
For Mr. K, who never misses a beat.
December 2023: RunningBarb’s Back! (at the Hospital)
I was determined to keep whatever fitness I had left, so I did a lot of walking, yoga, Pilates, and strength training. When I was tired I pushed myself. I was afraid that if I started to lose even more conditioning I would never get it back.
We had a trip scheduled to see The Darlings in Colorado in December. The Daratumumab was suppressing my immune system, and airplanes are full of nasty germs. Would I pick up something unpleasant in the air? Also, after my most recent bout with the not-being-able-to-breathe thing, I was a little concerned. Denver is the “mile high city.” A lot of people complain about thin air when they get to Denver. And airplane cabins are pressurized similar to an altitude of 8000 feet. Was this 8000 feet scenario going to work for someone with heart failure and possible fluid retention? I did all kinds of research on portable oxygen machines. Having been to emergency rooms twice for -well – emergencies, I was a little nervous that something super crazy might happen mid-flight, if you get my drift.
I talked it over with Dr. Advanced Heart Failure Cardiologist, and he told me to increase my diuretic before the flight, and I did not need a portable oxygen machine, and I should be okay. He also told me to bring my bathroom scale with me and monitor my weight. If I gained too much that meant I was retaining water and should call him. I thought it was a little weird that I would be unpacking a scale for TSA to inspect, but I know that they have seen stranger objects. Since the trip was green-lighted by Dr. Advanced Heart Failure Cardiologist I felt satisfied, and then I could relax enough to look forward to seeing my Darlings!
We had a great trip to Colorado. I definitely was slow walking up the hills of Golden, but everyone was patient. I had investigated where the nearest emergency room was if needed, so that was a small degree of comfort. We had a fantastic visit. You can read about it here, here, and here. I managed to do okay the whole time. It was kind of a relief.
Back at home I picked up my routine again, but things were changing. I was getting more and more tired. Still, I was determined to stay true to exercise. Until my body told me it had had it.
When I went for walks I tried out different parks to keep things interesting. One Sunday afternoon I was promenading on a path with some minor hills. Really, at that time things that looked like hills would have been barely noticeably a year or two earlier. And sure, there was that funny feeling of a death grip on my heart. But I did it, yay for me. I got home and noted a funny gurgling sound coming from my chest that had been around for a couple of days. No matter, I was noticing a lot of weird things about my body. At the same time, my heart rate and blood pressure had been coming down, so those were positive developments. Nothing to worry about.
That night when I was lying in bed I felt my heart pounding and looked at my heart rate on my watch. It wasn’t just pounding, it was racing. Then I noticed I needed to take more breaths to get enough air. Oh, here we go again. Off to the emergency room.
In line ahead of me was a high schooler with a booboo on his knee. I sat there gasping for breath while he explained his sports injury. I wondered if he had ever heard of urgent care centers and whether his parents would be sorry once the bill for this so-called emergency came.
Finally he was done, and it was my turn. Ms. Intake asked me what the problem was. “I can’t breathe,” I answered, and started to cry. They brought me over a wheelchair and an oxygen tank and rolled me back to a bed.
By now I was pretty familiar with the drill. X-rays, pee and blood samples, etc., etc., etc. This time Dr. White Coat explained to me how bad my heart was. I felt like he was blaming me for it. Not my choice, Dude. He told me I might be there for two days. I had A Very Important Zoom Meeting the next night. I considered whether it would be viable to attend the meeting from a hospital bed. I decided it wouldn’t be a good look for me (as I have established, hospital gowns are not very flattering), plus there would be a lot of noise and distractions, and how would I explain those away (awkward!), plus, guess what, I knew I did not need to be there for two days to get this thing resolved.
“I have A Very Important Zoom Meeting tomorrow night at 7:30,” I announced. “I need to be out before then.”
Another thing I have established here and here is that emergency rooms are interesting places. In fact, you won’t believe this, but shortly after I got there some guy came in with the exact thing I had – heart failure and fluid in the lungs! Small world! You would think I would be inclined to reach out to him and be his friend. But I learned he was 86 years old. I was 64. I really felt like I was a little on the young side to be experiencing such a mess. I guess I really couldn’t relate to him. On the bright side, the staff asked him whether he had an advance medical directive, but they didn’t mention that to me. I thought that meant they thought I was in better shape. Or maybe they just forgot.
Well, my watch told me I did not get any sleep that night, but I was out in plenty of time for my Very Important Zoom Meeting, and that’s what counts.
After my third time with all that brouhaha I decided I needed to get more strict in order to avoid a repeat incident. I started sleeping sitting up. I started a journal, measuring every ounce of water I drank, keeping to my two liter restriction. And I began writing down every single thing I ate and how much sodium it contained, making sure I was well under my 2000 milligram limit.
Let me tell you about reducing salt. There are lots of videos and articles on the internet advising people with heart failure that if they ditch the salt and just use, say, a handful of parsley, everything will taste great. “You won’t even miss it!” they promise.
Dude: Don’t pee on my leg and tell me it’s raining. Do you know what your food tastes like when you remove the salt? It tastes like it needs salt. So you have to accept that a lot of your food will not taste very flavorful.
I also realized my strategy of trying to hold on to whatever fitness I had left by pushing myself was not working. I decided to back off a bit and just do what felt comfortable. I learned that the day of chemotherapy the best thing for me to do was to nap if I could. The next day I could do an hour of slow flow yoga. The second day I could do a slightly more energetic version. Next day, Pilates. The day after that I could go for a walk. After that I could mix it up with strength training or walking. But I had days, boy did I have days, where things did not go as planned. Sometimes I just had to stop in the middle of things and sit down. I would go for what I hoped would be a pleasant walk in the woods, feel completely rundown and exhausted, come home after a few minutes, and dissolve into tears at the kitchen table.
I also noticed everything started to turn grey. I looked in the mirror and saw grey. My skin looked grey. I felt grey. Food tasted grey. My colorful chemotherapy chart appeared grey. My outlook turned grey. The sky looked grey. This must be what suffering feels like.
At my next appointment with Dr. Oncologist I reported all this. That’s when she brought up the subject of organ transplantation. Yes, organ transplantation involving someone else’s heart and kidneys (that they are not using anymore) placed into and attached to my body. Another Phrase . . . oh, never mind.
I nearly fell out of my chair. Was I really that bad?
She explained that it is not uncommon for people with amyloidosis to receive transplants. People can do very well after the procedure. She will continue to track all my labs and numbers and see what things look like after the chemotherapy is finished. They wouldn’t do anything just yet, but it was an option on the (operating, I guess) table.
Now I felt worse than ever. My organs were so bad that they might even be beyond repair. I tried to imagine going through the process of finding a donor, going through the surgery, recovering, taking anti-rejection drugs, and lots of other things that I didn’t even know about. It seemed overwhelming and other worldly.
But no one was recommending anything just yet. So I should just stop thinking about it and wait and see.
I had an appointment with Dr. Advanced Heart Failure Cardiologist not long after that. By now at least I was past the shock factor. I asked him about the possibility of obtaining a donor. According to Dr. Advanced Heart Failure Cardiologist, it actually is easier to obtain a heart and a kidney than just a heart or kidney alone. Two for the price of one! That’s a deal I can get behind. He also said that once people have their transplant they can go back to living a normal life. One thing, though, they can’t eat sushi. Which is okay with me, because I never eat sushi.
I started thinking that if a transplant is what it takes to save my life I guess I have to be open to it.
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