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In Loving Memory of Barbara GrannyBarb Lackritz
GrannyBarb's Bone Marrow Transplant

GrannyBarb's Bone Marrow Transplant

GrannyBarb's BMT



The Story Continues








You're reading GrannyBarb's CLL Story - page 3




    Autologous Bone Marrow Harvest


    Saved from a painful ordeal, we left for Boston with high hopes, all the phone numbers I could think I'd need , and my internet address book. We took with us a good feeling that we were on our way to accomplishing this major goal working with a very special group of people, and a wonderfully caring MD in charge. (Now is the time to blush, John).


    After spending a delightful week-end with our son, Neal, and his lovely Marjorie, we visited DFCI once more. On Monday, June 9th, I had blood work drawn at DFCI, had a constructive meeting with Dr. Gribben, consulted with the radiation team, viewed the radiation set-up (two induction units, one above the sailcloth table and one under it so all that's missing is the rotisserie and spit!) and took care of unfinished tests before harvest on June 12th. Wednesday, I had a lung block x-ray, that was used to make lead shields for my lungs while I undergo total body irradiation. A computer was used to enable the MD's to place the blocks in just the right places so as not to irradiate too much of the lungs.


    That afternoon, we visited the BMT unit (one of four such units with ten rooms each)--rooms twenty by eleven, wedge shaped, complete with bathroom and a shower and real flush toilet. The entire unit was positive air filtered. So after entering the double set of airlock doors, the air was well enough filtered that patients could walk around the unit masked and gloved. Visitors were welcome--hands washed, masked, and gloved. This was much more liveable than what I was facing previously.


    Thursday was harvest day. Brigham and Women Hospital's admitting office demanded my presence at the Brigham and Women's at 6:00 AM and you all know that I don't do mornings well at all! So on auto pilot we arrived, went to admitting, and discovered that someone had screwed up the paperwork and was considering my secondary coverage as my primary coverage, so the harvest wasn't approved. I knew I couldn't go through that insurance horror again without totally losing it, so I was grateful when the admissions person looked back into the computer and found the correct information with approval. Yes, the insurance company had approved the harvest finally.  Can you imagine how I would have felt if I'd been put through that whole scenario again?


    The ambulatory operating room at the Brigham is a huge rabbit warren and I was taken to a bed on the very far end of the room. The anesthesiologist was very thorough in his explanations, and when he sensed from my questions that I was really interested, he explained all the drugs that would be used. I warned him that I was difficult to intubate and gave him the medic alert information that a previous anesthesiologist had written. In that light, we decided to do a spinal instead of general anesthesia.....until Dr. Vance, one of the two surgeons who worked on me doing the bone marrow harvest, said that he really preferred that we go with general because it was likely to be a longer operation than originally anticipated. So I went off to never-never-land and was harvested. One doctor worked on one hip, one doctor worked on the other, and like the team the are, they were vieing with one another to see who did the neatest job, whose hurt less, etc. Being a diplomat, I said they both hurt equally. So I have six small scars on my upper rump on both sides and the harvest was complete and successful. Yippee!


    I spent the night in hospital and late that afternoon two jubilant doctors paid me a hilarious visit. "Harvest was successful and there is enough material to do two BMTs." Dr. Gribben announced. Dr. Vance looked equally delighted.


    "Thanks so much," I said, "but I'll settle for one successful one!"


    There was a small amount of pain on the day of harvest, but I was up and walking the mall the next day. I felt the holes in my hip when getting into a cab, sitting down quickly, and for several days afterwards when I slept on my back, but that's not a big deal at all. A week later they itched as they healed.


     Subsequently, they returned to my body all the leftover blood they had removed after selecting out the cells for purging. Then they did blood work, and my hematocrit was still low, so they gave me 2 units of irradiated blood (the only kind BMT patients may have). They also informed me that they had found gobs of yellow gunk on the tube used to intubate me, so they cultured it. Results were normal. I also gave them a sputum culture which came up normal. So even though I sounded like a barking seal, everyone agreed that there was nothing untoward there. It's my theory that CLL migrates into different parts of the body. Sometimes it affects the central nervous system, sometimes it affects the joints, but with me it infiltrated the sinuses. I'd been coughing like this since last August, it sounded horrible, and it was making me nuts!


     Then we had a week of freedom--to find permanent lodgings away from home. We looked at The Family Inn and Shannon's House which are inexpensive communal homes; but Irv wanted maid service, private bath and telephone, so we settled on the Howard Johnson's at Fenway with special rates for patients and a van running from the motel to the hospital. The manager was particularly kind and let me hook up my laptop to the net using his direct line.


