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Friday, 12 October 2012

A Day in My Life...



Having been free from hospital (well, aside from the outpatient appointments that is...) for almost three weeks now, life has settled down into a new routine. I have obviously needed a fairly rigorous treatment regime throughout my whole life, I am far more ill and more dependent on various machines and medications to lead any sort of normal life, it has become even more important that I follow a strict treatment routine. I thought that I should give you all a flavour into how my day to day life pans out!



Morning
8.00am – Luke or Mum (depending on whether Luke is at work) gives me my first dose of intravenous antibiotics (IVs) Currently these are Colomycin and Meropenum
8.30am – IVs finish and I come off my Non Invasive Ventilator (NIV), switch to my oxygen through nasal cannula and get washed and dressed for the day.
9.00am – Come downstairs and take my morning tablets (approx 10 drugs including slow release morphine again to combat chronic chest pain) and eat breakfast, I usually try to ensure that my breakfast contains about 700 calories. I also take two types of insulin in the morning; a long acting insulin and a short acting one. If my chest is particularly painful I will also apply a Lidocaine patch to the affected area.
9.30am – DNase; this is a nebuliser which helps to break down the thick mucous in my lungs to make it easier to cough up during physiotherapy. This needs to be taken about an hour before I begin physio.
10am – Exercise time, I use my NIV to do some exercise on the Wii fit. The reason it is necessary for me to use the NIV is to allow my muscles to actually become worked. If I were to not use the NIV, I would become out of breath before my muscles had a chance to even warm up. This means that I can (try) to keep my arm, leg and core muscles in some sort of shape which is really important for transplant.
10.30am – Physiotherapy; whilst using the NIV to help me take deeper breaths and get behind sputum secretions, Luke or Mum will tap and shake my chest to help me cough it up.
11.15am – TOBI nebuliser. This is nebulised Tobramycin which is another antibiotic to help control the pseudomonas aeruginosa that my lungs are colonised with.  At this time I also need to check my blood sugars to make sure that I’ve taken enough insulin with my breakfast. 

Afternoon
12.30pm – Lunch! Again I need to take short acting insulin with my meal and I aim to consume about 1000 calories in my lunch... Got to pile on those pounds!
2.00pm – Physiotherapy, as before
2.45pm – Second dose of IVs of the day.
3.15pm – IVs finish and Mum goes home (if it’s a weekday). Also check blood sugar levels.
4.00pm – Snack time, usually something like a Pot Noodle, or a hot dog as well as a bit of healthiness in the form of fruit. I also try to do some kind of gentle walking exercise during this time, without the use of the NIV.

Evening
6.00pm – Dinner time; again this is usually about 1000 calories as I need to consume about 3000 calories a day.
8.30pm (ish) – Physiotherapy, as before. Check blood sugars.
9.00pm – TOBI nebuliser and evening tablets, approximately 5 drugs this time, including slow release morphine.
9.30pm (ish) – bath; sometimes I need to use my NIV whilst having a bath if I’m particularly tired or finding breathing a struggle. I usually have some sort of snack here too (not in the bath might I add!)
10.00pm - Final dose of IVs of the day
10.30pm - Finish IVs!
11.00pm – Bed, attach myself to the NIV mask. (I also check my blood sugar levels before I go to sleep)

Reading this routine, it may seem somewhat demanding and I suppose it is to an extent. It does mean that I require Mum, or somebody else if Mum isn’t around to come down in the morning and afternoon to help me when Luke is at work. Sometimes it does feel that I am just living this routine and waiting for the transplant call to come. Fortunately it is flexible to an extent and I am able to be taken out for a bit of shopping, or a coffee. However, as is evident, the evenings are less busy in terms of treatment than the day, but after a long day at work the last thing Luke wants is to go out again! This means that we do have to plan outings and such in advance. Also, what I also have to take into consideration is that I get so tired from going out that I need to spend the following day taking things more easily (namely sleep a lot!). Luke and I do still manage to do things, like go to the cinema (well, we haven’t tried it since coming out of hospital, but we do want to go and see the new Bond film when it’s released!!) We also manage to out for meals occasionally. I am very lucky to have many fantastic friends who come round to see me and are able to fit around my routine. The support of my friends and family is definitely what keeps me strong during this time and hopefully, if that call comes, I will be free from this regime and I can enjoy the freedom that I experienced before!

