Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Relief, Dedication, and Suffering

I now have attached to my body five leads, and at least five different tubes carrying various fluids into my body, hooked up to their various beeping and grunting pumps. I am a mess of wires and tubing, plastic bracelets, buttons, and sweat.

As may be remembered, or willfully forgotten, there was a point a few months back when my blood-borne tumor markers were in the normal range, and various doctors were being consulted as to whether or not it was necessary and/or possible to surgically remove what looked like a bunch of dead tumor still hanging around in my abdomen (the entry for Thursday April 5, 2007 will give more details for anyone interested). Then my tumor markers shot back up, and the whole question was rendered moot as this current course of chemotherapy was planned. Now that I am approaching the end of this phase, it is time to begin thinking about what happens next. A conversation with the head oncologist here clarified something very important, and left a huge, shimmering puddle of relief in its wake. No matter what the results of the CT scan that will be done at the end of next week, there will be no permanently handicapping surgery. It may still be necessary for me to undergo a major operation to remove any remaining tumor mass, but this surgery, if performed, will not involve the removal of my bladder and rectum, which at one point was being considered. If given a 20% chance that I would die of a secondary tumor in ten years without the bladder-and-rectum-removing surgery, but a much higher probability that I would live into old age with holes in my body emptying fetid waste into bags slung around my legs, what would I have done? How could I possibly make this decision, in this state? What would it mean to my family and friends to tell them that I was willing to risk it, and what would it mean to my sense of self if I bet on longevity? With ecstasy, I am hereby dropping the whole topic.

The beginning part of this week went very well. My days fell into a routine which was by no standards exciting, but in retrospect, great. We would go into the hospital around 8:30 (when we were being good), and lobby for a private room to escape the maddening beeping of other peoples’ IV pumps. I get hooked up via my bionic contraption to a huge bag of saline, which keeps me grunting my way over to the bathroom throughout the day. Blood is drawn, analyzed, and I am given electrolytes if necessary. I swallow lots of pills designed to keep the meanies from eating me from the inside. I sit there for around five hours, sometimes sleeping, sometimes reading, talking with my mother, allowing her to convince me to eat. Lately I have spent some quality time trying to catch up with my generation, awkwardly punching buttons on personal video game consoles loaned by friends. My spirits were kept sky-high by some stunningly incredible love and caring.

Saturday night, things started getting ugly. I had a delirious night, thrashing the sheets in the throes of half-awake dreams, punctuated by blindingly painful abdominal cramps. Sunday may have been the worst day that I have had so far during this entire ordeal, though this is a case in which I am happy to have a slippery memory. The basic problem throughout the whole day was pain control. Apparently rule number 1 with pain is that as long as it is not allowed to spiral out of control, it can be relatively easily managed, but once it gets its dirty festering claws in you, it takes gargantuan efforts to battle. Pain management must be among the most difficult jobs a doctor has. How do you balance the patient’s awareness against their misery? How do you know you are not being scammed, when the patients themselves may not realize that they have become dependent? Does the patient really know what they are asking for? How do you distinguish between people “bellyaching” and something important to take care of immediately? How do you not create an addiction while trying to help? And, by the way, careful not to OD anyone.

Up to this time, I was being given oral oxycodone sporadically, and even had it been given on time, it was just simply not up to the job. For the entire day I was clutching my gut in moderate pain, punctuated by spasms every fifteen minutes or so that would send me into a panic of sweat and moans for a few minutes. Every time I would try to eat (bland, small bites, very slowly), I would be rewarded with spasms so sharp that they would propel the food right back out. By the end of the day, I was having that reaction to the amount of water that it took to swallow a pill.

They decided to admit me around 5, but since they didn’t have any free beds in the BMT unit, I was sent to the general oncology unit just down the hall. It was a mistake to have acquiesced at all. The difference in competence and training of both the nurses and doctors was flagrant. I arrived around 6, and told the nurse that I was in pain, and cold. It took approximately an hour for a blanket to arrive, during which I was clenched, curled up in a ball trying to stay warm, as my guts gleefully jumped at the opportunity to cramp repeatedly. Mom is out, will be back later, but there is no cell phone reception and the landline only makes local calls. Push call button: “Pain! Cold!” – response: “We know, we are working on it.” “PAIN! COLD!” “Coming soon!” From 6pm until 9pm, my pain was completely out of control. Once the fentanyl pump did arrive, they had me on the lowest dose. It took me an hour of trying to organize my thoughts while writhing in pain to tell them that I needed more, way more. By the time my mom did arrive, things had settled, and she was on a righteous warpath.

But I was hungry. My body having rejected every piece of nourishment I tried to give it, I figured that it was finally the moment to try to eat something, since my pain was no longer a problem. Wrong. Slow learner. It took two attempts at eating and two violent reactions to realize that this was not going to work. At that point, all I wanted was sleep. I was sick of being in pain, sick of vomiting, sick of that day, sick of being conscious at all. A decision was made at around 2am to up my fentanyl dose, hit me with some ativan, and call it a night. Sounded great.

6am. I open my eyes to at least fifteen faces within three feet of mine, staring at me expectantly. The room is completely packed. Everyone is calling my name. I find it frankly amusing. Who didn’t tell me there was going to be a party in here later on? What’s up, everyone? Hi! Why are you asking ME what’s going on? I have no idea! And can I please go back to sleep? Now? Cause I’m really, really sleepy. Yes, I know where I am, yes, I know my name, hi mom, why are you crying?

I had been overdosed on fentanyl. Luckily, the room into which I had been transferred was a double, but with nobody occupying the other bed, my mom had decided to spend the night to head off any further problems. With no monitoring equipment set up, it is a damn good thing she did.

