MACS
3 years ago

Being the two biggest hospitals are next to each other, we could visit our parents together!

Who says I don’t know how to party?!

8trackdisco wrote:



Now that's a pooper, not a Par-tay.
Stogie1020
3 years ago
Glad it went well Bucky. I hope the recovery goes as smoothly for her.
rfenst
3 years ago


I'm amazed with modern medicine. Not including pre-op and post-op, her operation was a 90 minute process... I take an hour or hour and half while I lazily change the oil and oil filter in my car.

BuckyB93 wrote:



Hope your mother does well fast!

ON THE MIRICLE OF MODERN MEDICINE: My then 80-year old mother had a heart valve replacement entirely through her groin in less than 90 minutes. They did it all by catheter/scope- through her groin to her heart- to cut out and removed the old failed valve and installed a new fully functioning artificial one. They did not go through her chest. She went home the next day and couldn't drive for only like 2 days.

UNBELEIVABLE!
8trackdisco
3 years ago

A hospital herf! 🤦

deadeyedick wrote:



In an oxygen tent.
DrafterX
3 years ago

In a nitrous oxide tent.

8trackdisco wrote:



👍
8trackdisco
3 years ago
Azz kicker of a day. Case Management person, Hospitalist, several nurses. A long 3.5 hours.

Now prepping notes for the conversation with my sister to get her up to speed.
delta1
3 years ago
Sister had her fifth radiation treatment yesterday. Twenty two more to go...

She is feeling depressed again, after a couple of upbeat days. She said she knows her mental abilities have been impaired, along with the physical problems that have immobilized her. She hates being bedridden and confined to a wheelchair. Tried to cheer her up and encourage her by telling her that the radiation treatment will possibly help her regain some lost function by reducing the stress in that portion of her brain that controls those lost and impaired functions. I told her that with physical therapy and lots of effort on her part, she may be able to get out of the chair and move on her own again, with a walker.

I honestly don't know if the outcome will be restored function. After the tumor was discovered and the biopsy done, the neurologist said that with radiation, there is some improvement in a few cases, but the likeliest outcome is to stop deterioration and maintain current function, a depressing thought.
Stogie1020
3 years ago
Sorry to hear, Delta. Does your sister have any hobbies that she can still enjoy to take her mind off things?
Ram27
3 years ago
Prayers for you and family delta. 🙏
Huzza3045
3 years ago
I don’t know if you all have the coverage for it, but health psychologists can be extremely helpful for folks going through chemo. My aunt said that they made radiation 100x less depressing for her.
delta1
3 years ago
thanks for the support, brothers...

my sister just watches TV...she used to be an avid reader, and I've brought her a variety of books, but she no longer cares to read. I'm not sure if it's due to loss of strength and dexterity in her left arm and hand making it difficult to hold a book and turn the pages, or what. It could be her mental impairment and short term memory issues negatively affects her reading comprehension and retention of information, making reading less enjoyable.

Taking her out and about is extremely difficult because she weighs 135 lbs, and has to be lifted out of her transport chair and into the passenger seat, and then vice versa. She cannot stand on her own, so it's like a 135 lb sack of potatoes. Lifting and pivoting in such tight quarters without banging her head is tough. I can barely do it, and I'm fearful of dropping/injuring her during the transfer.

We have suggested seeing a psychologist, primarily to replace the Prozac she's taken for years. Her primary care doctor made a referral...sister declined. We'll monitor her progress as she gets deeper into her radiation treatment and revisit this if warranted. She may change her mind if her depression worsens.
Gene363
3 years ago
delta1
3 years ago
dammm, Gene, didn't even think of it...I'm gonna check into them and see how sister likes them. Thank you very much!
Gene363
3 years ago
Glad to help is such a small way. Perhaps headphones or ear buds too.
8trackdisco
3 years ago

thanks for the support, brothers...

my sister just watches TV...she used to be an avid reader, and I've brought her a variety of books, but she no longer cares to read. I'm not sure if it's due to loss of strength and dexterity in her left arm and hand making it difficult to hold a book and turn the pages, or what. It could be her mental impairment and short term memory issues negatively affects her reading comprehension and retention of information, making reading less enjoyable.

Taking her out and about is extremely difficult because she weighs 135 lbs, and has to be lifted out of her transport chair and into the passenger seat, and then vice versa. She cannot stand on her own, so it's like a 135 lb sack of potatoes. Lifting and pivoting in such tight quarters without banging her head is tough. I can barely do it, and I'm fearful of dropping/injuring her during the transfer.

We have suggested seeing a psychologist, primarily to replace the Prozac she's taken for years. Her primary care doctor made a referral...sister declined. We'll monitor her progress as she gets deeper into her radiation treatment and revisit this if warranted. She may change her mind if her depression worsens.

delta1 wrote:



Loss of the retention of the information is a bummer and would ruin reading for me as well. You are doing everything you can. Be sure to take care of yourself in the care taking process.
Stogie1020
3 years ago

Loss of the retention of the information is a bummer and would ruin reading for me as well. You are doing everything you can. Be sure to take care of yourself in the care taking process.

8trackdisco wrote:



I second that motion.

