink some nasty tasting concoction - and not throw up. The table gets turned upright so you're in almost a standing position but a few feet off the ground and a huge xray box kind of thing slides down around the outside the table following the flow of the fluid.  He looked like some grotesque thing out of a Transformers movie.  Two radiology docs, two technicians and two nurses present at 8 p.m. on a Tuesday night.  No neglect here, dammit.

I watched the flow on the screen too.  I didn't see any leaks.  They didn't see any leaks.  No leaks.  I'm sure we would've been happy if we hadn't been so tired.  

There were still questions about Alex's kidney function and his electrolyte levels were a touch wonky so we still had some things to worry about and in addition to all the other great docs we had a couple of nephrologists lurking around.  We have been very well looked after.

We got better sleep that night, but you still get woken up for blood work and vital signs being checked and the like.  My cot is a modest upgrade from the the Korea issue I had last time, and I'm quite happy with it.  We were moved up a floor to "3B" where "we can monitor you better" and Cynthia (the incredible and amazing Cynthia on all levels) managed to snag the cot and move it up with us.  

Wednesday and today have been largely uneventful.  The kidney function was much much better by  Wednesday morning but not quite right so tinkering with fluids has continued.  As noted before there is a bit of uncertainty as to whether this was solely due to dehydration or is there something specific to the Methotrexate treatment?  The renewed focus is now on nutrition.  Alex hasn't been able to eat or drink although he started to nibble a little this evening.  We would really like to see that improve the next couple of days.  His weight is very low now.

I guess things are improving.  The emphysema has noticeably decreased (the air just gets slowly absorbed by the body).  In addition to the central line access  for IVs that is implanted in Alex's chest, he had an IV put into the back of his hand on Tuesday so he could get the blood transfusion without interrupting the other medications and fluids.  And once that line was in, might as well use it for other things!  It came out today and it had really bothered Alex all along so that's good.

Last night, I counted seven IV bags hanging down, as I type this there are only four so I guess things are getting better.  I'm writing which I was either too tired to do or too fed up to do so maybe that's a sign as well.

Aside from the possibility of the perforated esophagus it hasn't been scary.  It's just been a bunch of things, one damn thing after another, Mr. Hubbard said.  It grinds you.

It's been a really tough time, physically, mentally, you name it.  I'd like to use the "emotional rollercoaster" cliche but there haven't really been a lot of ups.

Just a lot of weird stuff.



Friday, November 19, 2010

Bad Paul!

Apologies for the lack of updates.  Things have been bumpy but are pretty good overall.  I'll try and provide a lengthier update later today.
THANK YOU MOLLY!


For donating blood!

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Home

Wiped.  Baked.  Drained. Dusted.  Bonked.  Done like dinner.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

No Jailbreak Today

We're here for another night.  Alex is a lot better but the conservative approach is not to push our luck and we're okay with that.

And I'm quite sure we'll get the Canucks game tonight on Sportsnet, Thinking about smuggling in a couple of cans of Pilsner Urquell and getting a pizza.

We hope to be out in the morning.

Been Hangin' Around ...

Been hanging around
This town
For way, way too long
- Counting Crows

We had an okay night I guess, a lot better than the one before that.  The trouble with hospitals is they're always pretty noisy and coming in to take blood at 4 in the morning and things like that but we did get some sleep.  

The last time we were here I had a pretty good fold up bed to sleep on.  This time it was more of a cot - in fact I think it was last used in the Korean War by the real Hawkeye Pierce.  (Where's the still?)  The mattress looked a bit dodgy so I wrapped it in about four sheets which also had the effect of increasing it's thickness by half.  Not complaining, I love camping.

Alex feels quite a bit better and seems bored.  His blood counts are pretty low but trending up. We are hopeful that we will be allowed to go home today.  The docs are saying probably tomorrow.  They want to see Alex drinking well and eating a bit before we go.  We're nodding agreeably now but will make our case more strenuously this afternoon ... when they're tired, heh heh ... 

Feel a bit like a zombie, not because of fatigue but sometimes things seem so surreal.  Weird.

