Last week I began to notice that I could pinch out tufts of hair. Looks like I’ll be bald soon, but for now I’m not bothering to shave or buzz my head. This last weekend, Kasha took photos of me on the balcony as I pulled out more hair.
Morgan's Blog Entries Archive
Losing hair after chemotherapy
Thursday, July 16th, 2009Home, Rested
Friday, July 10th, 2009I woke up at 7am this morning in my own bed. I had one of the best, most restful night’s sleep in over a month. What a gift that is. I woke just briefly a few times, once getting up to go to the bathroom. Otherwise, my catheter was dutifully filling up by the side of the bed.
I left the hospital around 5pm yesterday. Kasha went over my new prescription drug needs with Nurse Kathy and discussed nutrition. I have no dietary restrictions really, but I’m making the effort to eat healthy, green and organic. I haven’t had a cigarette since the day I was first admitted to the hospital (June 19th) but I do still think about it. There are some mornings where a coffee and smoke seem like the best thing, but then the nostalgic urge passes and I get on with myself.
Today is Kasha’s and my one month wedding anniversary. Our actual ceremony was supposed to take place tomorrow, July 11th. We still have a box of 60+ expensive wedding invitations to attest to that. I’d like to get them sent out to everyone this weekend, along with an explanation of why we moved the wedding forward and links to our websites (this blog and the wedding photo site).
There are no plans made yet today. No doctor appointments or professional deadlines. I do have a few tasks for my web business I’ll take care of this morning, but otherwise I’m free to do whatever I want today. What a wonderful feeling. It’s a good day.
Otherwise Mighty Fine Spine
Wednesday, July 8th, 2009My blood transfusion finished a few hours ago. I now have at least a quarter liter of new blood to top me off and increase my hemoglobin count. This also means I should be good to go tomorrow for an afternoon release from the hospital. My nurse took a vial of blood from my port for lab results in the morning, and Dr. Low should be going over this with me before breakfast.
I had a lot of visitors today, which was great; mom in the morning, Dad & Carol, Lance, Melissa and Kasha. My Dad & Carol arrived just as I was finishing a 2nd lap around the 4th floor during physical therapy. A therapist ties a belt to my waist (like a leash) and holds my IV stand while I walk ahead of or beside her, passing by rooms of other cancer patients and also the nurse’s station. My right leg has become a little more weak than my left, so I’m working on correcting my stride to keep it moving right. I’ve been using a cane from the hospital and also had one ordered to take with me (it arrived later– black, aluminum, adjustable). I have to make the effort to get out of the house and into the heat this week to get some long walks in.
Dad & Carol drove down from their home in Pinetop last night to take care of some Phoenix biz today and see me. They told me about taking an alternate route along Route 191 to see the massive Morenci mine of eastern Arizona, then a drive up Mt. Graham near Safford where they saw a young black bear.
I had my recent diagram of spinal tumors from Dr. Shaw of the radiation therapy team, and I shared this with them. It represented the CT scan of my full back the week before that revealed several sizable tumors along the thoracic region of my spine, all cancerous and a few of them exerting pressure on my vertebrae. Basically, over a half dozen tumors run the length of my spine from neck to end of ribcage and could cause paralysis in my legs or even arms if they continue to grow and cause pressure. Doctors have told me to alert them to any new sensations in my extremities– numbness, pins & needles, shooting pain, etc.
All said, though, my spine is in pretty good shape I would think. It’s the soft tissue that’s all f*cked. I’ve been getting regular chiropractic adjustments since winter of 2003, and it’s a shame Dr. Dan’s fingers and measurement tools didn’t pick up on the tumors, but “escaping easy detection” is the understated phrase that has hidden my cancer for years.
My first round of chemotherapy was targeted to Ewing’s Sarcoma, which we now know is not my diagnosis. While the majority of the drug cocktail is still able to help me, this next cycle will substitute one different drug that is specific to my current diagnosis, Neuroblastoma. The radiation specialists have recommended that we hold off on radiating my spine tumors because this could keep the chemo from doing its job– shrinking tumors throughout my entire body, namely Buster.