Also, if the audio books are a hit, it may be worth getting a library card at your local library. There are usually a ton of books on audio for borrowing.
rfenst
3 years ago
Sorry to learn of this, Al.
Prayers.
delta1
3 years ago
I do have some good news...about me...

had an appointment with an orthopedic doctor today regarding my arthritic left wrist/thumb...she had me take some additional x-rays so she could get different views of my left wrist and thumb...

I explained the pain had been getting more constant and severe with any activity that involved squeezing, lifting, holding and twisting with my left hand. The pain was most severe at the base of the thumb.

She identified on an x-ray the area with the damage and showed me two significant bone spurs and the muddled cloudy appearance of the damaged cartilage. She compared it to the same bone and cartilage in the x-ray of my right hand - the difference was shocking. She said she could do a steroid injection which would provide immediate pain relief, but she acknowledged the steroid could do more eventual damage to the bones at the site of the injection.

She said she believed that surgery was the best next step, and that she is a hand and wrist specialist who has done similar surgeries for the past 13 years. She said she would remove the arthritic bone, clean out the damaged cartilage and debris. The she'd remove a section of tendon from my left arm that would be used to provide a structural replacement for the bone and serve as a tendon to hold that area together.

She said the actual recovery would be about a year...when many patients who have had the procedure done reported the wrist and thumb felt normal and pain free. First is post op immobilization for six weeks, then two months of physical therapy to "teach" the new joint how to function. After that it would be my responsibility to continue physical therapy on my own, doing exercises to strengthen the thumb and fingers so that I can pinch the thumb to each finger, make a fist and grip large and small items...basically dexterity, mobility, flexibility and strength. Along the way there will be periodic visits with her to monitor my progress.

Finally...a game plan to fix an ailment that has annoyed me for more than 50 years!!!
8trackdisco
3 years ago

I do have some good news...about me...

had an appointment with an orthopedic doctor today regarding my arthritic left wrist/thumb...she had me take some additional x-rays so she could get different views of my left wrist and thumb...

I explained the pain had been getting more constant and severe with any activity that involved squeezing, lifting, holding and twisting with my left hand. The pain was most severe at the base of the thumb.

She identified on an x-ray the area with the damage and showed me two significant bone spurs and the muddled cloudy appearance of the damaged cartilage. She compared it to the same bone and cartilage in the x-ray of my right hand - the difference was shocking. She said she could do a steroid injection which would provide immediate pain relief, but she acknowledged the steroid could do more eventual damage to the bones at the site of the injection.

She said she believed that surgery was the best next step, and that she is a hand and wrist specialist who has done similar surgeries for the past 13 years. She said she would remove the arthritic bone, clean out the damaged cartilage and debris. The she'd remove a section of tendon from my left arm that would be used to provide a structural replacement for the bone and serve as a tendon to hold that area together.

She said the actual recovery would be about a year...when many patients who have had the procedure done reported the wrist and thumb felt normal and pain free. First is post op immobilization for six weeks, then two months of physical therapy to "teach" the new joint how to function. After that it would be my responsibility to continue physical therapy on my own, doing exercises to strengthen the thumb and fingers so that I can pinch the thumb to each finger, make a fist and grip large and small items...basically dexterity, mobility, flexibility and strength. Along the way there will be periodic visits with her to monitor my progress.

Finally...a game plan to fix an ailment that has annoyed me for more than 50 years!!!

delta1 wrote:



Game Changer to say the least. Long road, however you’ll be on the pavement, instead of the ditch you’ve been it foe half a century.

Hope with a Plan beats just Hope and continuous pain.

Early Congrats, Delta.
rfenst
3 years ago

I do have some good news...about me...

had an appointment with an orthopedic doctor today regarding my arthritic left wrist/thumb...she had me take some additional x-rays so she could get different views of my left wrist and thumb...

I explained the pain had been getting more constant and severe with any activity that involved squeezing, lifting, holding and twisting with my left hand. The pain was most severe at the base of the thumb.

She identified on an x-ray the area with the damage and showed me two significant bone spurs and the muddled cloudy appearance of the damaged cartilage. She compared it to the same bone and cartilage in the x-ray of my right hand - the difference was shocking. She said she could do a steroid injection which would provide immediate pain relief, but she acknowledged the steroid could do more eventual damage to the bones at the site of the injection.

She said she believed that surgery was the best next step, and that she is a hand and wrist specialist who has done similar surgeries for the past 13 years. She said she would remove the arthritic bone, clean out the damaged cartilage and debris. The she'd remove a section of tendon from my left arm that would be used to provide a structural replacement for the bone and serve as a tendon to hold that area together.

She said the actual recovery would be about a year...when many patients who have had the procedure done reported the wrist and thumb felt normal and pain free. First is post op immobilization for six weeks, then two months of physical therapy to "teach" the new joint how to function. After that it would be my responsibility to continue physical therapy on my own, doing exercises to strengthen the thumb and fingers so that I can pinch the thumb to each finger, make a fist and grip large and small items...basically dexterity, mobility, flexibility and strength. Along the way there will be periodic visits with her to monitor my progress.

Finally...a game plan to fix an ailment that has annoyed me for more than 50 years!!!

delta1 wrote:


GREAT news!!!
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