     There was lots of pollen in the air on Monday, and it really got to me. Coughing worse than usual, I contacted Dr. Gribben, who prescribed an additional antibiotic and some Robitussen with codeine. Tuesday and Wednesday I stayed mostly indoors and was back to normal, but Dr.G wanted a final reevaluation on Thursday. That was a very nerve-wracking night. Were we going to go, or were we going to have to waste another week until they understood that I wasn't going to stop coughing or get better?  Neither Irv nor I had much sleep that night.


     Thursday came, as it inexorably does, and with it the visit to Dr. Gribben. I was really worried that he'd listen to my barking and fear for the rest of the patients in the bmt unit. Instead, we discussed insurance--they still hadn't received approval from my company. I said I'd call Strategic Health and Benefits Plan Administrators myself. (When I reached individuals at each of those companies, I was assured that I was indeed approved.) Andrea, of BPA, made it a point to say that I had met all the requirements of our plan. She said any argument between BPA and the TPA (third party payer) was not my problem, but would be resolved by the school district and BPA. Strategic Health was only concerned with how many days I'd be in hospital, but otherwise they had also approved.


    The second part of the meeting was a request that I permit doctors from the Infectious Diseases (ID) section to see me. Of course, I agreed. As a result of that meeting, I had clearance from ID to go ahead. As icing on this cake, Dr. Gribben sent me to visit "respiratory". There I was treated to a nasal wash --unpleasant for a moment, but the results made the discomfort worth it.  The mucosa collected in the wash was cultured for virus diseases. With all that, still nothing turned up. Oh Blessings! I was cleared for take off and the BMT conditioning went forward on Friday.


     Because I was in Boston, I was fortunate to have some wonderful internet friends available. David Feingold, who has long been my mentor and source of information had us to dinner and then went out of his way to take us "out to play" the day before I entered the isolation unit. He wouldn't even let us buy him dinner! Gary Moon, 1 year post BMT for AML, member of the committee to enhance the Dana Farber/Brigham and Women BMT Partnership, went fishing on the cape and picked Irv and me up one hot day, took the historic route to his home in Concord so we could rubberneck, and then cooked us the most delicious striped bass and Boston bluefish dinner. Thanks also to his lovely wife Gisella for sharing her grandmother's recipe for noodles, brown sugar and cottage cheese!  


     The International Myeloma Association meeting was taking place at the Westin at Copley Square, so I went over to meet Hem-Onc co-owner June Brazil. Would you believe that we'd run the Hem-Onc list together for over a year and a half, had talked on the phone dozens of times, but had never met? June introduced me to Mike Katz, with whom I'd had many email conversations, but whom I'd also never met. Finally, I had lunch with Laurel Simmons of the BMT-Talk list, who is as lovely as she is kind.  I can't let this paragraph end without expressing my eternal gratitude to John A. Kaminski, a net friend I've never physically met, who generously provided me with local internet access by way of ULTRANET. In every instance, meeting these people was just like resuming a conversation with old, valued friends. The trust and caring was already there, and all we had to do was to add the flesh to the photograph. I welcome any other internet old friends from the Boston area who would wish to come say Hello, to come see me at Brigham and Women's Hospital while I'm learning how to live again.


    In-patient--The Adventure of a Lifetime!


    Bloodwork information for the period of the story covering my stay in the BMT unit

     Finally it was Friday. The phone hadn't rung telling us that it was all off, so we presented ourselves at the Brigham at 6:00 AM for admitting. This time the procedure went smoothly and I was down on Level 1 for insertion of the Hickman before you could say  "anesthesia". Using something called monitored anesthesia, the doc had me very comfortable and wheeled me into the operating room. This was one of the modern ones, and I was fascinated by all the lights, gadgets, and other accoutrements I saw. I don't recall the local being administered, and I know that I had a double entry double lumen Hickman, but don't ask me for details....the Versed saw to that!


     Next step was the move up to the isolation unit, where I was greeted by charming nurses and no bed.... When it finally arrived, I settled into my new home.  Love the refrigerator, but miss the computer table.  I'm writing this on the bedside food table, not the most comfortable place in the world, but it does the job! Thank heaven I could now say farewell to erratic network hook-ups--I was connected.


     I was constantly amazed at how patient centered this BMT unit was. If I needed something it almost miraculously appeared.  All my nurses, appeared to know what I'd be wanting before I even had to ask.  This surely made me appreciate their experience and expertise. Chrissy, Barbara, and the rest of the BMT nursing team. I salute you. I appreciate you. You are wonderful!


