Thursday, April 26, 2007

Is it Live or is it Avonex?

Lab Rat Coordinator #1 called today to have me answer a few questions about my first Avonex experience. I had to rate the Avonex related misery on a scale of 0-10, 0 being no problem and 10 being the worst imaginable. Soon after she gave me the run down on the rating system, she had to briefly take another call. When she returned, she immediately began to ask me to rate from 0-10 certain side effects of the Avonex. I most often gave her zeros with an occasional 1 or 2 thrown in, the 2 being the rating for exhaustion, which I honestly think was as much about my husband and I spending the weekend in NY state celebrating our anniversary as it was about the Avonex, but I had to let them have at least 1 side effect. (We spent the weekend at a ski resort in Findley Lake, NY, returned home on Sunday night and then left for the clinic Monday morning. I had a fair amount of blood siphoned out of me over a 15 hour period and didn't sleep very well, so you decide. Was it the Avonex or was it just life that made me tired? After this week's injection I had no apparent exhaustion at all. )

As I began to answer her rating questions, she started to laugh. I said, you think I don't understand the rating scale don't you? But I do. She laughed again and said that I had told her I was "opposite lady" and that honestly, she hadn't really believed me. She believes me now!

I told her to give the dancing neuro a message for me..."I told you so!"

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Number Two

On Monday night I gave myself my 2nd shot of Avonex. Throughout the day I made an effort not to think about it so that I didn't get myself stressed out.. At 7:00 I took my Extra Strength Tylenol (We are supposed to take it a couple of hours before the shot). At 9:00 I headed upstairs, placed the shot and the "extras" (gauze pad, alcohol wipe etc) on a towel, popped on the needle and just DID it! No hesitation, no thinking about it, I just did it. It again, wasn't actually so bad. I did squint my eyes a bit, like I do when I see road kill on the highway, just to keep from seeing the actual needle puncture my skin. Hey, whatever works! It was all over in a matter of minutes.
I again had no significant reaction to the drug. I had a mild headache throughout most of the following day, but again, nothing too bad. I am feeling very fortunate since so many people have such a hard time with the medicine.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

The Waiting

After the MRI, we were off on a shuttle ride to the main hospital. You know you are at a big hospital when you have to ride a bus from one section to another. It can't be just any bus. There are colors that coordinate routes to different buildings at the hospital. If bigger is better, this one should rank right up at the top. (By the way, it is ranked among the top 3 hospitals in the United States, which says to me that it is ranked third, because if it were ranked first or second, wouldn't it be in its best interest to advertise itself as being the top ranked hospital in the US or in the top two ranked hospitals in the US.)

The dancing-neuro had given me my walking papers while I was at the hospital, so after dropping my bag of groceries and reading material on the hospital bed, (which by the way was another one of those bad bad inflatable beds that try to rearrange you all night long because it has a notion that you are uncomfortable) hubby and I went to the International something or another place at the hospital where they have all the food. You're still thinking about my bag of groceries aren't you? In the paperwork for the research study it indicated that they would be serving dinner to me from their "pantry". That could translate to many different things, but all I could think of was that they were going to bring me a lunch meat sandwich with mayo on it which I would never ever eat. I packed a few snacks, just in case. I also figured I wouldn't likely sleep much, so I brought reading material.

After dining at the International something or another (maybe Food Court?) we went back to my room, which by the way was the cleanest hospital room I have ever been in. It was almost time for my first shot of the MS medication, Avonex. My nurse/instructor bordered on being a stand up comedian which truly worked out well for me. She basically said, if I didn't get the shot in my leg, she would jab it in for me. LOL I had it in my hand all ready to go and just needed to take a deep breath before inserting it. I told her to give me a minute to get relaxed. It isn't everyday you stab yourself in the leg with a super-sized needle. She stepped back and started talking to my hubby and by the time she looked up again, I was pretty much done. Although the needle looks huge, it wasn't really so bad. Once you puncture the skin, it just feels like sliding a knife in butter. That probably isn't an analogy that everyone will appreciate, but truly, once you get it through the skin it is no big deal. The only thing that bothers me is that little "crwk" sound and feel as you puncture the skin.

They had me take Extra Strength Tylenol a couple of hours before the first shot to prepare for the side effects that may or may not (translate to likely will) happen. The side effects should begin about two hours after you have your shot and may last for up to 24 hours. I took my shot at 7:30. At 9:30 I started waiting to feel something bad. At 10:30 I was still waiting. By 11:00 I was sleepy and just couldn't wait any longer. I took another dose of ES Tylenol, just in case the side effects crept up on me later, then I fell asleep. Several hours later I woke up and just lay there quietly in the dark accessing the situation. Aches? No..Fever? Don't think so...Chills? Nope...I did have a mild headache, but nothing to fuss over. I swear I woke up all night long just waiting for the ax to drop and it never did.