And how do they get all hospital food to smell the same?  In every hospital?  It's like this smell of ... mediocre gravy.  Are people having gravy on breakfast?

We've been hanging around this place (wonderful as it is, truly) too much and too long.

 Thanks to those who emailed to tell us where to find the Canucks game.  


Elvis Costello's new album is out today.  The reviews have been terrific.  I'm downloading it now.



Monday, November 1, 2010

A Rough Few Days

I was driving into work on Thursday morning when Alex called to say he was throwing up.  That was a bit surprising as he had been so well of late.  Normal - aside from missing some white blood cells and that doesn't make you feel bad.  He hadn't had much appetite the night before mind you, but still ...

Probably just one of those things I thought, but  ... better check it out.  I was just hitting the Lions Gate bridge and had to cross over, fight traffic down Denman Street to find a place to turn around and then head back home.   Alex was in his room and threw up again when I got there but we've seen worse.

About fifteen minutes later though he got a pain in his lower left abdomen.  It got worse.  And worse.  Alex, the black lab, I call him sometimes, has a very high pain thresh hold.  He can take a lot, big needles in the spine and quads and things, so when he is writhing around, you know it's mega-pain.  Okay, Dr. Paul, what else?  No temperature, no obvious other symptoms ... I'd like to phone a friend please.
I called the oncology day clinic at the hospital and said we were heading in to see them.  It was a tough ride for Alex but towards the end the pain had dissipated a bit.

We were expected and they put an IV line into Alex's port and took some blood.  Dr. L came in and poked and prodded a bit.  The we went for an xray of his lower abdomen.

The xray showed some pretty significant blockage in the bowel.  One of the drugs, Vincristine, is known for gumming up the works but under the heading of learning something new everyday, I didn't know that your works could be gummed up ... but still working.  Seems that you can have a fairly major blockage but other stuff flows around it and you think and feel you're normal - until suddenly you don't.  Bizarre if you ask me.  So just add more fluid, some magic powder mixed in a drink for a couple of days and it should sort itself out.  In theory.

We got home Thursday afternoon and Alex was a bit better but not feeling great.  Friday, he had the same bad pain for about an hour in the morning and didn't feel great, ate and drank very little.  Saturday was a bit better, still a pain in the morning but he ate and drank a bit.  He was sick to his stomach occasionally off and on all three days.

Yesterday was bad.  Alex had a vicious pain for an hour and was quite sick in the morning.  I phoned in and talked to the on-call doc and we decided to wait and see how things went as the pain was gone by this point and he had drunk a little.  But in the early afternoon Alex started throwing up - and did so all evening and all through the night, the poor guy.

We felt so badly for Alex.  Just a couple of days earlier he was so keen on going trick or treating (it's my last year, Dad, you can't go when you're fourteen) and since he was three or four we have always had a street party and fireworks, co-produced with our unbelievably great neighbours the Richardsons.  And it seemed entirely feasible that it would happen.  Instead we hung out at home (did I mention we've rented a new house?  More on that later then) and Cynthia zipped the other kids around to the different parties and things.

We were up all night and then headed in to the hospital about 8:30 this morning.  Alex was feeling and looking pretty miserable but at least there was no pain this morning.  Same drill, access the port, take the blood, see the doctor.  They're so great here, such great professionals.

The xray was repeated.  From the same angle and another one from a new angle standing up.  The good news was the blockage seemed all cleared up.  This left, and leaves a bit of a mystery - what was causing all the nausea?  The xray showed unusually clear definition of the ridges in the intestine, suggesting that maybe there had been, or was, or, less likely, starting to be, some inflammation, maybe a result of the blockage and treating that or maybe from an infection.  Infections are bad - especially when you have few or no white blood cells.  Really bad!

So, as a precaution, Alex has been admitted to hospital and we will spend the night here.  He is getting fluids by an IV and will do so until noon or so tomorrow if everything goes according to plan.  He's still feeling pretty rotten but hasn't complained once.  Hasn't complained about Halloween, missing the party, or feeling rotten.  Star.

Cynthia has brought us our necessities and the Giants just won the World Series.  But why can't we find the Canucks game on TV?