     Saturday morning rolled around very early.  Vital signs (temperature, pulse, respiration) were run at 5:30.  We know I'm a growling bear that early in the AM. By 7:30, Christine, my day nurse, had arrived, rolling scale in tow, to take weight and height. (Thereafter they recorded weight daily.)  .


    As BMT days are counted, Friday was -1 (minus one) when I had my Hickman venous catheter installed.


    Day -2, Saturday, I faced high dose cytoxan with saline hydration, and zofran to prevent nausea. Then benedryl and ativan (two other antiemetics, ). I had a reaction to the cytoxan that made my carotid artery stop up. We tried tylenol and 4 mg. morphine and ice packs on my cheeks but I still looked like "Charlie the Chipmunk." Laurel Simmons, Marie Cote, son Neal and Marjorie, and husband Irv were here to do the honors. I was more compos then mentis, I think! As always, the phone rang incessantly, and I did feel loved by you all. The reaction disappeared as fast as it came, and with it went my morphine virginity..... I don't have too many kinds of virginity left!


    Monday was day -3 and the start of total body irradiation (TBI). Now that was an experience! I was asked to empty my bladder, and then plopped into a blanketed wheelchair wearing hospital robe, slippers, and an assortment of additional blankets. I also wore a heavy duty white mask provided by the hospital. I was whisked, in a specially chosen elevator, to the radiation department where specially personalized lung blocks were taped to my front and back. Then I lay on the radiation table, made of sail cloth, in only the robe and lung blocks for twenty minutes. No pain, no problems, good classical music and then I was whisked upstairs to the unit again until the next time.


    Tuesday, day -4 I awoke with a fever of 102.  I was dosed with tylenol and the fever responded by dropping down to 101.2. They gave me TBI as usual in the AM. I didn't know quite how I felt about early mummification, but I couldn't say it was bad and the classical music to which I listened was delightful. By this day I was taking oral acyclovir, (also known as zovirax) 400 megs, and ofloxicillin 10 mgs. The first is an antiviral and the last is an antibiotic. This time, too, I received an extra dose of 50mgs. hydrocortisone and benadryl.


    David stopped by for an early visit, and Irv came with me to radiation, so I had supporters out there. That afternoon I had not only the TBI that was scheduled for me, but they also did a chest X ray. Frankly, I knew my cough sounded horrible, but it hadn't gone into my lungs since August, so why they were so concerned that it would do that now was beyond my fathoming. Nevertheless, I'm not a doctor and I agreed to do what was asked of me. I suppose an ounce of prevention was a pound of cure in their minds.


    On Day -5 I woke after a dreadful night of diarrhea and urinal incontinence, to discover that I still had a fever of 101.5. Was given tylenol and the usual antibiotics, asked that they change from the anti diarrheal Imodium, to something that would be more effective in this situation. Lomotil arrived immediately. I was informed that my white counts had dropped again and that I would receive IV piperacillin and gentamicin right away.


    Day -6 was essentially a repetition of the preceding days.


    Day 0 was, as has been mentioned by others, an anticlimax. In one quick half-hour I was reinfused with my own purged cells .


    In the days following I watched my white count drop to .01 and was delighted to be told that meant that there were no more CLL cells in my body.  I continued on the antibiotics with the addition of vancomycin. On Day +13 it was decided that there was an infection in my Hickman and it was removed. Now I was using a peripheral IV in my arm and having daily blood sticks which made me look like a "junkie", which I would be happier not to have to endure.


    In typically GrannyBarb fashion, I developed chemotherapy induced acral erythema (palm and sole disease), a disease one almost never sees, as a result of cytoxan. It caused my fingers and heels to develop sore, throbbing, red/purple sores that prevented me from doing many of the activities of daily living like opening things with thumb and forefinger, walking on my entire foot (I totter around on my toes only), and even opening food packages. UGH! It even kept me from answering computer email--and that was a major complaint.


    Day +17 and I was still in the BMT unit. White counts were at .480 and platelets today were 8, so I had a bag of platelets infused.


    The support and love that you have given me-- by email, cards, phone calls and physical visits, by prayers, prayer lists, strong thoughts, and caring concern have really come through and given me an immeasurable boost. Thanks to all who cared so much and who made sure that I knew about it.


    SPRUNG--The Adventure Continues!