When morning rolled around, they came in to draw blood again and as soon as that was over I was allowed to leave. The nurse had a bit of trouble siphoning out my blood
(See Memoirs of a Lab Rat) and while she was trying to coax a trickle of blood out of my arm, a doctor came in and started to speak to me. She, I think, was French. I seriously couldn't understand anything she said except for "Thank you for participating in the study" or research or whatever she called it. I at least got the thank you part. She grabbed the tubes of blood that eventually dribbled out and was off to the lab to play. (She was a very nice doctor and it isn't her fault that my ears don't hear French.)

Hubby came to retrieve me. We walked back to the hotel, had breakfast and headed home. I was a bit fatigued throughout the day and the headache remained for most of the day but that was it!

Just a little side note......
I told my hubby the night before I went to the hospital, that I had a feeling I wasn't going to get the bad side effects. He agreed. We just had a feeling and were trying hard to be optimistic. When I was being accessed by the dancing-neuro, I told her that I had made up my mind that it wasn't going to make me sick. She gave me her best serious look and let me know that yes, I was likely to get the side effects. That most everyone does.

All I can say is...Always the Rebel!


And another note...

I talked to someone at Biogen Idec today. (The drug company) She suggested I use my magical powers to cure something or solve the problem of global warming. LOL Alrighty then....

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Magnets and Needles and Xanax, Oh My!

Part II
So, I managed to make it through the IV fiasco with my sanity intact. (See previous post, Memoirs of a Lab Rat) Although, while having a needle dug into my arm, Lab Rat Coordinator #1 and Lab Rat Coordinator #2 realized that they did not have me check off boxes on the consent form giving consent for them to save my blood for future research. So, while a nurse is asking me to clench and unclench my fist in hopes of pumping up a third vein, I am asked to read and give my approval for my blood to be frozen. (Cari on ice!) I asked them nonchalantly if they realized they were asking a person with MS to do two entirely separate things at one time. I'm sorry, but my lesion-laced brain can only take so much. I had already played their little games (run though their maze) and my brain was still tired from the memory math game. I'm telling you...Whoever decided to give that test to a bunch of people with holes in their brain is the DEVIL!

Before the blood letting, I was examined by a neurologist who shall remain nameless, which is only fair since I have to remain nameless. (Afterall, I am just a lab rat.) One hint, she used to wear a tutu. She had to evaluate me as if I were not her patient. P'shaw! I'm sorry, but I took cream cheese pound cake to her on my previous visit. Let her just try and forget me! She did a bunch of tests on me, all of them more pleasant than the stupid make-me-feel-like-a-loser math game. I had to walk for her too, five laps up and down the long corridor of the Mellen Center. I had already taken a Xanax to prepare for the MRI before the walk, so if she had waited a little longer to have me walk, it may have been a lot more fun to watch.

Next on the agenda was an MRI. This time, the MRI was only of my brain (no spine) so it lasted about 25 minutes. The MRI guy (I don't really know what his title is), encouraged me to wear headphones and listen to music to help block out the clanging noise of the magnets. I opted out of that. There is far too much Georgia rhythm in this girl's blood and I could just see me start shaking my groove thang in the MRI coffin and mess up the whole darn thing. I thought it safer to just listen to the magnets so I would only have to do it once. I'm thinking, at only 25 minutes, I could probably do it the next time without the help of pharmaceuticals. But then again, why would I want to? I mean really, if I can ride that X- train for 25 minutes, why not?
Next Stop, The Hospital

To be continued...

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Memoirs of a Lab Rat

Yesterday was the big day. I began my Avonex injections. I am here to tell about it, so I think it safe to say, it went pretty well. Since my last blog entry, I agreed to be in another MS research program. The new one is about MS and proteins or something or another that really makes no sense to me, so I won't even try to explain it. All I know is that it required me to have a bit more blood drawn while I was playing lab rat.

Once again I am sporting not one, but two blown out veins in my arm. My veins simply do not like the invasion of an IV. If all you want to do is draw blood, my veins cooperate just fine. But try and stick an IV in them and they start to play hide & seek. We eventually had success, only to have it shattered by 8:10. Since they were going to draw more blood for the research studies, they decided to leave an IV in to make drawing the blood less difficult. Translate...They SERIOUSLY thought they were saving me pain by putting in an IV for the blood draws because I was going to have blood drawn around 5:00, another at 7:20 another at 8:10 and one more the following morning at 7:30. If you add them up, that is four sticks of the needle to draw blood. I told them from the beginning that I didn't mind needles for drawing blood, but they insisted it would be much easier with the IV.

Easier for whom? Let's do the math! If you count all the sticks above, that is four sticks of a needle to draw blood. Hmmm, let's see...It took three stick attempts and some serious digging around under the skin for them to get the IV in. Then, they still had to take it out last night after the last blood draw because it was malfunctioning. This morning, it took two more sticks to get a good vein going for the blood draw because they had already completely used up my right arm trying to make an IV work. That makes FIVE STICKS. So, if they had just taken the blood with a needle as needed, I would have had four punctures. But because they were trying to make it easier, I got stuck FIVE times (six if you count jabbing a needle into my own leg, but we won't count that one since it is not about the blood letting.) Hey you guys, thanks for looking out for me! Next time, listen to me. And to think, they gave MEEEE a math test!

