4/18/2012
Thanks to the
wonders of modern medicine undergirded by the deluge of prayer worldwide
directed towards the Great Physician (or is it the other way around?) today
turned out to be harvest time. Two days
ago my white count was at 7% of the level it needed to be, this morning’s blood
test in Freiburg they stood at 128%. The
decision was made to step into the other room and start the harvest. I called
Diane who was as thrilled by the news as I was.
The downside was that I had driven in for a blood test and that she
would have to hitch a ride to pick up both the Opel and myself. (Thanks David!) The technician said that she had to advise no
driving after the procedure.
A few days ago,
seemingly out of nowhere, my hips started to really ache. I had been warned about bone pain in relation
to the whole stem cell transplant procedure but I went from zero pain to fairly
intense pain in about ten minutes. It
was gone by the next day. Today, seeing
how pleased I was at the results of the blood test, the technician asked if I’d
been sore. I told her of the hips and
she said, “That’s what we look for – that is your bone marrow producing these
cells.” I had also passed a night of
vague edge of flu-like feelings – also part of the immune system kicking into
gear. It’s actually pretty cool to now
know what that feels like.
The room, once I
was hooked up, contained three bald guys undergoing stem cell harvest and one
hirsute gentleman undergoing what I think is something called photoluminescence therapy. This procedure pulls blood out of the body,
exposes it to UV light and returns it back.
I have no idea why this was being done but it’s a pre-antibiotic era
treatment that seems to be undergoing new applications for a wide variety of
medical conditions.
The harvesting requires both arms be hooked
up. My left arm had the big steel needle
for pulling out the blood supply. This
arm had to remain fairly immobile throughout the five hours spent in the
lounger. There was a bit of pain after
about an hour but I got past that soon enough.
The right hand became the return line hook-up as well as the all purpose
Kindle grasping, lunch delivery and head scratching implement.
By the way – I don’t mean to give any commercial
endorsement but thank you to the “B’s” who sent me a Kindle. I have few fears in life but one major one is
being stranded somewhere without a book to read. Now that I’m of a certain age that fear is
joined by the fear that I’ll forget my reading glasses and the presence of a
book will be a moot point. That lovely
little e-book is always stocked with material and you can adjust the font size
(particularly important today as I did, indeed, forget my reading glasses). I know there are those that swear they could
never adopt this technology but I am firmly in the fan column. I’ll still consume paper versions. I ordered, after hearing of it from one of
the Freiburg docs, the Pulitzer winning The
Emperor of All Maladies, A Biography of Cancer by Siddartha Mukherjee. It’s touted as one of those blends of
historical and scientific writings that, when done well, are highly
entertaining in a way that feels like it’s more than entertainment. It’s also way bigger than my Kindle. Oddly enough, I look forward to reading it
but I’m not sure I should right now.
Vitals taken, hook-ups in and the machine began
its work. I had been told that this
could take more than one session but I though that I’d be more than satisfied
with just the one round. The time passed
fairly quickly by most accounts. The one
account that wouldn’t agree was my lower back due to having to remain in pretty
much the same position for the whole five hours. Lunch included something I know I must have
experienced before but of which I have no active memory – someone had to cut up
my schweinefleisch (pork cutlet) that was served courtesy of the hospital
kitchen.
As various test results came in the news was
more and more encouraging. The best news
was that one session would be sufficient to achieve the goal of an adequate
harvest. And it was. I became strangely prideful when I finished
before the two other guys who had started before me. It’s a guy thing apparently still latent
despite the ability of cancer to strip away most of your usual pride.
At the end of the session the result was two
bags of product. One contained pure
blood plasma – sort of a clear yellowish fluid.
The other contained approximately eight million stem cells produced by
my aching hips and other bone marrow repositories. These would be mixed together and then frozen
– really frozen in some sort of liquefied gas (couldn’t get the proper one
across the language barrier) for later “consumption” during the next hospital
stay after one, hopefully, LAST chemo (high dose) session.
Speaking of consumption, time to pop lasagna in
the oven. Back in late December we put
together and froze three. We were making
one but why go to all that trouble for just one lasagna. We intended one for the ill-fated mini-break
to a self-catering apartment in the Swiss Alps a few days before
Christmas. That was when all of this
lymphoma stuff made itself known. I felt
awful, there was little snow and I received the ominous email from my local
physician that I needed to see an oncologist ASAP. Who ever wants to hear that they need to see
an oncologist? We came home a day early
and the one of our pre-prepared meals traveled back with us (I don’t think it
was the lasagna but I could be wrong).
Anyway, what we’ll eat tonight was prepared when I had stage IV
intermediate HRLBC lymphoma. Well, I don’t
know what stage I’m at now – if any – but one thing I do know – I’ll enjoy
tonight’s lasagna a whole lot more than that first one.
Thank you for all who pray. Thank you.
3 comments:
Thanks for the idea - I may need to feed lots of people next week for a dinner and lasagna fits the bill!
So you've just had all of those cells taken out of you - does that leave you in a precarious position or will your body just keep at it?
And it's my pleasure to pray, particularly as I can't do much practical to help you guys at this point. Lasagna doesn't mail well overseas...
Wow.....goosebump-producing stuff!
I'm glad you won the harvest race with the other two bald guys...
Praising the Lord with so many for how God has been working in all this.
Post a Comment