I had an MRI scan today. I can only share what it is like, not what the results are. At my appointment with my consultant, on Wednesday, I am hoping to get the results.
What is it like?
Through a small door at the back of a waiting room, I am left in a curtained cubicle to remove any metallic objects. There is a locker for me to leave all my belongings. The appointment is early; my half eaten sandwich is left in the locker too. In the adjacent room, I am asked to sit in what appears to be a comfortable chair, but the design ensures that I feel like I am going to slide down and out of it, forwards, onto the floor. I always think of Gavin's baby chair and Nigel's hospital chair (both designed at uni), when I am using my legs (that can only just reach the floor) to retain my position. It is a chair with a high back, and squishy arms: "Rest your arm there", says my nurse, whose name I have already forgotten.
I am given a canula: this is a needle, inserted into a vein inside my elbow. I look away, the whole time, with my left hand across my eyes, "I always hate this", I tell the nurse. The canula is sellotaped to my arm, and has a long tube leading to a syringe. The nurse injects some saline fluid to check that it is working correctly. I have not looked, and I cannot feel anything. This is good.
In the waiting room, I wish that I had brought my book with me. The key to the locker has been taken by the nurse, so I can't go and get it. Reading the October edition of WOMAN, I learn that leather skirts have been "in fashion" through the winter.
Into the scanning room. I lay on a thin bed, and put my head in a cradle. This is not like the radiotherapy - I do not have a mask. They place large earphones over my ears, and put a case over my head. The case has a periscope that allows you to see out of the back of the scanner. The bed slides into a thin dark tube. The music blasts my ears: it starts with the LAs, "There she goes", which I like, but all the subsequent tunes were cheesy pop and quite unbearable, especially in succession. Every now and again, the music is interrupted by something that I know to be the nurse telling me that it will be 5 minutes of the next batch of treatment, except that I cannot hear what I am being told. Back to the cheesy pop ...
The scan sounds like really loud banging. Each phase has a different tone, and/or a different rate of pulse. I feel like I have been put into a tube, and then shaken around for about three hours. It is actually about twenty minutes. During the scan, a nurse inserted a dye through the canula; again, I felt nothing. When I was eventually slipped out of the tube, I am not sure which is worse - the banging and shaking, or the cheesy pop music!
Back to the waiting room, for another magazine. I can't remember what it was called, but it was full of horrific stories e.g. one was about a woman who discovered that her husband was a serial killer. I still have the canula in my arm. After twenty minutes, this was removed in the same clinic and slide-forward chair. "You are free to go".
Thanks for all your good luck messages.
Lots of love to you all
Sarah xxx
Monday, 31 March 2014
Thursday, 13 March 2014
"logging out for a few days" - back soon
All going ok.
Key dates: 31 March - MRI scan
3 April - appointment with consultant
Have a good time
lots of love
Sarah xxx
Key dates: 31 March - MRI scan
3 April - appointment with consultant
Have a good time
lots of love
Sarah xxx
Wednesday, 12 March 2014
Monday, 10 March 2014
chemo day 5
I made it to school with packed lunches for both Martha and Katy. Nausea at dawn, and various stages of the day, but I have overcome it.
I received my next scan date - Monday 31st March.
Sleep now
love
Sarah xxx
I received my next scan date - Monday 31st March.
Sleep now
love
Sarah xxx
Sunday, 9 March 2014
chemo day 4
Day 3 was quite a good day. Day 4 was hard going!
A beautiful sunny day, with some warmth in the air, I took some time to sit in the garden. Mostly, I slept or helped with homework.
I have had a good vomit today! It can't be avoided. Only one more day of pills to go...
love to you
Sarah xxx
A beautiful sunny day, with some warmth in the air, I took some time to sit in the garden. Mostly, I slept or helped with homework.
I have had a good vomit today! It can't be avoided. Only one more day of pills to go...
love to you
Sarah xxx
Friday, 7 March 2014
chemo day 2
Pouring with rain, this morning, I was nearly deterred from my morning walk. Based on the prediction of the weatherman, by the end of my walk, it was sunny and blue. Spring is here. Daffodils cluster on the river bank, the buds are reaching into small leaves, the stinging nettles have started growing. My crab apple tree has a thin coat of green.