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Great Limitations


The old adage is correct - time certainly does fly, another six months have shot past, marked by another half yearly transplant assessment at Harefield. The results of the various assessments were alright in themselves, particularly seeing as I’ve only just been released from hospital and am still trying to build up my strength. However, I definitely noticed that this visit to the clinic was much more physically demanding than previous times which illustrated the fact that I have deteriorated somewhat since my admission to the Brompton.

After the glut of tests and a rather tasty lunch, the wait to see the doctor began. This time I got to see one of the consultants – Dr Carby, who is a lovely bloke and has experience in dealing with Cystic Fibrosis as well as the whole transplant she-bang which makes him really understanding of my condition. The whole team were already aware of the downturn I had taken and the ensuing stay at the Brompton. Dr Carby was able to deem me still fit for transplant, but the urgency of needing one is far greater now. The frustration he feels about my situation (and undoubtedly many others) was palpable. There isn’t really anything that he or any transplant team in the world can do to help me as the lungs that I require are incredibly rare. It is just a waiting game; One that I have been playing for two years and nine months, with no success so far. It is just a fact that small, O negative lungs are hard to come by.  This led him onto discussing with me the use of ‘extended criteria donor lungs’. This group of lungs include heavy smokers, lungs from over 60s, lungs from intravenous drug users and participants of ‘risky sexual behaviour’, donors with brain tumours, lungs from donors with viral infections including hepatitis and other drug manageable blood viruses.  Getting a good pair of lungs, but contracting a long-term viral infection would mean additional drug management and does pose medical risks, but given the state of my lungs as they are, this (whilst not ideal) still represents a better quality of life than I have at the moment and a better chance of a longer life. My window of opportunity of being ‘fit’ enough to survive a transplant operation is becoming smaller since my latest ‘blip’ as the doctors cannot predict how unwell I will become. Any chance of increasing the number of donor lungs available to me is one I’m willing to take. Therefore I signed the consent form (whilst blubbing, obviously) and Dr Carby said he would make a recommendation to the surgical teams. 

Dr Carby also wanted me to think about whether when the ‘time’ comes, would I prefer to be at home with my family and made comfortable or would I like to move to Harefield and receive ECMO (Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation) in last ditch attempt at getting lungs. ECMO in essence is a machine which performs the gas exchange (oxygenate and removes carbon dioxide) that the lungs should do, but outside the body. This is not a very nice procedure and is basically a way of buying me a little more time. I think I would want to fight to the bitter end as I am a fighter – we all have a survival instinct in us. Mine is really bursting out of the seams at the moment. At the moment I feel I would opt for ECMO, but it is incredibly hard to comprehend. 

It saddens me that doctors have to push the boundaries of medicine to increase the number of lungs available. If there were more donors on the organ donation register would it be necessary to put patients at additional risk? 

Having been a bit negative and feeling a bit fed up, I will not let CF define me nor defeat my spirit. CF is NOT greater than God. CF has taken away a lot of things from me, but it cannot take away from me my family, my pets, my friends or my love for them all. 

You, Lord, are all I have, and you give me all I need; my future is in your hands Psalm 16:5 (GNT)

Thursday, 27 September 2012

The Great Escape


Over the past two months I have watched many patients come and go on Foulis Ward and on Monday it was my turn to finally leave! Eight weeks was a personal best for me in terms of admissions, by no means a record, but still a long time. To add to the excitement of leaving hospital, we travelled in style... no I don’t mean in a limo, but in an ambulance with the blue lights! (Talk about a getaway vehicle!) This is because I am deemed a ‘high risk’ patient as I need to use my non-invasive ventilator (NIV) during the day sometimes. Therefore the technicians wanted to get me home as soon as possible so I could be settled and stabilised. This meant that it only took us an hour to get home through heavy London traffic and terrible road conditions! 

