General status update:
Hair: Now confined in today's fashion statement - a cutting edge
Smurf hat, headband and snood combo, in which I now look less nativity play
extra, more Suleiman the Magnificent. Or so I like to think. So very glad none
of you can see it.
Nausea demon: almost as crushed by yesterday’s annihilating defeat at the
hands of the Chemo Muse as was Roger Federer today, after losing in the Aussie
Open semi-final to Andy Murray. He doesn’t have to wait for the next Grand Slam
to get his revenge, though – just to bide his time until the inevitable
post-steroid crash comes tomorrow.
Chemo Muse: Happy for once, after extracting 3, 676 words out of me yesterday,
my longest ever blog post. She even let me go shopping this afternoon.
Fatigue/weakness: Cancelled by steroids until tomorrow; the supply of Dexamethasone
has now ended, and hard times are likely for next the few days.
Sleep, lack of: steroid–fuelled sleeplessness last night until 3am. Yawn.
Anxiety level (1-10): The next week is likely to be very unpleasant indeed, but it’s not so
much anxiety any more as resigned dread based on the experience of the first
two chemo cycles.
State of mind: Into the chemo groove, man. Not lovin’ it. Not lovin’ it one
tiny little bit.
Chemotherapy treatment is administered in ‘cycles’, which
vary in length according to your particular condition and the type of chemo
regimen you are on. My own chemo regimen, FEC, is running for 6 cycles of 21 days, as shown in the diagram below:
Example
1: a six-cycle course of chemotherapy
Day
1
|
Days
2–21
|
|
Cycle
1
|
Chemotherapy
|
Rest
period
|
Cycle
2
|
Chemotherapy
|
Rest
period
|
Cycle
3
|
Chemotherapy
|
Rest
period
|
Cycle
4
|
Chemotherapy
|
Rest
period
|
Cycle
5
|
Chemotherapy
|
Rest
period
|
Cycle
6
|
Chemotherapy
|
Rest
period
|
Total
|
18
weeks
|
You only receive chemotherapy on one day out of the
21; days 2-21 are what is euphemistically called the ‘rest period’.
That doesn’t sound too bad, does it?
One day receiving chemotherapy – in my case, for this
cycle, Wednesday 23rd of January, a date which will live in infamy
in my memory, at least, and then a 20 day rest period – how hard can it be?
Well….according to the Royal Marsden Hospital’s guide
to chemo, ‘the rest periods allow your
body to recover from any unwanted effects of the drug/s’
That’s one way of putting it.
Another might be to say that the ‘rest period’ is when
the drugs wreak their havoc on the rest of the body, as well as mopping up any
stray cancer cells circulating in your bloodstream, looking for a new home to
go to (chemo is sometimes used to shrink
large tumours before surgery, which is called neo-adjuvant therapy; in my case
it is being used as insurance, to destroy any cancer cells that might still be
rampaging around my system after the tumour has been removed; this is called
adjuvant therapy).
The ‘rest period’ might more accurately designated as
days 2 and 3 of the cycle, during which the body is protected from the worst
ravages of the poison by the steroid drug Dexamethasone, which causes
hyperactivity and sleeplessness, but also prevents the most unpleasant effects
of the chemo toxins from making themselves felt.
Then the Dexys stop and the post-steroid crash comes: all
bets are off and the chemo drugs can unleash their Dogs of War. Day 5 is
usually the worst, and the days following are horrible; by about day 10
or 11 you start to feel vaguely human again.
There’s the thing: after a couple of times you begin to
recognise the rhythm of the cycle, the steps of the dance leading you along to
the Bad Times. It is one of the few occasions in life when you are able to
predict, with a fair degree of certainty, that you are going to be feeling Very
Bad Indeed for a certain period of time. You don’t just wake up one morning
feeling lousy – you can put in your diary that from 26th January to 6th
February 2013 you will be troubled by
nagging pains in your stomach, nausea constantly struggling to break through
the barrage of anti-emetic drugs you are throwing at it, overwhelming weakness
and fatigue, and a strong feeling of general internal toxicity.
That’s the basic set of side effects, anyway – in my
case. Others experience it differently, with variations on the theme.
Oh, and not forgetting that in the second week of the cycle you will have no immune system to speak of, because the chemo destroys the good cells reproducing in your bloodstream as well as the bad ones, so any infection you pick up will be at best dangerous, at worst lethal, and is likely to result in re-hospitalisation.
But this I know, now I am familiar with the rhythm of
the chemo cycle: as the effect of the Dexamethasone begins to wear off tomorrow,
horrible things are going to start happening, and there’s absolutely nothing I
can do about it, except sedate myself with Lorazepam if it gets too much to
bear.
The second cycle was much worse than the first, and I’m
told the third cycle is as bad as it gets, and that is probably why I was weeping
on Wednesday morning when we were walking down the Fulham Palace Road to the hospital
– I knew then, as I know now, that a hard rain is going to fall.
Welcome to Chemo Brian, who looks very at home on the sofa. And a handsome lad he is too! I only wish that I were more skilled with a pair of needles, so I could offer your a couple of knitted Dexys (perhaps one called Geno?) to sit alongside him.
ReplyDeleteBut seriously, all the best to you for cycle 3.
Bee
A "chemo crash bad attitude" google search, brought me to you. Hope that makes you smile. curious where you are now. how you are. i'm crashing from the steroids after infusion #3 but for rectal cancer. Two years ago it was breast cancer. and yes, I hate pink. and yes, I hate chemo. and none of this makes any sense.
ReplyDeleteLater on I got them to taper off the steroids more gently and it was MUCH better. Just had a look at your blog, and my thoughts are with you xx I'll be posting an update on the blog later this week as I did abandon it rather suddenly during My Summer Of Hell, and people have been complaining. Feeling considerably better now - touch wood.
DeleteOh, and it really made me laugh that googling 'chemo crash bad attitude' brought up this blog - excellent!
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