The chemo is working. It’s important to me that all of you understand the extent of my cancer, though. It has metastasized (spread) throughout my body, including many of my large bones and bone marrow. The question some of you may be asking at this point is:
Is my case of cancer curable? Doctors say no.
Is it treatable? Yes, meaning that my surgeries, chemo and radiation treatments can allow me to have a decent quality of life in the months or years I have left.
And I feel as though I have some very important things to do in my time. I’ll be telling you all more about this soon. In the meantime, I wait to babystep out the hospital doors tomorrow.
OPB (Other People’s Blood)
Wednesday, July 8th, 2009Dr. Low was in to see me just a few minutes ago and asked how I’m doing. I told him I’m feeling better today than since I began chemotherapy, and it’s true. Besides some diarrhea and nausea yesterday I’ve been feeling progressively better this week, in fact.
I had expected to be able to leave the hospital today. After all, my white blood cell count is now up so I’m no longer neutropenic. But, Dr. Low told me my hemoglobin level is now low, so I’ll be needing a blood transfusion.
This will be my second transfusion, and it’s an odd thing to have someone else’s blood piped into you. I’m O-, so while my blood can be given to anyone of any other type, I can only receive blood from people of the same type. Most of my family is also O-, so they’re able to donate blood through one of the big blood banks on my behalf and it will keep the karmic circle in check.
The transfusion will probably begin this afternoon. If I remember right it takes at least 4-6 hours for two units of blood to be cycled into me. I’ll be given a few drugs in advance to minimize the risks of my body rejecting the blood or some other negative reaction, including some Benadryl. Once it’s done, I’ll be monitored throughout the night and if no troubles I’m sure I’ll be out of the hospital by tomorrow afternoon.
I want to send out a great thanks to all of you, my family and friends, who’ve been following along with my progress through the blog, and for your wonderful showing of support and prayers. I love and appreciate you all, and look forward to catching up with some of you in person or by phone soon for the first time in a long time. My phone number appears to people who have logged in to this website (near top right of page). Feel free to call if you actually know me!
I’d also love to have your comments on any blog entries, so if you don’t yet have a user account on this website click the “Register” button to do so and then follow the steps to activate your account and start posting.
Hospital Bound – Chemotherapy, Round One
Friday, June 19th, 2009I’m leaving for the hospital in the next half hour. I’ll be admitted into John C. Lincoln on 3rd St and Dunlap and staying up in Four East.
Kim at the hospital called about 20 minutes ago and asked why I wasn’t there yet. I told her that the doctor’s office was supposed to call me back today to confirm that I was being admitted. No one called. Talk about unprepared– nothing like being told at the last minute that you’re expected into the hospital for a week’s stay to have chemotherapy and a kidney procedure.
Yesterday, Kasha had been calling all around to find out options for me. First the insurance was figured out (finally and officially insured) and then Cancer Centers of America was called. After some back and forth with a Rep there, it turns out my insurance does not cover their treatment. I must be on the PPO plan if I want to switch to them. I told this to my sister, Melissa, and she said it may be an option– that family could scrape together the extra $300/month or so that would be required.
Reading through the Cancer Centers of America website, it seems like exactly the type of place I’d want to be treated. From their site:
We are committed to treating all of you—not just your disease—using leading-edge medical technology and innovative medical therapies. With our unique approach, we aim to fight your cancer on all fronts, and with every available resource.
But it takes more than technology, knowledge and skill to fight cancer. It requires the undeniable power of the human spirit. At CTCA, compassionate doctors, nurses, clinicians, therapists, and staff members play an essential part of your care team. Each team member is devoted to you and your fight. They abide by a higher standard—the Mother Standard®of care. More than a gold standard, the Mother Standard® reflects the way members of your care team would want their own mothers, fathers, brothers, or sisters to be treated if they had cancer.
As it stands, I’m still with Dr. Isaacs, even though it is someone else in his office who will be treating me for now. I had a very good experience at John C. Lincoln during my outpatient treatment last week, for the biopsy, so I expect good care from them this time. It’s just the doctor himself I’m concerned about for now.