Drawers of drugs!
A lot of things have changed now. I am going to be permanently on intravenous antibiotics (IVs) – until I get a transplant. This is because the inhaled antibiotics are simply not enough to control the bacteria and fungus that grow in my lungs. The acuteness of the infection during my admission and the bacteria’s ability to become resistant showed that we needed to use ‘bigger guns’ to control the infection. The bacteria in my lungs, if unmanaged, can reach a ‘critical mass’ and can cause me to become unwell almost overnight. These continuous IVs will be cycled, so every two/three weeks the ‘cocktail’ will be changed, to keep the bacteria on their toes! This means more frequent trips up to day case at the Brompton to have various tests and be monitored after my first dose of the new lot of IVs. As a result of this, our kitchen is now akin to a small pharmacy, or drug den, if you will... In order to keep the drugs separate from the potatoes we have dedicated storage to store the abundance of medical kit, as this is now a long term situation. Being on IVs continuously is very different to the odd two weeks blast every now and then, mainly through the way we have to organise ourselves. During my admission fungal infection was also a problem. As I mentioned in a previous blog I was put on an intravenous antifungal drip, but to make this more manageable at home, I now take a more effective antifungal tablet. It had some rather interesting side effects when I had my first ‘loading doses’ I had rather severe visual disturbances. I am pleased to say that these have subsided!  

I am also on much stronger pain medication to help manage the chronic pain I suffer. This entails long acting morphine tablets and ‘break-through’ liquid morphine to manage the pain in between long acting doses. This type of care will be managed locally by the palliative care team at my local hospice. Discussing hospice referrals and the like is not nice to hear. I am under no pretences that my lungs are in bad shape and I am in dire need of a new pair, but to actually have referrals put into place make things seem more real. 

My oxygen requirements have also increased, I now need 4 litres a minute whilst resting and through my NIV and 6 litres a minute whilst exerting myself. I am so pleased that I am able to use nasal specs as I genuinely thought that I would be coming home needing to use a full face mask on rest. I do however need to use my NIV more in the day, probably for about 4-6 hours. I see this as a great achievement seeing as I was on the NIV permanently for a month of my admission and have managed to with some God given strength to rely on it less and maintain decent Sp02 levels (approximately 92%). I am slowly building up my exercise tolerance, but at the moment it's quite low. Luckily Luke's mum and dad have given us a Nintendo Wii so that should help me!

Just before I escaped from hospital, as my infection markers had reduced sufficiently I was given an iron infusion to combat the anaemia I recently developed. It takes a couple of weeks for the iron to be converted into haemoglobin, so later tests will establish how successful that treatment was.
After such a rough admission and being so unwell it feels like such a blessing to be home. There were a couple of times when I didn’t think I would be coming home, but praise God, I got through them. Not only by the work of the incredibly talented and caring staff at the Brompton, but through God given strength and perseverance. Having Luke with me when I was really poorly was amazingly helpful as he not only helped me physically with 2am physio sessions and helping me to the bathroom and the like, he was an incredible help emotionally. My faith in God has been vital as there were so many times where I wanted to give up – and even told Luke so, but my faith pulled me through. Although we have a rather busy medical routine now, I am going to do my utmost to enjoy home life! 

Reunited with Azlan the rabbit!

So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand. Isaiah 41:10

Thursday, 13 September 2012

Plodding On, Slowly but Surely...

Oh hey! I do apologise for it being all quiet on the Western front as of late. To be honest, initially there wasn’t a lot to report. I was pootling along nicely for a week or so after changing to my new room, but then my infection started to get a little worse again... Grr! When this happened I wasn’t really in the ‘right place’ to write a blog, or share my story. I felt a ‘bit’ disheartened; as if I’m going to be stuck in this perpetual hospital hell until I am fortunate enough to get called for transplant or if the worst should happen. Despite this little blip I was still gaining strength and compared to the ‘blips’ I was having at the beginning of my admission, I was coping with this one physically much better. After yet another Intravenous Antibiotic change things have settled again and things are going in the right direction again. I have to admit, I say this with much trepidation as I no longer feel that I can trust or even anticipate what my body is going to do next.  

