Wednesday, February 6, 2013

The Last Post

Hello everybody, this is Sarah on behalf of Ron.  

Sadly this will be the last post on the Rusty Racer blog as my lovely Ron died on 2nd February. His family were with him because it had become clear in his last couple of days that he wasn’t going to do his usual come back from the brink.
 
Since Ron’s last post the tear in his stomach had been repaired but he had become unable to eat solid food. His bone marrow was completely ineffective and his lungs just couldn’t take any more. 

I want to thank all of you for the support you have given Ron over the years. One of the joys in his life was the interest from all over the world in this blog. He took much pleasure in writing it and in the comments and support he received. His hopes in writing the blog were that it would help other people suffering similar illnesses. 

Regards, Sarah.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Stronger by the day

It's been a roller-coaster of a ride these last two-three weeks.
When I returned home from hospital on New Years Eve I was weak and very fatigued. Wiped out would have been an understatement!

The initial strong response from the increased prednisone seemed to have faded away and everything was becoming a struggle. My breathing was bad, and my energy levels so low that once again Sarah was having to do everything for me. Showering me, helping me dress and move around the house.
Things didn't look good at all. Even brushing my teeth had to be done sitting down or in bed and the act of brushing them left we puffed.

My weight has improved slightly, at least I'm no longer loosing it.
However my state of mind and body left me in no doubt that I was pretty close to loosing the fight.
Then early last week I decided to put up a "last stand" I started doing little exercises and pushing my limits where ever I could. (despite being advised by hospice staff not to waste energy) I walked very slowly on the treadmill each day. Extending the period from one minute, to five, then to ten minutes over just five days.

The improvement has been huge. I now find that I don't get as dizzy when I stand up anymore.
I'm more sure-footed and can move around the house a lot more comfortably.
To say I'm very pleased with this result doesn't do it justice. My goal is to be well enough to get myself into hospital for transfusions etc by the end of this month. ..and not need my wheelchair.

Last Thursday I even had enough energy to drop in on the guys at STM and show one of their mechanics how to use my old wheel alignment machine. I scooted around the workshop in my wheelchair and felt really good!

One new factor that may be influencing my current health improvement is that I'm taking Morphine for pain in my ribs and chest from torn muscles due to coughing. The Morphine not only reduces the debilitating pain, but it's also a cough suppressant.
So I'm coughing less, breathing deeper and not constantly depressed by the agony of torn muscles.
When you have chest pain like that you tend to shallow breath and this results in a higher risk of developing pneumonia. So it's all a bit of a win-win situation. I sleep heaps better too!

OK will update as things develop. It's great to post some good news for once!  :-)

..Ron

PS: Today's goal is to climb a flight of stairs. Then ten minutes on the treadmill at 2kph






Sunday, December 30, 2012

Hospital again

Last Monday I woke in the middle of the night with a high fever. I woke Sarah and we decided to head into the day ward early and let the docs know.

We already knew that I had a couple of bugs growing in my system but as they previously had not caused any problems with fever we had taken a wait and see approach.

The most prudent thing to do was to be admitted and administer IV antibiotics.
Once again the Doctor asked me if I wanted to continue being treated if the infection spread. He said it would be unlikely that I would survive should I end up in ICU again.

Over the last few months and in particular the last three weeks I have become progressively more unable to function without extreeme fatigue and very distressed breathing. Sarah has to help me get out of bed and get dressed. She has to shower me as I sit in a chair as I cannot stand without becoming very dizzy and coughing.

I've lost a huge amount of weight and at the time of being admitted to hospital only weighed 55kg. Food had totally lost all appeal, but I still ate as much as I could, however it made no effect to my weight.

On Thursday morning the Doctors came and visited me on their rounds. They asked how I saw things going from here.
 I told them that I felt I was in a downward spiral and that ultimately once I left hospital it was to progressively get worse until I died.
There was nothing anyone could do.

My bone marrow won't produce any blood, I live from one transfusion to the next. Within a few weeks I'll be too weak to even come into hospital for those. Death would follow within days unless I was admitted to hospital and even then it would only be until I faded away.
I think they asked the question so they would know that I had a grasp of the severity of my situation.

Things certainly looked grim. Any hope of further chemo treatment are curbed by the fact that I'm too weak to survive it.

I then  suggested to the Doctor a plan that Sarah and I had discussed the night previous.
All my symptoms, the lung function, the weight loss and fevers were all signs of a relaspe of BOOP, the lung disease that almost killed me in 2009 until I convinced a young respiratory Doctor to treat me for it. My cancer Doctors had up until then (and like now) insisted it was the Hodgkins Lymphoma that was the cause of everything.

