neutropenia

it sounds like a groovy sixties album title.. it isn’t really.. I found out just before my third treatment that i have it.. i am neutropenic, another thing to be, its having a very low white blood cell count and your white blood cells are your immune system. It is normal for your white blood cell count to drop going through chemotherapy but some people are very sensitive to the chemo and it gets too low. Thats me. Its not a bad thing really there have been studies that suggest that people who are that sensitive have a better success rate with the chemo drugs. So thats fine, the down side is the increased risk of infection and having to take another drug called neupogen and its side effects which normally include sever bone pain (neupogen causes your bone marrow to go into overtime producing more white blood cells, you feel the ache in your bones). The Neupogen has to be injected under the skin for five days following chemo treatments so the after my third treatment where my white blood count was down to 0.1 (but the treatment was fine, calm and alright, i am used to it, just reading magazines with my mum) i went back into the hospital in the morning for a clinic called ‘Look Good, Feel Better’. It was a nice thing, other women in various stages of my position and myself led by some other nice ladies about dealing with the trials of makeup and hair and cancer. I got lots of nice products for free and some good tips, the main being under no circumstances share your makeup with anyone else because of the risk of infection. It was fun sitting around trying out the new products and the makeup tips they suggested. Afterwards a couple of us stayed and talked a little bit about what we were going through. They were all older then me and had breast cancer though one woman had had Hodgkins when she was 26 so it was interesting to talk to her about that but her treatment was completely different. They were strong brave women talking casually about where to get the best fake breasts fitted. I sat rather quietly marveled.
I then headed down to the Lymphoma centre with my first vial of neupogen on an ice pack to get the nurse there to do the injection. I told her i eventually wanted to do it myself so she walked me through getting it out of the vile, switching the needle to a smaller gauge for the injection, getting the air out of the syringe (the best part, you feel so professional!) and the angle of attack. she did it to me though she put it in my arm. No problem. No headaches or bone pain and it continues that way through the 5 days. A lovely nurse came to my house the next day and walked me through the process again though she put it in my leg so i would know what that feels like since it is an easier place for me to do it myself. The next day she supervised while i did it. the worse part was making my hand move forward to stick it in. I said in a frantic voice with the needle poised two inches above my thigh squeezed up with my other hand ‘do i do it now? now? now?’ Calmly she said ‘take a deep breath and then just do it’ i breathed in and plunged my hand forward. Really there is no resistance and no feeling of pain, a little bit slowly squeezing the syringe but not bad at all. I did it, i wanted to go away for the weekend so i needed to be able to do it myself. It was great to have that as a motivator. The next day with friends sitting around i did it calmly and professionally. I have great friends they were fascinated and so supportive. It was a great weekend running around in the snow and eating and talking and no bone pain at all, i would feel the slightest ripple of something in my shoulder or chest but nothing even really to speak about.
Since then i have been having a great time going out, playing bass in a friends band and shopping in kensington market.
Feeling psychedelic and groovy.
e

the one that seems to make it cancer.

Posted On November 24, 2007

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I have been rather slow on the updates since there has been little to report this time! definitely a good thing i have felt really very little side effects from the second treatment at all.. none of the achy fluey or shoulder blade pain. This may seem rather indelicate but for anyone going though Chemo i think this is important to tell. My Naturopath advised me that if i could really get on top of the constipation (caused by three out of four of the ‘ABVD’ drugs in the treatment i am on and also the steroids, then the side effects would be less.. i had tried to deal with it with food last time but eventually took the Docusate and the Senna.. this time i took them straight away and ate very carefully and took lots of epsom salt baths (also great for drawing out toxins, 4 cups per bath) and i have felt completely fine. I did have that cold and spent an hour last saturday in emergency to be prescribed some antibiotics. Thought the doctor was reticent about giving them to me the seem to have done the trick apart from a bit of a residual cough that will hopefully go in the next days.
The only thing has been the dreaded hair loss.. i didn’t see any signs of it until tuesday night when i had a bath full of hair and brushes full and pillow cases covered… I dashed out wednesday for some last minute hat shopping and spent a lot of time picking the hairs out of them.
I don’t feel too bad about the hair loss.. its funny you dread it until it happens and then you just deal with it.. having said that i have hardly touched my hair in days! haha (they say only to wash it every three days and use baby shampoo) it looks pretty thin and is a disaster but who can tell under a cute crochet beret (from a dear friend) or beige with swallows on it or a great slightly brimmed knitted chapeau kindly sent over by another great friend who spotted it for me in Top Shop? There is snow on the ground here and thereby it is toque (canadian for knitted hat) season.
Its the side effect that seems to make it unequivocally, visually cancer.
I feel fine.
It grows back.
e

science experiment..

i do feel a bit like an 8th grade science project, all the chemicals running through my body, all the different reactions going on under my skin, all the effects they are having. Chemo drugs first and foremost kill cancer… Hooray! secondly tax the organs; drink dandelion juice, Chemo drugs kill the immune system; drink orange juice eat mushrooms. Bright fluorescent liquid coming out of my nose with this cold didn’t help! i felt like i was playing a gross practical joke on myself like i just figured out how to make something yucky with the chemicals and the bunsen burner. Yellow comes out; put antibiotics in, kills sinus infection side effect kills digestive bacteria put live bacteria yogurt in and try to strike some kind of balance.
chart your progress, make some graphs, write up your conclusions and paste them on bristol board.
1st prize!
e