[Mom says: Had I not been there he might have died. I heard a weird nonhuman wheezing or rattling sound, twice, and rolled out of bed just to check it out. Joshua’s chest muscles were tight, his eyes were staring straight ahead, pupils and mouth wide open. I called to him, yelled at him, shook him, shook him again, kept yelling while I tried to sense a pulse, realized that was stupid, panicked, pushed the call button, realized that was stupid too, called for help twice down the hall, and everyone came running. The nurse turned off the infusion pump immediately, and gave him oxygen. The nurse hugged me and took me out of the room while the doctors piled in. He was revived within a minute or two.]

Needless to say, any indignation at the treatment I had received on Sunday was dwarfed by the fury of Monday morning.

I was transferred back to the BMT unit, and all the doctors and managers are apologizing and trying to figure out what went so wrong. My pain is back under control at a much lower dose of fentanyl, and while I did spend yet another day hungry because of bureaucratic stupidity, I will be started on IV nutrition this evening, so that I won’t be trying to feed myself and cause more damage.

I spent the day taking tiny sips of very dilute fruit juice and sleeping. It was a great day.

17 comments:

Anonymous said...

good grief. shall i get out my knuckledusters and do those incompetent fools some damage?
caroline

Steven said...

OK, for pete's sake...NOW can I hit someone? (You don't have to admit it, We can pretend it will only make ME feel better in a superficial way.)
-And by the way- THATS why mom's there! (Does she want me to pop someone?)

Anonymous said...

Fhew.
Have had a couple of dreams about you and your mother suffering, and am glad to hear your medical team is back 'on pointe'. Lots of lessons for all of us there. My brother a number of years ago had trouble coming out of anesthesia (what should have taken 10 min. took two days) and I sat there the whole time, resting on the ground next to his cot, with one ear open to his heart and breathing monitors...One needs a 'midwife' when the stakes are high, someone on the outside to keep vigil. Good your mother's instincts are strong.
And am also glad to hear your decision about the surgery. Double Fhew.
On a lighter note- what color do you think your hair is going to grow back in this time?
:-)
Julia

Menopausal Death Crone said...

Josh, I can't help but think you will be able to use all of this experience in the future and you will be one hell of a doctor.

Tracy (Marc's sweetie)

Anonymous said...

That is some seriously scary stuff right there. I commend your strength. Thank goodness for Moms!!! - Cousin Jess

lefty librarian said...

Wow. That is unfreakingbelievable. I was on the edge of my seat. I'm so so so glad that your Mom is there and have complete faith in her abilities. I'm sorry that you both had to go through that. Awful. Craptastic. I love you.

MommytoCoandAl said...

thank goodness for your Mom. I shook my head in utter disgust at the doctors.. on somewhat of a side-note, I practiced medical malpractice law for 8 years.... gee, did someone say..... unnecessary pain and suffering??? gross negligence. That has to be worth millions.... Like I said, total side note. What matters is that you are OK and on the mend. Enjoy the fruit juice. Have you tried pomegranite juice?

Anonymous said...

Josh, I marvel at your bravery and optimism in the face of all of this awfulness. Thank God your mother is there with you, and especially the other night.

Thank you so much for your vigilance about posting here regularly. It's painful just reading about it all -- can't even imagine what you and your family are going through. Damn though, you're one strong dude!

Sending warm thoughts your way,
Rubette

Anonymous said...

Oh boy, that really sounds like you had a few rough days, it is just unbelievable....

I am amazed by your and your mother's strength. Sending lots of love and hugs!

Thank you for the blog!
Georg & Kirsten

Kacey said...

Holy goodness, Holy Moses, Holy SH*T! And thank all the holy people for your mom.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

Unbelievable. To think of all the shit you have weathered, all the determination, and clench-jawed bravery; to be potentially undone by pharmacological blundering. ah, hell no. I'm glad you came through it man. And thinking of you there, just wondering what all the fuss is about is pretty funny.
Trevor

drewski said...

hell hath no fury like a mother enraged? part of me wants to defend medicine and all ("that has to be worth millions"?? i hate that kind of attitude), while the other half wants to go tear someone a new one.

wish i could be there to watch over you and give your mom a break.

Anonymous said...

Thank you, thank you for keeping us with you, teaching us with you. It's amazing to think of the little and huge blessings that have come to you through all of this. I can't wait to eat caviar, souflees and creme brulee with you in the near future.

CalifSherry said...

If blogger.com had diary and comments rating capacity, I would be giving out as many stars as allowed. ******

Oh, my. This was an excrutiating read and didn't get easier the second time around. Not that the writing isn't glorious; sometimes I feel as if I'm orbiting around both you and your mom and dad.

I suppose it's escapism of a sort, but in response to the terrible beauty of your posts, I've lately had images of an album, reminiscent of http://www.griffinandsabine.com/Gallery/gallery.html
Your blog is the text, the images come from the three of you and the circles of friends...

I'm a distance away, but you are pretty much always in my thoughts.

Sherry

Anonymous said...

Hooo weee, such courage, such wit, such insight, such healing... Joshua this beautiful thread that is connecting us to you vibrates with the sheer power of your struggle. And Cheryl, unflappable motherwarrior as you stand watch over what is precious on this Earth, I propose that the next planet discovered be named for you and predict that it will come to represent a new model of courage/love/power. And Daniel, in some ways you have the hardest role as you must straddle the unfathomable void between two worlds. Keep breathing deeply and taking in all that is available to you in this moment. YOu are not alone.
love,
Ruby

man halakhic said...

wow josh... man....
i just hope you've been doing a lot better the past few days.