Saturday, July 28, 2012

fairly smooth going...


This week's blood tests were still okay, and the chemo went smoothly.  Steve has been feeling basically okay, with the expected side effects of the chemo (fatigue and some digestive challenges) remaining within a manageable range.  We've had visits from friends;  he took a walk with Clair all the way into the village and back; we had a good time at a senior-center dance; and he stayed up to watch the Olympics opening ceremony.  (I, on the other hand, conked out before the end!)

 

Now we have two weeks off from chemo (this regimen is a 4-weeks-on, 2-weeks-off pattern), during which we will spend a week in Cambridge with Matt and Celeste and Dylan.  We expect that to be great fun, but mostly (we hope!) outside of the "health updates" subject range—so it may be a while before we post again.  We hope you all will assume a "no news is good news"  response to this potentially silent period, and will continue to send your supportive thoughts and prayers and vibes in whatever way suits you.  Thanks again for all of that!  And keep enjoying your summer, as we will keep trying to do. J

 

--Carol

Saturday, July 21, 2012

a better week


This week has been consistently smoother than the one before it, for which we are very glad.  Last Saturday evening (last week's blog entry was a morning effort) we went out dancing, to our favorite dance floor and one of our favorite bands, and had a brief but very enjoyable time—a good number and variety of dances, and some encouraging conversation with friends.

 

Sunday we drove to Ravenna for brunch with Margie and Ted (first time we've been there since last October, when we had just received the diagnosis).  That visit also included their friend Ray with whom they share the pursuit of steel drum music;  it was nice to see him again, too.  On Monday we had a fairly quiet day at home.  On Tuesday, I went to school and finished the first pass at organizing my new office (several more passes to go, I'm afraid).  Steve drove to his Reiki appointment in the afternoon, and we both went to our Gathering Place support groups in the evening.

 

Wednesday was chemo day again—but unlike last week, this time all the tests were fine and the treatment went forward (though with a 20% reduction in the active drug).  Everyone there agreed that Steve was looking better than last week, which confirmed our own impression that things are getting back into a better balance. 

 

Wednesday was also the beginning of Nora's visit, which she began at Margie's since we couldn't predict in advance that our chemo day would go so smoothly!  But on Thursday Nora came up to us, and we had a very nice day together, enhanced by visits in the morning from Ken and in the afternoon from Olivia.  On Friday, some of the Ravenna contingent came up for a mid-day celebration of Margie and Ted's 32nd anniversary—and Steve prepared the risotto main dish, which was a great success!  Then in the evening Nora and Steve and I walked down into town for the Little Theater's production of Hairspray, which was very well done and enjoyable.  And all three of us were in good shape for the walk back home, uphill though it is. J

 

So now it's Saturday again.  Nora has left for home, and Steve is having a well-deserved nap.  He continues to feel optimistic about his progress (in spite of the occasional snags, the overall trend seems to continue upward), and we remain convinced that optimism is in itself salutary.  Thanks again to all of you for helping us to continue onward and upward!

 

--Carol

 

 


Saturday, July 14, 2012

some challenge with the chemo


Steve's initial reaction to last week's new chemotherapy treatment seemed fairly mild, and we had a good time watching Melissa and her curling team do well at the Tropicurl bonspiel in Pittsburgh over the weekend.  By Monday evening Steve was dragging a bit, but we did have a good time at bridge group.  However, by Tuesday a predicted side effect (severe diarrhea) set in with a vengeance, and although we had (and Steve used, to some extent) medicine to counteract it, the results were fairly serious.  Tuesday afternoon we canceled a couple of engagements and returned to the 24/7 feeding machine hookup; but by the time we arrived at the infusion center Wednesday morning for the scheduled chemo infusion Steve was pretty badly dehydrated and his blood test showed not only low platelet count but also seriously low potassium—and possibly other issues that I'm not recalling in detail.

 

Considering all of this, the doctor held off on the chemotherapy for this week and instead checked Steve in for another overnight stay at the Clinical Decision Unit for observation and rehydration and attempts to get the various fluids back in balance.  That along with a different diarrhea medicine seems to have worked well.  We were released around noon Thursday, with a follow-up blood test scheduled but Steve feeling generally better.  Thursday afternoon was sort of a whirlwind, since we had to squeeze in an emergency visit to the surgeon to insert a new feeding tube (the previous one fell out as we were packing to leave the CDU—the balloon that holds it in place disintegrated again ;-<) and I had a dental appointment to keep on the way home.  But we got it all done, and had a quiet evening at home.

 

Friday morning we had a normal breakfast (off the feeding machine again :->), and went to our play reading group in the afternoon.  On the way there we stopped by the lab for the follow-up blood test.  Results of that were pretty good—potassium still a bit low, but the current prescription is to keep up the once-a-day potassium pill and eat some bananas.  J

 

That's our story for this week.  We have another infusion appointment (plus echocardiogram) scheduled for this coming Wednesday, at which point the oncologist will decide how to adjust the dosage—and on we go.  We hope that you all (our friends and loved ones near and far) are well, and that you remain aware how much we appreciate and rely on your ongoing support, both expressed and tacit.  It is such an important part of our therapy!  So, thanks again.

 

--Carol


Wednesday, July 4, 2012

another CAT scan, another chemo shift


I see it's been two and a half weeks now with no blog post.  That has been on the whole a continuation of the "no news is good news" procedure—not a lot to report, though I haven't deliberately refrained from saying so.  Steve has been working on weaning himself from the feeding machine (as he mentioned in his last blog entry).  For the last week or two he has been eating three small meals plus the occasional snack during each day, and using the machine only at night.  His weight has gone down a bit, though not consistently or precipitately.  (BMI scale shows him now just on the border between "normal" and "overweight." ;->) He would love to go off the machine entirely, but that will require significantly increasing his daytime caloric intake.  He keeps aiming for that, so we'll see how it goes.

 

Yesterday we visited our oncologist, who showed us results of last week's CAT scan.  Unlike the previous one (in late April), which showed good reductions in the cancer spots, this one showed increased issues ("atelectatic opacities" and "a new nodular opacity") in both lungs—not big things, but bigger than they were last time, which is of course disappointing.   One of the blood tests, for carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)—which the doctor described as an "imprecise measure of the amount of cancer cells" in the body—had gone up significantly [usual level in healthy nonsmokers is below 3; Steve's level had gone down to 6 in May, but back up to 30 in June and 39 yesterday].  And the CAT also showed some increased fluid accumulation around his heart, which was one problem involved in our last overnight hospital stay. 

 

Considering all those things, the doctor decided to change the chemo regimen again, this time to Camptosar, in a cycle of four weekly doses followed by a two-week break.  We got the first dose yesterday, and so far no bad side effects have showed up. 

 

The good news is that Steve continues to feel pretty good ("so darn good," as the doctor said, that he even hesitated to change the chemo regimen).  Steve has gone walking with Clair a couple of times, and plans to do more of that.  He regularly drives himself to various visits and appointments now, and as I mentioned above he's eating more and often enjoying it quite a bit.  And except for the specific issues in the long paragraph above, the CAT scan showed stable and normal conditions in other areas.  We plan to drive to Pittsburgh this weekend to see Melissa and her team play in a curling bonspiel; we will return to Columbus July 23-24 for a bar-exam tailgate related to my law school work; and we have booked a flight to Boston for another visit the first week in August. 

 

So, with thanks to our medical team and to all of our supportive friends and family, we continue forward with energy and optimism.  We hope that you all are well, and will keep in touch in whatever ways work best for you.

 

--Carol