So, it looks like I’ll be off the web for at least the next week. Family will be hanging out with me when they can, and Melissa says she’ll take care of my entertainment needs (books, magazines, games, etc). I’ve never stayed overnight in a hospital so this is all new to me. I assume I’ll be at least somewhat sedated most of the time. I am not looking forward to nausea. That’s a pretty standard side effect of chemotherapy. I don’t care about my hair. Let it all fall (not much left on top, anyway).
I’m going to give writer’s access of my blog to some family members, so you may hear from them this week. I’ll keep you updated as I can.
They want to shoot the drugs where?!!
Thursday, June 18th, 2009Kasha, Ruth and I drove to my 2:30 appointment with Dr. Jeffrey Isaacs, my new cancer doctor. It was under 30 minutes to the northeast side of town but the drive left me irritable and sore. I harped at Kasha as we walked up, for not knowing exactly what side of the building to enter.
Inside the office of Southwest Hematology/Oncology I signed in and sat down. A moment later I was back at the desk to get a photo taken and submit my paperwork. A few minutes later I was back up to receive the report that Kasha’s insurance company said I was not insured through them.
Sh*t. Is this really happening? Kasha was flustered. She told the receptionist I was just added to the policy and should be on. The receptionist countered with her initial words: the insurance company said I was not insured through them. Kasha said fine, we’ll pay cash.
“Are you sure? It could be several hundred dollars.”
Yes, cash. We’ll take care of it.
We waited. I glanced around the room to see a half dozen senior couples. No one my age. Two blonde-haired kids played in the center of the room, coloring and chatting to each other. They must have been waiting for a parent.
I was called back after 10 more minutes or so. Kasha and Ruth came along. Weight, temperature, blood pressure… quick statistics measured and then we were seated in Dr. Isaacs office.
“The doctor likes to see his first-time patients in here before going back to the examination room,” his secretary told us.
Ok, not bad. A personal touch. I was hoping for a compassionate doctor and any indication in that direction was a relief. We looked around the room to see photos of two grown children. Medical awards on the walls showed certifications from UC San Francisco and South Africa. Kasha noticed on the wall above me an award for “best doctor” of some sort. 13 of the last 14 years voted top doc by his peers, she said.
The doctor walked quickly into the room, utterly distracted. “I’m looking for something and I’ll be with you in a moment,” he said. He walked out and down the hall, grabbed something and then walked toward me with his hand out. “Hello Morgan,” he said. I said hello and introduced my wife and mother-in-law. He sat down and began looking through my file.
He asked me to explain how it all began. I was relieved to know I would finally be telling this to the right person.
I told him that I had fallen hard on my right hip three years back in July. The pain lasted a few days and was gone. A few months later, hiking in the Grand Canyon, I had a terrible ache in that same area- hip, buttocks, lower back- only on my right. I assumed it was related to the fall. Over the next few months the pain would come back for a few unrelenting days and then disappear. As time went on the pain would return more frequently and last longer.
In July of 2007 I went to UrgentCare to see if the problem was more serious. Urinalysis showed nothing and I was given a prescription for muscle relaxers and an anti-inflammatory. I was also told to get an X-ray taken so they could examine it. I never did go in for the X-ray and just let the pain continue.
All this time I was going to a chiropractor weekly (since December ‘03). The doctor would adjust my spine in relation to where the pain was. Sometimes the adjustment helped, sometimes not. I continued this passive therapy until April of this year. More symptoms were appearing and the pain was spreading. A new hotspot on my back left me reeling on the floor when the pain hit it.
My (then future) in-laws offered to foot the bill so that I could see the doctor and have tests run. At first, nothing. X-rays, urinalysis and finger prodding gave no abnormal results. Dr. Hamilton suggested I could have a CAT scan done but it would be expensive. A week later, Ruth and John agreed to it and before I knew it the results were in and I was being told about my ‘lumps’.
“First of all, let me say that you have been in a tremendous amount of pain,” he told me.
[No sh*t]
“I don’t understand how you were able to endure it for so long,” he continued. “You are taking oxycontin now? What is your dose?”
I had no idea. I turned blankly to Kasha and she said it was filled out on the form the doctor was holding.
“40 milligrams,” he read. “Is that working for you?”
I told him it relieves the pain for about 9-10 hours and then I’ve got to take another pill before the pain sets back in.