It has not all been doom and gloom though. My sputum production (nice!!) has been much less and I have felt much better within myself. The physios have provided me with a Nintendo Wii which I’m using as part of my rehabilitation programme in order to build my muscles back up to what they were pre-admission as well as to keep them fit for transplant should I be lucky enough to get ‘that call’. I also have a Wednesday treat to look forward to each week, which my physios have christened ‘Wicked Wednesdays’. We’ve frequented many a pub, as well an ice cream parlour or two! I’m so past feeling self conscious being out and about on my Non Invasive Ventilator (NIV). If I had hang ups about it, I would have been stuck within the same four walls for the last 7 weeks! My treats are no longer confined to Wednesdays though. As I am able to cope with up to an hour off my ventilator, Luke and I are allowed to escape on our own as long as we are within 15 minutes of the hospital - if something were to go wrong with my ventilator there would be enough oxygen to use a high flow mask to quickly scoot back to hospital! So now there’s no need to go out armed with a back up NIV and a very heavy battery (car battery-sized) to operate it!
Wicked Wednesday at Scoop!

Pedicaure from the lovely Mrs. Baghaw!
Thai Takeout!!
Wicked Wednesday at the pub!
Another positive step is that I no longer require a morphine pump. I am on a long acting morphine tablet twice a day, which delivers the same dose as the pump, but it is a far less invasive treatment and in all honesty, my poor stomach was really suffering with being so prodded. In addition to this, my stomach often gets incredibly bloated overnight from the use of the NIV (particularly if I eat late) so having a subcutaneous needle under the skin with an incredibly taught, bloated drum of a stomach was not pleasant! I can still take ‘breakthrough’ doses in the form of subcutaneous injections should I need them. 

I have probably missed loads of things that have happened, but having been in here for so long, everything sort of merges into one event! I am disappointed that I will most likely be going home with a large dependency on my NIV and continuous intravenous antibiotic drugs. It just makes it so much more patent that I am in dire need of a lung transplant. I hate the fact that my lungs aren’t working mechanically very well anymore, in as much as they retain CO2 and don’t take in O2 efficiently and that I have to rely on a machine to do this for me. It isn’t as if I’m even just using my NIV to give my lungs a rest, if I do not use it when I sleep (or for most of the time at the moment) I get the most horrendous headaches - although that is trivialising it somewhat. We have had the misfortune of not connecting the oxygen to the ventilator for a short time (something we will never repeat) and during this period my oxygen saturations plummeted to 38%! This made me feel *very* unwell and turned my skin grey and if this had continued for any length of time I may have slipped into a coma (eek!). This glimpse of life without a ventilator/oxygen makes me thank God for modern medicine because without it I wouldn’t be here. Of course now more than ever I am praying that I am fortunate enough to get a transplant. I just can’t wait to go to bed and snuggle up with my Luke and fall asleep without a crappy facemask and reams of tubing lying between us. I do grieve for my ‘old’ life, of being a teacher and enjoying an active social life and volunteering in church. However, I am also incredibly grateful that I had those opportunities in the first place – that I was well enough to complete my degree to a high standard and teach for two years. I was also well enough to have the wedding I’d always dreamed of. So whilst I often sit here feeling a bit dejected, I do remember the blessings that I have been given.
Our wedding!! 07.07.07

At Winchester Cathedral for my graduation in 2007!


As I have said many times, we don’t know how long we have on this earthly plain so although I have had a bit of a moan in this blog about how sad I feel, it isn’t a feeling I like to hang onto. I do still have faith and trust in God. Although it might seem that he has abandoned me, or isn't answering my prayers in the way I *want*, I take comfort in knowing that He is with me through my suffering. Joshua 1:9 Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go.”