Wednesday - April 30, 2014
A liver biopsy is quick, painless, and generally complication-free. The only real inconvenience is the waiting and resting before you are cleared to go home. Altogether, Megan and I were at the hospital for 6 hours today. Ultrasound, then biopsy (LONG needle), then hours and hours in the recovery room waiting for any internal bleeding to manifest (it didn't) and for a later blood test to come back clear (it did). I used my medical moxie today to lobby successfully for a liver panel to be added to the customary post-biopsy blood draw. It's always good to have more data points to try to determine where my enzymes are and why they might be at that level. "Good idea," said the doctor. "At this point I am an old-hand, self-advocating, professional patient," I thought. BOO-yah for getting more tests with one blood draw!
Megan prepared for her upcoming qualification exams alongside my gurney while I read and at one point gave in to the temptation of resting supine for hours and just napped. Although we were only curtained off from a very busy and crowded recovery room, it was surprisingly peaceful and free of interruptions. Rather calm.
The liver specialists believe that my methotrexate infusions may have scarred my liver. Perhaps the biopsy will confirm this theory. Results may be in within the week.
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Friday, April 25, 2014
A Thought - full Day
Friday - April 25, 2014
Today - my father's birthday - is always bittersweet. Our father, Herb Carter, would have celebrated his 82nd birthday today but he died suddenly of an aortic aneurysm shortly after celebrating his 63rd birthday. So many years have passed, milestones commemorated, grandchildren born, all without his cheery, impish, supportive presence. Herb Carter was truly a marvelous man. I miss him, I miss him, I miss him and yet - daily - I am heartened and amazed by the abiding strength of his love and connection. A cherished legacy. What a remarkable father! He can still make me smile through my tears. I thank God that he did not suffer a long death and that he did not endure the anxiety and grief of facing a long illness. One day he was excitedly enjoying family travel in Australia and the next day after a brief hospital visit he was gone - within minutes - in a Sydney ER.
This year's ache of his loss is deepened and refracted by the news that a dear YOUNG friend has relapsed a second time with Hodgkins Lymphoma and is now preparing for an allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplant. Our prayers and thoughts are focused fully on her and her family and our anxiety is channeled into action. Bone Marrow donation remains the exception rather than the norm yet it is not the invasive bone marrow biopsy technique that exists as common knowledge (NOTE: my bone marrow biopsy was equivalent to the painfree pressure / discomfort of my c-section and remember that this invasive procedure was done by a MED STUDENT with an oncology fellow telling him what to do step by step sotto voce right behind my manhandled hip). Today's bone marrow donation is essentially a longer kind of blood donation. If we simply spread the word that the common image is OUTDATED and WRONG, perhaps more people will register and more of us who suffer from blood cancers will have an opportunity for treatment and for long-term survival.
An allogeneic
Bone Marrow Transplant still looms for me as my next
step in case I relapse. And yet, I have already batted ZERO off the
Bone Marrow Registry. There's nothing quite like that knife-slice
knowledge that you have NO MATCH coming off the registry. That's it.
An allogeneic bone marrow transplant is the last medical step and
recommendation to thwart that scourge cancer. But no one matches you.
You have come up EMPTY. What next? You're on your own. Just you, your
own oblivious malfunctioning bone-marrow, and that conniving cancer
that has duped / invaded / hijacked your body. There's nothing equal to
that pit in your stomach as you face mortality straight-up, as you see
your kids' terror as they try to stay strong for your sake. And yet,
you know that there MUST be a match somewhere - in someone. If only a
donor would come forward with a quick cheek swab and then perhaps an
outpatient simple blood donation process. If only ... if only. Have
you registered as a donor?
Megan says it better.
"Some difficult news has struck a community that is very dear to me and the next few months might be hard for all of us. If you see that I'm sad and you're looking for something that you can do I have MANY suggestions:
* Please, please, please if you are considering signing up to be a bone marrow donor and have not yet gone through with it, go to be http://bethematch.org/ and get a kit to swab your cheek for free
* If you need any information that might make you more comfortable with being a donor, feel free to ask me. The normal, outpatient procedure if you're asked to donate is a week of shots and a few hours donating blood in a chair.
* If you've got some spare change, donate to Elizabeth Stone's efforts to fundraise for the Leukemia and Lymphoma society or drop some running hints before her *half marathon* in two days. http://pages.teamintraining.org/nca/nikewhlf14/elizabethstone
* If you're already on the registry or you're not able to donate, see if you can spend some time this week dispelling the misinformation about donation. No big needles. No nights in the hospital. No long term health risks.
* Pause and take some time to get some perspective on your day. Life may be difficult, unfair, and heartbreaking, but we are here and we have the opportunity to share so much gratitude and hope! Keep the faith. Take care of each other. Believe in magic. Those words have never been more true."
Today - my father's birthday - is always bittersweet. Our father, Herb Carter, would have celebrated his 82nd birthday today but he died suddenly of an aortic aneurysm shortly after celebrating his 63rd birthday. So many years have passed, milestones commemorated, grandchildren born, all without his cheery, impish, supportive presence. Herb Carter was truly a marvelous man. I miss him, I miss him, I miss him and yet - daily - I am heartened and amazed by the abiding strength of his love and connection. A cherished legacy. What a remarkable father! He can still make me smile through my tears. I thank God that he did not suffer a long death and that he did not endure the anxiety and grief of facing a long illness. One day he was excitedly enjoying family travel in Australia and the next day after a brief hospital visit he was gone - within minutes - in a Sydney ER.