“You can double that with no problem,” he told me. “Your large tumor is the size of a small to medium watermelon. Now, I will tell you what we must do.”
He said that I would be admitted to the hospital to begin treatment. I asked if he meant chemotherapy and he said yes. He also explained that my kidney must be examined due to a ureteral dilation that was causing it not to function. It may need to be drained, he told me.
I asked if it was possible to put off the hospital stay, at least until I could take care of some things that were important to me, while I still had mental clarity and strength. I explained I was the founder of an organization that required my help to get it into non-profit status so it could continue to function; that I was also writing a book. I might need a month, I said.
Dr. Isaacs looked at me as though I was retarded. Or at least oblivious to my options. He explained much more damage could be caused in that time. He would like to see me admitted within 24 hours even. But it turned out he would not be my doctor. At least not for the next five weeks while he was on vacation. Dr. Bib{blooblahbleep} would be taking care of me. [I didn't hear what name he said.] The doctor was fully knowledgeable of Ewing’s Sarcoma.
[It was at this point that either the doctor became much more dismissive of me or I -suffering under some hypersenstive delusion- assumed he was. His responses became much less helpful to me and I lost the motivation to keep asking questions until I felt his answers were clear.]
The doctor explained he would not be able to help me until I decided what it was I wanted to do. The first treatment would require a week’s stay in the hospital. I would be given a catheter and the chemotherapy would be administered through it. Future treatments would not be as long. It was the kidney procedure that would increase my stay this time.
[Hold up. A catheter? That is inserted in the penis, right? He's going to inject drugs into my penis!!??]
I had believed I’d become totally dysfunctional as soon as chemotherapy began, and that’s why I wanted to have time to take care of some things. He seemed to be telling me that I could still function and would have plenty of time at home. I was confused. I told him I was willing to go ahead with immediate treatment then, but we would need to make sure our insurance was taken care of first.
We walked to the examination room. Along the way, a staff member was crying at a nearby desk. He approached her and asked what was wrong. She went on to explain to him as Kasha and I stood awkwardly in the hall, waiting for the doctor to tell us where to go. A minute later he directs us into a room and tells me to remove all but my underwear as he waits outside. I take off my clothes and slip on the paper gown sitting on the examination table. He re-enters the room and realizes his stethoscope is missing. A moment later he’s back again, listening to my breathing. He then tells me to lay back on the table while he pushes his fingers into my abdomen.
“You didn’t know you had a tumor?!” he asks incredulously. “You can feel it without problem. What did you think this was?”
I told him how I had gained a lot of weight a few years back. I assumed whatever was there in my belly was just fat. I asked him when he thinks the tumor may have begun growing.
“Probably at the same time you began waking up from the pain!”
I asked if he thought it might have been there longer.
“Isn’t that long enough?!” he asked. The doctor didn’t seem to understand my curiosity. Hell, he didn’t seem to understand people. Or maybe it was just me. Dr. Isaacs made just a few more comments and then walked out the door. Kasha asked me, “What now?” and I told her I think he’s done. We leave.
As we went to the front desk secretary to pay another woman walked up to me and introduced herself as the billing manager, shaking my hand. She said she understood there was an issue with insurance and was sure we would have it fixed before next visit. She told the secretary that we would not be billed this time. It was a moment of compassion that meant a lot to me.
The secretary checked the computer and asked my availability for a bone scan later in the month. Wait, what about the hospital and chemo? No mention of it in Dr. Isaacs’ consultation notes, she told me. I explained that I may be admitted into the hospital within the next few days and so she went back to talk to the doctor. She returned and said Dr. Isaacs believed I had asked to postpone treatment. I told her I had said I would go anyway, as soon as insurance was in place. She went back to talk to the doctor again, and when she returned I had instructions to call the office as soon as I was ready and the hospital visit would be scheduled.
Before I left I was asked to walk down the hall to provide “lab work”. Blood. I sat down and the technician painlessly slipped in a needle. (Left arm, always left if I can help it.) She took vial after vial, and I commented on it. “Almost done,” she smiled. 4 vials later and the needle was out. I walked down the hall, met up with Kasha and Ruth, and got the hell out of there.
