Mouth Ulcers
New side effect with infusion 3 (of 4) of the Taxol. Mouth ulcers. Venita had these with the earlier chemo, so she has tools in her toolbox, but unfortunately those tools are not very effective.
These mouth ulcers differ from the earlier ones. Those were swollen glands like from tonsilitis or the mumps. These ulcers are open sores like from chewing on your cheeks and tongue. Venita's face appears swollen.
Venita is taking an antiviral for the ulcers, and hoping that the Dilaudid that she is otherwise using for the bone pain will minimize the mouth pain. She will have to call the oncologist on Monday, and likely take a drive down there. Sigh.
Family Visit
Venita's brother Les and his wife Donna arrive on Wednesday for an almost week-long visit. We so hoped the weather would have cooled down some so that we could do some outdoor things, like the Philly Zoo. That may still happen, but we are looking into alternatives, like the NJ State Aquarium in Camden, across from Philly on the Delaware river.
Of course, Venita has her ever-ready "to do list" in case Les and Donna would like to do some chores around the house.
Cooking for and feeding this group is going to be a challenge. Venita has little to no appetite. Les is on a no-to-low fat diet, including no red meat. Jim's stomach is completely screwed up with worry about Venita and not being fed well. Donna is trying to support Les's diet, but really, if you don't have to, how many broiled fish/seafood and fresh fruit dinners can one eat?
Venita put Les and Donna on notice: Venita will cook the first night, but after that, they can have the keys to the car to go to the grocery/butcher/Trader Joe's/farm stand.
Venita and Jim are very excited about having Les and Donna visit. It's been almost a year since they've been together, and everybody is worried about how everybody else is taking Venita's cancer diagnosis. This will give us all a chance to talk/walk/hug through all those feelings.
Ennis Update
It's likely that only those from the feline diabetes community will understand this detailed babbling. For others, the bottom line is that Ennis still has severly diabetic blood glucose levels, but for the most part is acting like he feels OK
Venita's attempt to aggressively slam Ennis's blood glucose (BG) numbers down into a normal range is not working well. She started using Dr. E. Hodgkins' protocol and sliding scale on Sunday, but she is getting mostly high numbers--at midnight Ennis's BG was 372, +6 after a 2U shot. So Venita gave him 4U. Venita is not sure how much she trusts this "shooting into rebound" theory, but she'll try it for a couple of days.
Meanwhile, Tuesday's vet visit for an exam and to draw blood and urine to look for an infection can't come too soon. Venita wants to get Ennis on antibiotics ASAP.
Monday, July 31, 2006
Mouth Ulcers, Family Visit, Ennis Update
Wednesday, July 26, 2006
Dr. Chemo Visit and Other News
Not Dr. Chemo actually; another oncologist in the practice. We'll call him Dr. ChemoReplacement (CR).
Venita got the go-ahead for chemo tomorrow (#7 of 8). Blood counts are good. She's going to start methyl B-12 for her chemo induced peripheral neuropathy, if Maxwell will share his pills. Since maybe chemo 3, Venita has had tingling in her fingertips and toes, but now she is starting to get weakness in her knees.
Dr. CR agreed with Venita's concern that her breathing problems might be heart related, and ordered a MUGA scan (see MUGA scan defined here). Venita had one of these scans before the Adriamycin chemo because that drug is contraindicated with a weak heart. Adriamycin also can damage the heart.
Dr. CR explained that the MUGA scan measures the efficiency of the heart at pumping blood out of the left ventricle. "Normal" is around 60%, meaning that each beat/constriction of the heart moves 60% of the volume of blood out of the left ventricle. Venita pre-chemo rate was 72%, which could be indicative of high blood pressure. (Venita was running somewhat high on blood pressure before she got on Paxil for stress.) The follow-up MUGA scan rate will be compared to the pre-chemo MUGA scan rate.
Other recent events:
Venita had a pulmonary function test at Dr. Primary's office last week. No official results yet, but the tech indicated that Venita's breathing is weak. (We guess Venita telling them that wasn't proof enough.) The deep breathing for the test put Venita down for 2 days.
Yesterday was Maxwell's one-year anniversary of his diagnosis of diabetes. As part of the celebration, Venita did blood glucose tests on both Max and his littermate Ennis. Max was fine; Ennis showed diabetic numbers (in the mid 300s). Ennis is back on insulin, but the bottle in the fridge is old and doesn't seem to be doing much.
A friend took Venita for a ride on a Harley motorcycle last week. She hadn't been on a bike since the early 1980s. It was a short safe ride, and Venita really her brief stint as a biker chick.
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
Dr. Cutter Follow-up
We saw the breast surgeon, Dr. Cutter, yesterday. The purpose of the meeting was a check-up and to plan the left breast (LB) mastectomy. The big news is that the LB mastectomy will likely be the week of September 18.
We asked Dr. Cutter to explain why the LB mastectomy was needed. It hadn’t registered with us that the biopsy sample taken was almost 8x6x3 centimeters—-huge for a biopsy sample. The invasive lobular carcinoma in that sample was only 2 millimeters and excised with clear margins.
However, when the full sample was dissected onto 10 slides, 7 of the slides showed ductal carcinoma in situ nearly all the way up to all of the edges of the sample. There also was lobular carcinoma in situ present. Therefore, the educated guess is that such “peppering” of in situ cancer was throughout the breast, perhaps even past the area that would be excised in a mastectomy. (In situ cancer is basically a precancerous condition; in situ cancer is not know to metasticize.)
