Sunday, October 25, 2009

Too Much Information

Warning: A lot has been going on with me over the past couple months, some of it good, some of it bad, all of it going seems to continue to on and on

It is a time of good news and bad news for me. First the good news, my one year anniversary was on September 24, 2009. Outside of car accident that left Wendy without her car for a month, it was a good day. Wendy and I visited the hospital, delivered a cake and some thank you cards, and went out to a great dinner at Providence . Actually one of the best meals I've ever had. It was a significant day. It's been a year and I still have zero signs of rejection.

I continue to be on fairly low doses of anti-rejection drugs and tolerating it well, which is nice.

Unfortunately, from my perspective right now, that is about the end of the good news. In August, I let myself get a little too dehydrated and ended up getting a biopsy; of course it came up negative. Unfortunately, it was the start of a disturbing downward trend of my blood platelet count which culminated if me being admitted to the hospital. My platelet had dropped to 9k putting me at extreme risk of an inter-cranial bleed. They gave a treatment called IVIG, which had me hooked up to 2 liter IV bottle for 18 hours. Unfortunately, the pharmacy seemed to mess up the mixture and it gave me a 4-day migraine. Finally I got some relief from Imitrex. Unfortunately, since then, I've battled minor headaches, and I'm not allowed to take any meds for them. However, between the hospital, the migraine, and doctor’s appointments, I've been missing a lot of work, not good, as I was long ago out of sick time. Luckily, the IVIG treatment worked, and my platelets bounced up to 380k. I thought I was through it; I finally managed to get back to the Hematologist last weekend, only to find that my platelets were back down 19k. The ITP is beginning to look like a chronic problem, rather than an acute problem. The most frustrating part of it is that it is idiopathic, meaning they don't know the root cause of it. ITP itself is idiopathic, not just my case. The treatment for now is pulsed steroids, 4 days of Decadron every two weeks, with blood tests every week. It also means I'm on Zantac, because the steroid, tear you up. I started taking it in the evening but found that it keeps me awake; I will start taking it in the morning on the next pulse. NOW, last night I took the Decadron with the rest of my medications and now I'm suffering the most intense episodes I've ever felt. Every time I stand up, the world goes a little dark; I even fell to my knees once. Luckily I am at the end of the pulse, drinking lots of water, and hoping that once I get the Decadron out of my system it will go away. Still I have confidence in my doctors, I understand the difficulty of this particular problem, not knowing the cause, and having some many others health issue to thread it around. Speaking of which, I am still battling the BK virus. My viral count went back up to 40 million, which is to be expected with my increases in steroids. The goods news in this is that I'm still asymptomatic and another Dr., an expert on the BK/polyoma virus, said that that number is "Amateur", both I and Dr. Barr feel better about this.

So the out come of all of this is that I'm grounded. No mountain biking, most likely for 2 months - 2 months, which is unbelievably frustrating. Not just because I can't do it, but because I keep losing my fitness, it’s a struggle, I'm not making any gains in my climbing - on the bike and on the rocks for that matter. I have things I want to do, next year and I keep getting these set backs.

So with all this, I have begun to take Lexapro. For those of you who don't know, Lexapro is a anti-depressant. When I left the hospital, I was suffering from minor PTSD and recovering from Psychosis that I suffered while in the ICU. I finally went to a therapist in March, and as the PTSD clear up, it revealed a more deep seeded depression. After a couple months of therapy, my therapist finally advised me that she was worried that my depression was becoming a little more chronic and suggested an anti-depressant. Of course I was reluctant, but open, because I know I'm still having trouble, being sad for no reason, moody, unfocused, and generally unpleasant. So I went to a Psychiatrist, he agreed with my therapist’s diagnosis and prescribed Lexapro for me.

So the struggle continues for me. I have to admit that all of these issues are affecting the rest of my life, my home life, my work, but I won't go into those details. Right now, I'm kind of feeling like I just want this year to be over, to start over again.

Now, I know that as far as transplants go, I have it very very good. NO rejection, minor problems, great supportive doctors, great support at home. So I feel guilt for complaining, but I just felt like I needed to dump, I hope you don't think less of me for it.

Mostly I'm doing well, I just hope I don't pass out when I stand up from writing this...

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Platelets up, Migrain gone

Well, I can easily say that the last 4 days have been the roughest for me since leaving first leaving the hospital after my transplant, just about a year ago. Over the past few weeks my platelet count had slowly been decreasing. Last tuesday, my platelets had dropped to 11,000, prompting my post-transplant doc to refer me to a hematologist. She ordered a platelet transfusion, which bumped the count up to 32,000, which was about half the response they were hoping for. Back on Friday to see if I'd had an more recovery, my platelets were back down to 9,000 - something in my body was destroying my platelets. The was no choice, I had to be admitted to the hospital for IVIG, which is basically a protein treatment - antibodies to go against existing antibodies which had been destroying my platelets. What was going to be a couple of boring days in hospital soon became the toughest days I've had in about a year. They started the IVIG at 1AM on Friday, and as is typical in the hospital, they don't let you sleep. By 11am, I'd begun to get a headache, which I didn't think too much of, I was short on sleep, but when you are low on platelets you are at risk for an inter-cranial bleed, CT came up clean, but nothing was helping my head, Tylenol - nothing, vicoden - nothing, morphine! - nothing. By 11 am on Sunday, my platelets had rebounded up to 83k, but my creatinen was rising so they stopped the second IVIG treatment and let me go home. For the next 2 1/2 I had the worst headache my life, that nothing would relieve, no vicoden, a late night dulaten treatment offered a couple hours of relief but nothing real. Finally back at the hospital for follow up blood work, one of the hematology fellow prescribed Imitrex for me. My platelets had rised up to 325k, and the Imitrex worked - my headache has abated. I'm back at work today, but very weak, because I haven't eaten much in the last four days. I've also got some rip-roaring indegestion from not eating and taking so much painkillers on an empty stomach - word to the wise. I can only guess that ll that extra protein from the IVIG really ticked off my chemical balance - I've never had a migraine like this before, but my God am I glad it's over.