—————————————
This evening, I was talking to my friend Lance on the phone and told him about some of the comments Dr. Isaacs had made to my questions (such as asking how long the tumor had been there) and that I didn’t feel like the doctor was compassionate or understanding. Lance told me that maybe I should talk to another doctor before going with this one. Cancer Treatment Centers of America has a good reputation, and it could be worth waiting a few extra days to make sure I am comfortable with the doctors who will be helping me.
True. I’m hoping to talk with the doctor referred by Dr. Isaacs tomorrow. If not him, then I keep looking. But not too long. I’m Stage IV. That means the cancer is hopping like crazy and Buster is growing like a mofo. Something’s got to break real soon.
Diagnosis Day
Wednesday, June 17th, 2009It was last Thursday morning, the day after my wedding. I woke around 9am to the sound of low voices in the other room. Kasha’s mom, Ruth, would be here. I put on some shorts and came down the hall.
Both looked at me expectantly as I carefully sat down in my recliner. They were becoming experts at gauging my pain level based on how I moved around the room, or sat down, or what expressions I wore.
“Any news about the biopsy?” I asked.
“Yes,” Kasha said. “It’s cancer.”
And so there it was. The moment when everything that has occurred up to that point in my life exists on one side, and the diagnosis determines the other- now and what’s next.
Knowing I had cancer did not instantly change me. Buster had been growing for a while, after all, and I had become more aware of something ominous in me for the last several months. No, it was the week before that I was most affected. Friday, June 5th, returning from my doctor’s office. He had told me my CAT scan revealed multiple lumps in my body, including the huge pelvic mass as well as in my liver and lungs. After the visit, Kasha, Ruth and I went to First Watch to eat breakfast. While in the bathroom, washing up, I began to cry.
It had been a long time since I last cried. Emotion swept over me and I gave in. Throughout the day I cried some more- alone on the balcony; talking to my brother Mark on the phone (I hung up on him, couldn’t quite share the grief yet).
I have Ewing’s Sarcoma. I typed it into Google and clicked through the first result, Ewing’s sarcoma – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
…a rare disease in which cancer cells are found in the bone or in soft tissue. The most common areas in which it occurs are the pelvis, the femur, the humerus, and the ribs.
Yep, sounded about right. I learned the disease mostly affected teenagers. People between ages 10-20. I wondered how long Buster had been growing.
I called members of my family that evening. Everyone is of course supportive and wants to help in any way they can. For now, there’s nothing I need but love.
I have my first appointment with an oncologist today. I leave in just a couple minutes, in fact. Dr. Jeffrey Isaacs.
I’ll let you know how it went when I return.
Meet Buster
Sunday, June 14th, 2009I am Morgan’s tumor. The big one. He calls me Buster.
I’d been laying low for a while. Under the radar, so to speak; hiding out in the pelvic cavity. It was getting to be pretty cramped down here over this last year and, as I continued to grow, I started pushing back. Prostate, bladder, colon– out of my way!
It was easy for Morgan to pass me off as “low back pain” for the first few years. He sits in front of the computer way too much as it is, and when the pain got especially bad the old “pinched nerve” explanation comes in handy. Everyone knows someone with a problem like that after all, right?
Soon enough, the extra pressure was creating a new set of problems. “Man troubles,” I guess you could call ‘em. Soreness, numbness, swelling– with everything from difficulty urinating to constipation to an occasional failure to ‘get it up’ and ‘keep it up.’
Ah, silent humiliation has got to be a tumor’s best friend. Well, that and a lack of medical insurance.
It was a CAT Scan that finally made my presence known. Up to that point, X-rays and urinalysis didn’t show squat. Thursday, June 4, 2009. Morgan goes under the scanner, gets some dye shot into his vein, and – Voila! There I am, laying like a brick down near the base of the spine.
I am indeed the big one:
7.3 inches long
5.4 inches wide
5.3 inches tall
Imagine that. I am larger than Morgan’s brain (although I’ve got a bit more give). Maybe that explains how I outsmarted him for so long.
Now that he knows, things are beginning to move fast. On Monday, June 8, a doctor stuck a needle into me to see what I was made of. A biopsy, they called it.
Thursday, June 11, 2009. Word is in:
I am cancerous.