This year's ache of his loss is deepened and refracted by the news that a dear YOUNG friend has relapsed a second time with Hodgkins Lymphoma and is now preparing for an allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplant. Our prayers and thoughts are focused fully on her and her family and our anxiety is channeled into action. Bone Marrow donation remains the exception rather than the norm yet it is not the invasive bone marrow biopsy technique that exists as common knowledge (NOTE: my bone marrow biopsy was equivalent to the painfree pressure / discomfort of my c-section and remember that this invasive procedure was done by a MED STUDENT with an oncology fellow telling him what to do step by step sotto voce right behind my manhandled hip). Today's bone marrow donation is essentially a longer kind of blood donation. If we simply spread the word that the common image is OUTDATED and WRONG, perhaps more people will register and more of us who suffer from blood cancers will have an opportunity for treatment and for long-term survival.
Megan says it better.
"Some difficult news has struck a community that is very dear to me and the next few months might be hard for all of us. If you see that I'm sad and you're looking for something that you can do I have MANY suggestions:
* Please, please, please if you are considering signing up to be a bone marrow donor and have not yet gone through with it, go to be http://bethematch.org/ and get a kit to swab your cheek for free
* If you need any information that might make you more comfortable with being a donor, feel free to ask me. The normal, outpatient procedure if you're asked to donate is a week of shots and a few hours donating blood in a chair.
* If you've got some spare change, donate to Elizabeth Stone's efforts to fundraise for the Leukemia and Lymphoma society or drop some running hints before her *half marathon* in two days. http://pages.teamintraining.org/nca/nikewhlf14/elizabethstone
* If you're already on the registry or you're not able to donate, see if you can spend some time this week dispelling the misinformation about donation. No big needles. No nights in the hospital. No long term health risks.
* Pause and take some time to get some perspective on your day. Life may be difficult, unfair, and heartbreaking, but we are here and we have the opportunity to share so much gratitude and hope! Keep the faith. Take care of each other. Believe in magic. Those words have never been more true."
Thursday, April 17, 2014
No More Scheduled Scans
Wednesday - April 17, 2014
Today's big (good) news from the oncologist is that he does not advise scheduling regular and routine PETs and MRIs. Given the fact that I remain symptom-free 18 months since my last chemo round, the danger of excessive radiation outweighs the potential of early red flags. The plan going forward is that I will visit clinic and see my oncologist every three months while staying (hyper) vigilant for symptoms such as night sweats, fever, and any lumps. So I am off the hook for full body x-rays for the near future!
Today's other (not-so-wonderful) news from the clinic is that my liver enzymes are all way back up - back to the post-methotrexate highs of Virginia. I have no symptoms of liver disease. Without the steady iterations of blood tests, we would have no clue about the liver enzymes. But the blood doesn't lie so the time has come for that much debated liver biopsy to try to determine what inflammation or disease is producing these stubbornly elevated levels. I'm scheduled for the day-long, out-patient procedure in two weeks. Can you believe that we're on yet another diagnostic journey? At least we know that scans have shown that my liver and other nether regions are tumor-free. Cancer won't be the answer in this case. But what exactly is causing these stubborn liver enzymes to be so out of whack?
Today's big (good) news from the oncologist is that he does not advise scheduling regular and routine PETs and MRIs. Given the fact that I remain symptom-free 18 months since my last chemo round, the danger of excessive radiation outweighs the potential of early red flags. The plan going forward is that I will visit clinic and see my oncologist every three months while staying (hyper) vigilant for symptoms such as night sweats, fever, and any lumps. So I am off the hook for full body x-rays for the near future!
Today's other (not-so-wonderful) news from the clinic is that my liver enzymes are all way back up - back to the post-methotrexate highs of Virginia. I have no symptoms of liver disease. Without the steady iterations of blood tests, we would have no clue about the liver enzymes. But the blood doesn't lie so the time has come for that much debated liver biopsy to try to determine what inflammation or disease is producing these stubbornly elevated levels. I'm scheduled for the day-long, out-patient procedure in two weeks. Can you believe that we're on yet another diagnostic journey? At least we know that scans have shown that my liver and other nether regions are tumor-free. Cancer won't be the answer in this case. But what exactly is causing these stubborn liver enzymes to be so out of whack?
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Best MyChart Message Ever
Just got that most excellent clear-scan news via UCSF MYchart! Hurrah!! Time to breathe!!
"Subject: MRI and PET/CT normal
Hi Ms. Ammirati,
Hope you are doing well. I wanted to let you know that both your MRI and PET/CT were normal.
I think we should discuss decreasing the frequency of the scans at this point. See you in clinic on Thursday."
And that's all we needed to know, thank you very much!
Monday, April 14, 2014
2014's Scan Day #1
China Basin looking towards the ballpark |
6 months is a long time to wait but this morning the opportunity came once again to get that precious sneak peek inside body and brain via IVs, contrasts, PET, and MRI. Watchful waiting is UP! It's time to reconcile my lack of outward symptoms with the internal evidence. It's time to rule out any lymphoma lurking in bone, blood, and organ. It's time to get that delicious go- ahead to once again breathe easy and get on with it.
The all-morning scan routine is now familiar, almost procedural, but it is still a jolt to bear witness to the visceral fears and manifest tears of a radiology waiting room. Families huddle in the hall on cell phones parsing allowances and details with insurance companies. Hospital-braceleted patients sit in chairs looking more exhausted than worried. It's the families that seem to show the strain. Going in with hair and energy brings on feelings of both gratitude and guilt. I am very very fortunate indeed and I count my blessings.
My predictable pre-scan anxiety has been somewhat dissipated by activity -- work (of course), a happy visit from Arlington friends, excitement and vicarious nerves for Megan's qualifying exams (today!), and planning for Jonathan's May graduation and June move to Arlington to begin his job. Now comes the wait for my oncologist's phone call. Or will he just tell me the news when I see him on Thursday? Time for some more watchful waiting.
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