@PeppermintPatty I made a lunch box of food. Even though there are an abundance of snacks there, Ron wanted to stick as close as possible to the cancer fighting diet he’s been following at home. So what you can see are veggie wraps. Spinach wrap packed full of veggies.He looks quite comfortable Ronni. He looks as though he’s eating tortillas.![]()
That’s really good Ronni. I hope he sticks to it.@PeppermintPatty I made a lunch box of food. Even though there are an abundance of snacks there, Ron wanted to stick as close as possible to the cancer fighting diet he’s been following at home. So what you can see are veggie wraps. Spinach wrap packed full of veggies.
I also brought a lot of fruit. And yeah, he was very comfy!![]()
@robin416 his infusion lasted about 70 minutes. We expected a longer time, so we were thrilled. They also don’t require a port, so he was able to be infused with an IV. He actually had an IV in each arm, one specifically for the infusion, and the other for blood draws, of which there were so many over that 24 hours that we were amazed he had any blood left!!I remember those days. I don't know how long Ron got to lay around and be all warm and comfy. When my hubs went in for his chemo, I could run out, drive down to where I knew they sold good coffee and get him one that was long gone before the TX ended.
Same with the snacks and such. I would bring in a bunch of stuff for the room a time or two. Our hospital didn't provide much in snacks so many of the significant others would bring treats in.
I hope he tolerates his treatments as well as my hubs did. None of the side effects so many others suffered so when his cancer wasn't laying him low he could pretty much do whatever he wanted.
Any news on DD?
@Jules he’s on a 28 day schedule. They are referred to as Cycles. He’s on Cycle one and just finished Day one. He has Day 8 and Day 15 to go on Cycle one. Same regimen minus the hospital stay, because he tolerated Day One so well.How long and how many of the sessions are scheduled. Wishing him well.
My Gleason score is only 6,4, and so the characteristics are less concerning. It still means that I will undergo treatment, because they only got 20 'bites' for some reason, and it doesn't get better by ignoring it. There was concern that the 21st 'bite' during the biopsy could have made the score 7, but rather than go through another biopsy after the prostate has recovered, I have decided to act on what we know.I missed this thread early but you and Ron are on my mind now. Reading through it now has been quite a useful education - thank you- as of course I have one of the cancer magnet organs too. My friend @Stoppelmann has recently been in for a check too. He has probably already investigated all this but if not he might find all the information you shared early on useful too.
It's not just his stress, it's yours too.They upped his dose last visit (last Tuesday) and by Friday he was experiencing the joint pain that is characteristic of this particular drug. He spent the day Saturday with Sheri, ignoring all his own issues, running around buying her a new recliner because hers broke and it’s the only place she can get even slightly comfortable. Went with her to the hospital, spent time with her there. I think I mentioned in the other thread that by the time he got home he was staggering he was so tired and in pain.
Sunday he was a wreck, could barely move, head, neck, shoulder area. He had zero range of motion in his neck, had trouble lifting his arms. It was miserable. Took him Monday in between work stuff to get a massage. That helped a bit, along with lots of Tylenol.
Today he’s back for another infusion, I was going to drive him but his range of motion in his neck had improved enough that he felt ok about driving himself. and he told them of his extreme pain. They’re doing extra blood work, and also talking about adjusting his dosage again.
He’s dreading the coming week, both because of what he’s expecting his pain to be like, but also because he may not be able to spend time with Sheri if it’s bad. She’s still in the hospital while they try and figure out where her extreme pain is coming from. No clue yet when she’ll be released.
So he has lots to stress about.![]()
He can take Aspirin and Tylenol rotated as needed. He hates taking pain meds, but realizes he wonk make it through without some kind of pain management. They offered him a prescription of something stronger but he refused.It's not just his stress, it's yours too.
If he can take it, can you ask them if ibuprofen is appropriate for his pain? Post op I forego opioids and exclusively take ibuprofen. I find it works better for me.
I know what you mean about adding anything else to an already long, stressful day. At first we tried scheduling my guy's appointments on the same day since it was a bit of a drive to his docs. He decided it was too much so we stopped doing that.He can take Aspirin and Tylenol rotated as needed. He hates taking pain meds, but realizes he wonk make it through without some kind of pain management. They offered him a prescription of something stronger but he refused.
And yeah, my stress too.
He and Sheri are in the same hospital, different buildings but same campus. He wants to go see her after his infusion. Of course I understand his need to, but these infusion days with all the tests they run, delays in between consults, the demanding protocols his clinical trial team has to follow, they’re 10-12 hour days. I hate the idea of him adding anything else to his day.![]()
@Jules she has a sister who’s wholly immersed Sheri’s concerns. She’s the one who’s also named in Sheri’s Will as guardian to her kids if something happens. Her Mom/Ron’s ex is very involved as is a couple of her very close friends. Not to mention her long time boyfriend who’s been by her side through all this. He took month off work (accumulated vacation time)Does Sherri have bothers and sisters nearby who can help?