My Macmillan nurse was ill, so I was happy to go straight back to bed. Two hours pass, I have small lunch, and go back to bed again! I struggled to get to school on time, to pick up Katy. Martha has gone on a sleepover tonight.
Some bad stomach cramps have made me feel poorly. They have occurred on and off, all day.
Back to sleep again!
lots of love
Sarah xxx
My Macmillan nurse was ill, so I was happy to go straight back to bed. Two hours pass, I have small lunch, and go back to bed again! I struggled to get to school on time, to pick up Katy. Martha has gone on a sleepover tonight.
Some bad stomach cramps have made me feel poorly. They have occurred on and off, all day.
Back to sleep again!
lots of love
Sarah xxx
Thursday, 6 March 2014
Chemo day 1
I continue to feel very weary. I got up at 6am for ondansetron (anti-sickness), and at 7am for chemotherapy pills.
At 9am, an electrician was due to come and give me a quote for the shower fuse, and he came early; he arrived in the middle of my egg Florentine, which left me later with an unbroken egg and a cold breakfast. The good news is that he will do his best to investigate the problem, and (hopefully) fix it.
I go straight back to bed and sleep most of the morning. I go for a medium length walk, and sleep in front TV in the afternoon.
Evening ondansetron was remembered late, so I now have to wait a bit before taking metoclopramide (anti-sickness) and senna (laxative).
Day one out of five is nearly over. I want it to pass quickly!
lots of love
Sarah xxx
At 9am, an electrician was due to come and give me a quote for the shower fuse, and he came early; he arrived in the middle of my egg Florentine, which left me later with an unbroken egg and a cold breakfast. The good news is that he will do his best to investigate the problem, and (hopefully) fix it.
I go straight back to bed and sleep most of the morning. I go for a medium length walk, and sleep in front TV in the afternoon.
Evening ondansetron was remembered late, so I now have to wait a bit before taking metoclopramide (anti-sickness) and senna (laxative).
Day one out of five is nearly over. I want it to pass quickly!
lots of love
Sarah xxx
Wednesday, 5 March 2014
Hospital appointment
With a lift to the hospital, I was there close to 9am. Blood taken by a nurse, I sit on the "green chairs" to await my appointment. The usual pattern of the morning repeats itself: have appointment with doctor, wait on the green chairs for confirmation that my blood tests are ok, go to pharmacy to "collect" prescription, be told to return in 45 mins to an hour. I do not leave the hospital until after 12.15 pm.
My news:
love to you
Sarah xxx
My news:
- scan in a few weeks, and then in three months;
- return in a month for check up and scan results;
- advised to go to complementary therapy on an evening once a week, for massage or acupuncture;
- I must not start running, until my stiffness and pain has reduced. Pilates, cycling and swimming are good activities (low impact). Swimming in a few weeks, once my low immunity phase has passed.
love to you
Sarah xxx
Tuesday, 4 March 2014
Chemo starts tomorrow
Sorry for the long delay - I had no phone and no lap top. My phone is now fully functioning, and I am still getting used to my computer.
I wrote my BLOG last night, and lost it! Tomorrow brings my appointment with consultant, and my giant prescription of pills. I start taking them on Thursday. My mum will arrive on Friday and if I follow my usual chemo pattern, I will decline into overwhelming nausea from that point onwards. This is my sixth month of chemo, out of six. I can't wait for it to be behind me!
My consultant will tell me tomorrow, what will happen next. My questions are:
Love you all
Sarah xxx
I wrote my BLOG last night, and lost it! Tomorrow brings my appointment with consultant, and my giant prescription of pills. I start taking them on Thursday. My mum will arrive on Friday and if I follow my usual chemo pattern, I will decline into overwhelming nausea from that point onwards. This is my sixth month of chemo, out of six. I can't wait for it to be behind me!
My consultant will tell me tomorrow, what will happen next. My questions are:
- acupuncture trial - can I go on waiting list?
- pay in Martha's fundraising money,
- ask for results of last blood test,
- what happens next?
Love you all
Sarah xxx
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