Dr. Cutter warned us that the in situ cancer may not show in a pronounced way in the pathology on the mastectomy tissue because Venita has been through chemo, which will have shrunk the cancerous tissue. We are aware of that, and do not plan to play the “we didn’t need a mastectomy” second-guessing game after the pathology is back. Because of the chemo, Dr. Cutter also expects no sentinel node involvement.
We also asked for the staging group on Venita’s right breast cancer. We hadn’t really been prepared for this information before. It is Stage IIIA. According to some statistics, the relative 5-year survival rate for patients diagnosed from 1995 to 1998 with that stage was 67%. That means that that 33% of the women diagnosed with Stage IIIA breast cancer during that 4-year period died from their breast cancer within 5 years of diagnosis. (Yes, this scares us.)
Breast cancer treatment has improved, so Venita’s odds are better than this average. Venita is undergoing aggressive treatment, so her odds are better than this average. Venita has an aggressive form of breast cancer, so her odds are worse than this average. Overall, we think her odds are better than this average, probably around 75%.
Information about staging breast cancer and survival rates are here.
Friday, July 14, 2006
Nearly 75% Down the Chemo Road
Yesterday, Venita had the 6th of her 8 chemo treatments!! Almost at the 75% mark (she doesn't count a cycle done until the beginning of the next cycle).
The Taxel is much easier with side effects than the Adriamyicin/Cytoxin, although the infusion is tougher. Tougher infusion of Taxol because of the pre-chemo infusion of Benadryl, which makes Venita hyper. Also, Venita is running out of veins for the infusion. Yesterday, it took 3 sticks, and she came away with 2 very large bruises. Easier side effects if the last Taxol cycle is any indication; Venita is planning to again have bone pain and abdominal cramping this weekend, but hoping against it.
Venita is starting to get her overall energy back. Today she is multitasking with laundry, some house cleaning, and work-work. It's been maybe 4 months since Venita did any serious housecleaning (she's had someone coming in recently), and although she is not a housecleaning diva, she enjoys a clean house and is enjoying the cleaning of the house today.
Venita's breathing also continues to improve; it's at maybe 75% of normal. Dr. Primary is going to give Venita some sort of breathing capacity test next week.
Dr. Chemo said Venita should not have chemo and radiation therapies at the same time. He said it would result in a bad cosmetic outcome. He did not expound, but Venita plans to ask Dr. Cutter at her followup appointment next week.
Venita is looking forward to, but with anxiety, the mastectomy on the left breast. Looking forward to it to advance this whole unpleasant but necessary process. Anxious because (1) the delay in surgery may have allowed the cancer to spread to the lymph nodes, thereby making radiation on the left breast necessary; (2) the possibility of serious post-surgical complications similar to the ones (hematoma, wound necrosis, and drainage problems) that she had with the right breast; and (3) potential complications that might happen by placing an implant on top of the intercostal (between the ribs) neuritis. But we are trying to be positive and take the attitude that those things won't happen.
Monday, July 10, 2006
Hot Flashes
You may be aware that chemotherapy induces menopause. Before chemo, Venita flirted with menopause; now she's full blown into it.
Biggest problem is hot flashes. It has mostly happened at night when she goes from a sitting to a reclining position--lasts 20 to 30 minutes, feeling hot and sweating. Now it's starting to happen during the day and without a position change.
Any suggestions besides a fan to reduce the hot flashes? No hormonal suggestions please; hormones are contraindicated with breast cancer--fuel to the fire, hormones feed the cancer.
Saturday, July 08, 2006
July 8 Update
Nine days past her first Taxol infusion, Venita is doing OK, but disinterested in much besides sitting and resting. She has, however, been able to get some work done this week.
There were side effects from the Taxol. Two days after the infusion, Venita had bone pain in her skull and pelvic bone, and strong cramps throughout her abdomen. She took Dilaudid, and rotated Tylenol and Advil, and went to bed for about 48 hours. She then was constipated (maybe a side effect of the Dilaudid, maybe a side effect of the Taxol), and played the Fibercon/Immodium dance most all week trying to get her GI tract back to a reasonable balance. Venita also has a hardened and tender vein where the Taxol was infused.
Eating is going better. More foods are starting to taste like themselves and not sawdust. Venita had a pizza for lunch yesterday and it was good.
Venita's breathing is also better. Seldom does she need to stop to catch her breath. Head hair also seems to be growing a tad.
Venita doesn't know whether the improvements are a temporary result of having taken a 3 week break from chemo, or instead a permanent result of moving onto recreational chemo. We are so hoping it's the latter.
Venita saw her primary care physician on Thursday. She got the paperwork for a 90-day handicap placard for the car and a scrip for an inhaler that would make breathing a little easier. Dr. Primary didn't want to reduce Venita's Paxil; in fact she wanted to increase it, so it's staying the same. Dr. Primary dealt with Venita's concern about her trouble breathing and possible heart damage by addressing her lungs and prescribing the inhaler.
Next week, Venita sees Dr. Boob for a final fillup of the expander implant and Dr. Chemo for approval for chemo infusion 6 of 8 on Thursday.
We've scheduled out the remaining chemo infusions (if they stay on schedule), and found that the final chemo is on Venita's 54th birthday! August 10 is going to be a major celebration day.
Venita's thinking that if Dr. Boob is now going to wait to change out the implant until after radiation, then maybe Venita can get started on radiation concurrently with chemo. She'll be talking to both Drs. Boob and Chemo about that next week. She'll also likely have to talk with Drs. Cutter and Nuke if she gets OKs from the first 2 doctors.
You all take care.
Venita and Jim!!