Our plan was to treat me with high dose steroids. If it worked we would see a response within a few days. I would rapidly gain an apetite and weight, my fevers would reduce and my breathing improve. We had nothing to loose by trying and everything to gain. After-all I was a dead man walking. I could fade away or have a few more good months (or longer) before possibly succumbing to infection from my steroid weakened immune system.
Basically I get to choose the manner in which I die. Slowly in a bed or quickly one day in the future from infection.

The Doctor (head of the oncology dept and regarded as one of NZ's top oncologists) said he would go away and talk with his team. Twenty minutes later and I had permission to start on 40mg of prednisone; the exact dose I had also decided on when working out our treatment plan. (Had they said no I was going to do it anyway).

It's now been four days and the improvements have been dramatic. It's early days yet though. Going by my notes from 2009 I should see my lungs starting to recover after about 14 days. (read my blog posts from Dec 2009)

It's starting to look like Sarah and I may have just saved my life, at the very least improved my quality of life and bought more precious time together.

You have to wonder though.. The Docs were sending me home to die, so convinced that it was the cancer killing me (it will in time) that they never considered looking at anything else.

To say we are pretty proud of ouselves would be a huge understatement.
Now to get home, eat, get fit and enjoy the time I have.  :-)


..Ron


Saturday, December 22, 2012

Running on empty.


We have pulled the plug on the latest chemotherapy drug. Like all the others we have tried we just didn't get the result we were hoping for. The lymph nodes in my groin have only shrunk a little bit. We were using these easily palpable nodes to gauge how well the Vinblastine might be doing against the larger nodes hidden in my body where we can't see them.

My blood counts haven't done anything spectacular either, just small increases in the hemoglobin between transfusions.
In about ten days we shall start on yet another drug, Cyclophosphamide. I'm not expecting it to be any better than all those that we have tried before it. I guess it's really clutching at straws time now.

My breathing is not good and is laboured and fairly fast with a constant cough.
To me it appears a lot of my health decline is due to my lungs. The loss of appetite, weight loss, muscle wasting. The problem is that treatment for it would be a massive increase in my steroids.
That may give me some short term improvement in the quality of my life but would ultimately dramatically increase my chances of a fatal infection. I would be lucky to survive a few weeks.

So we have to ignore that and just put up with lungs that barely function and cause my body to waste away. I currently weigh just 56kg, I'm just skin and bone. No muscle and just a little fat on my stomach from the effects of the prednisone. Looking at myself in the mirror I look like a concentration camp survivor, and I don't say that lightly.

If I continue to loose weight at this rate I'm afraid my chances of surviving anything more than a cold are virtually zero. I'm finding it very difficult to move around I'm so weak. Standing up makes my heart race and I become dizzy and puffed. I have to stand very slowly and wait a minute or so before moving. Once moving I can only walk a few metres.

Working with what I have, Sarah and I are hoping spend a few days at Foxton beach and enjoy the Christmas break. Some family members will be joining us on Christmas day.
My plan is to stagger in the door, fall into the lazy-boy chair and remain there till it's time to come home on Thursday for more blood.

Wishing all my readers a very merry Christmas and I shall post again around the new year.

..Ron

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

I nearly spoke too soon!


After a week of pleasing haemoglobin counts Sunday night was a near fatal disaster.
I had been taking antibiotics prophylactically due to my concern about a possible chest infection that I felt might be building. It didn't eventuate even though my breathing still feels awful, like a bad case of asthma.

What did occur is a very bad case of antibiotic induced diarrhea. This really puts my whole gastrointestinal system to the test and I wasn't too surprised to discover I was bleeding internally as well.
I didn't worry too much because it usually only bleeds while you are actually sitting on the toilet. However this time it must have continued for some time afterwards because by morning I was so fatigued that I could not get out of bed or dress myself. I was incredibly weak.

We went to the Day Ward as scheduled and a blood count revealed my hemoglobin count to be just 78, the lowest I have ever been. Two units of platelets and two of red blood cells helped.
I've been told that I would be highly unlikely to survive a significant internal bleed. It must have been just a small slow one. What puzzles me is how a spontaneous bleed could start but stop when I have no platelets to make it clot? I'm just glad it did! Another bullet dodged.

It's now Wednesday and I've just returned home from another day of transfusions, again two of each of platelets and red blood. I've been feeling really good all day, I've mustered up some energy from somewhere. Certainly not my blood as the counts were again very low today. It could take a week to build up to my usual baseline count. The nurses joked that I must have received some Superman blood on Monday, I suggested more likely Lance Armstrong's !

I start GCSF today and if my neutrophils and white cell counts return to normal I will have more chemo on either Friday or Monday. I'm guessing Monday.

Update later..  Ron