TO BE CONTINUED....

Thursday, April 12, 2007

The Day Approaches

Finally, after seven months I am going to start treatment for MS. On Monday, I will return to the Mellen Center in Cleveland to begin treatment. Hopefully, this time I will go to the Mellen Center without being a big cry baby. MS is what it is, and no amount of whining about it or getting sad from seeing others in wheelchairs is ever going to make it go away. I can still walk, I can still talk, so I just need to quit whining and be thankful for what I am still able to do. It's not cancer. I didn't lose a child.

I have a little bit of fear at starting the medication. The last time I took medication for MS, I spent the next three months just trying to get back on my feet. Coincidence or not, my mind still remembers having to lie on my side for two weeks, so in my tiny non-medical lesion-laced brain, there is a connection. This is an entirely different medication. I talked about it in my last blog entry. It is called Avonex. Its job is to help reduce the chances of me getting new lesions and to hopefully reduce the number of flareups that I have.

Flu symptoms are the most common side effect of the drug and they may last for up to 24 hours after receiving the shot, which by the way I wasn't all that worried about until yesterday when I watched the DVD from the drug company. That sucker is big and I have to poke it into the muscle of my own leg once a week. I was expecting a tiny little needle like my husband uses for his insulin. Needles, shots, IVs, blood draws...None of that has ever been a very big deal to me. I just pick a point and focus and it is over. However, it is going to be hard to pick a point and focus when I have to focus on shooting myself in the leg. I feel the tension rising!
(For some reason, that sentence, each and every time I read it, makes me start to sing CCR's song Bad Moon Rising in my head. I see a bad moon a rising, I see trouble all the way. I hope it's not an omen!) I am curious to see how the flu symptom side effects (fever, chills, aches, headache) will effect me. I seldom get a fever. Even when I am seriously sick, a fever seldom accompanies my illness.

I am going to be a part of the bio marker study for Avonex. I will have to complete a couple of tests, putting pegs in holes, walking (and just for the record, you never walk the way you really walk when you know someone is watching you. OK, that was a hard sentence to put together, but you know what I mean, right?) and I have to listen to a CD, all the while adding up some numbers. My ability to hold onto things in my slightly holey brain may cause me a little problem there. If I can see it, I do OK. However, trying to hold onto some number as it slips and slides around in my less-than-perfect brain might be a problem. I guess that is the whole point of the test.

I sort of wish they wouldn't call them tests. Maybe they should call them evaluations or anything besides TESTS. The 11th grader in me who was always good with numbers yet struggled in trig (bad bad teacher) comes sashaying out in her Gloria Vanderbilt jeans, swinging her Farrah Fawcett hair and asking "What need will I ever have for this in the REAL world".

I will also have a neuro exam (again a word that really means TEST) from the dancing neurologist (who I am determined to show that I am not really a basket case about to take a dive off a bridge over raging waters), and an MRI. We all know by now how I feel about MRIs. Just bring on the drugs!

So, wish me luck. I'll update as soon as it is behind me.

[On a side note...I have spoken to many people associated with the Avonex drug over the last few days and they have all been wonderfully kind, knowledgeable and helpful. Score 1 for Avonex!]

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

$50.00

Today I have another appointment with the hematologist. It is a follow up visit. He wants to check my white blood count to be sure that the white count is, at very least, not increasing. Each and every time I walk through his doors, it costs me $50.00. That is more painful than the lousy blood sucker his office has employed who can't seem to draw blood without administering pain. I am no baby when it comes to having blood drawn. It is no big deal to me. I have had so much blood sucked out of me since September, that I am a pro. Nowhere, not the local hospital, not Cleveland Clinic, not the family doctor's office has anyone hurt me as much as the blood sucker at his office. Irony? I think so. This is a HEMATOLOGIST 'S office. They specialize in BLOOD! For goodness sake, hire a decent blood sucker!

The hematologist has given the OK for me to finally begin the MS medication Avonex. Ah, a double -edged sword. I want to start the medication. I certainly don't want the MS to get any worse if I can help prevent it. However, the medicine itself is a bad boy and will likely give me flu-like symptoms during the first 24 hours after I take my shot each week. Hopefully, with each week I take it, my body will become more accustomed to it and the flu symptoms will decrease. Avonex is an interferon which can cause depression, so if any of you who read this think I sound like I'm ready to jump off a bridge, give me the heads up before I jump so that I can spend another chunk of money every month to buy an antidepressant. I quite frankly, think the two should be packaged together with one drug bill for the month. Here you go Ms. Spano. Here is your Avonex and here is your bridge-diving prevention medicine. Makes sense to me!

On the bright side, maybe all this medicine buying will help me lose weight. How will I have money for groceries after buying all those drugs? Being sick is expensive!