    On day +22 I was sprung! Counts were still low, but my polys were high enough and the red counts were high enough so that they felt I could handle being out of isolation.


    Home was the Howard Johnson's Inn at Fenway Park. We had a lovely room, refrigerator, freezer, microwave, and internet hookup. I was told to plan on being in Boston for two weeks with visits to the Dana Farber clinic every other day. I was amazed at how little energy I had and how much effort the least bit of exertion took. I really didn't want to go anywhere or do anything much. Since I wasn't allowed to eat at a restaurant, and we couldn't use carry out food, my menus were Stouffer's frozen dinners, prepackaged foods, and things I could eat immediately. Thank goodness for my son, Neal, and his lovely Marjorie, who were kind enough to learn the dietary rules, and bring food cooked in their kitchen for me to eat several evenings. We also spent one week-end at their home and the break was really appreciated.


    At the Clinic, I found that I was usually being given blood and/or platelets almost daily. We celebrated those days when I needed neither. My cough was nearly gone by this time, and that was another a cause for cheering! Dr. Gribben shocked me when he announced that I was doing so well that I could go home the next Tuesday, so after just a week and a half of Clinic visits, we hopped on a plane (with me wearing my trusty mask) and flew home to 90 degree, humid weather in Mizzery--Ok, so I really live in Missouri.


    Gosh it was good to be home. I spent that first day just looking at all the space I had and all the rooms and walls. I even found enough energy to run up and down the stairs several times just to enjoy the feeling that I had space available. I hadn't realized how constrained I'd felt until I could move around again.


    My fingers continued to peel, leaving fresh new skin behind, and I could again answer email. Then my feet began to peel (Goodbye calluses) so it was a good thing it was summer and sandals were appropriate. Twice weekly visits to my hem-onc became the rule. Invariably, I'd need platelets or blood, and that meant the poor nurses trying to find unbruised veins into which to put the IV needle, without blowing a vein. Some days it took 4 or 5 sticks until a useable vein was found. OUCH! That was when I wished that the Hickman was still in place.


    I'd been through a period of computer burnout when answering my email became a chore. I guess I was too tired, and trying to push myself past my limits. Finally those last few weeks, I'd begun to have some more energy and had begun to enjoy the computer again. I did try to update my page, and was shocked to discover that I had misplaced the disk that had this page on it. Thank goodness for Joyce Niblack, whose laptop computer I had borrowed, who sent me a back up copy, so this update could be done.


    The week of day +67 was the first week when I didn't need either blood or platelets and we celebrated by dropping my office visits to once a week. The next week again, I didn't need blood or platelets and there was hope for a trend. I finally was feeling energetic enough to go out to the theater and to dinner--the first time since the bone marrow transplant. It was also the week that I discovered that I was losing my fingernails, and I'd probably lose my toenails also....Now how will I wear shoes when my toenails are falling off? Tune in later for the GrannyBarb solution to this problem.


    Week four with no transfusions and Dr. Denes, my oncologist, decided that one visit every two weeks would be sufficient. Sounded wonderful to me. I was starting to feel like myself again, Yippee!


    Day 100 had passed. I hadn't had a transfusion since, and visits to Dr. Denes had dropped to once a month. I thought I was in heaven. Then I started having nausea and vomiting when eating scrambled eggs. I left a message at Dr. D's office and stopped eating eggs. Irv and I decided to vacation in Phoenix and relax for the first time in 3 years, and we had a wonderful visit with Joyce Niblack, her husband Bob, and her 91 years young, father. I noticed that I was having edema (swelling) of the feet and ankles, so I called Dr. Denes in St. Louis and, bless him, he called in a prescription for a mild diuretic. That did the job.


    When we returned and I visited his office, Dr. D suggested that I have a sonogram of the gall bladder (eggs problem) and an echo cardiogram (edema problem). My counts looked wonderful. My hematocrit and hemoglobin were normal. My red and white counts were just below normal, and platelets were at 46,000. To make a long story short, they found I have gall stones and will need to lose my gall bladder, but not until my platelets reach 100,000 or so. The echo-cardiogram showed calcification of the valve to the aorta--which fortunately sounded worse than it is. The valve is still working correctly, but I'll need antibiotic precautions before I go to the dentist, have a colonoscopy, etc. Oh well, I can live with that!


    The best news of all was that I returned to work full time the first week after Thanksgiving. So far, I have been thrilled to be back and feeling fine. Here's wishing I'm as strong as I hope I am!


    Six Month Check-up










    You're reading GrannyBarb's CLL Story - Page 3

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