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#18050 08-11-2005 02:23 PM
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Michael,
Just wanted to say hi and hope the feeling in your throat proves nothing worrisome. John told me he finds himself wondering what each sensation in his throat/tonsil area means. His left tonsillectomy was July 6th. He seems to be settling into the radiation rhythm pretty well now and the chemo effects seem gone for now - there is hope! He also fights dehydration but he's now accepting the Peg tube and beginning to appreciate what it can save him in time and effort. We both jumped though when he belched as I opened the Peg clamp and I got splashed! Hang in there and best of luck. He's being treated in the Cleveland Clinic system at their Moll cancer site on the west side of Cleveland.
Peace,
Janet


Caregiver, Husband diagnosed 7/6/05 SCC left tonsil, T2N2bM0, Concurrent chemo/radiation begun 8/2/05 (Cisplatin). Received 2 cycles cisplatin, 38 radiation treatments. Completed course 9/27/05.
#18051 08-11-2005 03:44 PM
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Michael,

You need to calm down a bit. This is only Thursday? You just got here! If the Oncologist really believed he saw a reoccurence, he would have told you. I had mild memory problems when I saw him on 6/16 /05 and was in the MRI 2 hours later, the craniotomy followed shortly. Don't forget, I have been with the same guy for nearly 2 years and he is, as you and I have discussed, not afraid to voice his opinion. Good or bad. I don't mean to knock ANYONES Hospital choice, but MSKCC is very near the top of the list on places to treat cancer. As we had emailed, you probably could have stayed closer to home ("The OC"), but you are here ("The Big Apple") and need to place some trust in the choices you have already made.

As a final thought on this particular issue, I would not be so fast to get more surgery. It will halt all further treatments until you heal and you do not want that. I have put off chemo for nearly 2 months to recover from the brain tumor and Stereo-Tactic Surgery, and I have fairly nice dose of Bilateral Lung cancer. You will have ear pain and related surgical issues for quite a while, and although it may some day be the cancer returned, you need to dig in and get this done.

I do not believe in blindly following your doctors order, but you do want to allow some latitude. They have kept me going very well for over 3 years and my OC has traveled my entire body.

And, since I have decided to voice my opinions as I see fit, we avoid using the names of medical personnel here and I fail to see the need for inserting what may be the first 2 letters of the name. Do you?


Try to calm down! Maybe I'll look you up on Tuesday, I'm there early.

Glenn

#18052 08-12-2005 06:00 AM
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Michael,
I totally agree with Glenn.

I didn't have a clean MRI for almost 1 1/2 years. There was always some ROI (region of interest) that the radiologist was dutifully flagging. All of them turned out to be nothing. The radiation and the chemo will mop up what's left. It's inevitable that you will have scar tissue (and you will have even more from the radiation). They don't like the "feel" of it and watch it closely but it DOESN'T mean you are having a recurrence. We can understand your fear though - we have all been there. Take a deep breath and enjoy your pre-radiation time while you can.


Gary Allsebrook
***********************************
Dx 11/22/02, SCC, 6 x 3 cm Polypoid tumor, rt tonsil, Stage III/IVA, T3N0M0 G1/2
Tx 1/28/03 - 3/19/03, Cisplatin ct x2, IMRT, bilateral, with boost, x35(69.96Gy)
________________________________________________________
"You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes" (James 4:14 NIV)
#18053 08-13-2005 11:15 AM
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Hey ALL!

Glenn, I used "Pf" to honor the rules, but let my friend's and family know the particular Dr since I've had so many, and they frequent the board for updates and support.

I have GOOD NEWS !!!

I saw the ENT on Friday (Dr Sh...)

He is very calming and professional, while also showing compassion.

His team inspected the site and dismissed it as scar tissue forming.

He said: "I see nothing on visual or tactile examination to indicate it is anything but normal tissue".

So, I'll take that as good news, and have been continuing as planned anyway.

Friday I also had my "SETUP" which seemed to drag on for hours, but only lasted about 1:15.

Again!!! My HEAD was killing me half way through, and we had to stop twice due to nausea.

I am practicing with some topical treatments (Eucalyptus, Menthal, etc) to see what can keep my scalp cool during the 20 to 30 mins burn time each day.

I haven't heard anyone else every mention this as an issue, so I'm sure I'm just being a big baby, even the tech's seem surprised that I complained about it.

Basically, my head is so big that they needed to take the pad out from under the back of my skull when they did the simulation, mask, etc.

My head rests on the bare block of table and starts to feel like it's ON FIRE after 10 mins.

Anwyay, I think I'll get used to it too.

Even if I don't, I'm sure it's not the worst of my problems smile

As far as the PEG, it's fine.

I'm keeping it clean, and flushing it as instructed.

Haven't really used it much, but like the idea of having it "just in case".

However, the stomach distress is quite severe.

I had the PEG surgery Monday, and even today (Saturday) I still have spasms that are terrible. They wake me up all night long, and keep me from taking a deep breath.

I spoke to the fellow on call at the hospital today (they really are great here!!).

He said it can take up to 2 weeks to feel better and that it really has to do with the proceedure of filling the stomach with so much air for surgery. (Dilate).

He say's it can collect in cavities and takes a while to all get out.

So, I'll continue to put up with it, but it upsets me that "the last week of normalcy" before chemo/radiation was ruined by the pain, discomfort, naseau and bloating of having the tube.

My hearing tests, and EKG all showed normal, and they finished processing my slides that I brought with me.

So, I think I'm all set.

Any other tips for Cisplatinum? I have it scheduled for 5 HOURS min. each day for two days, at least 3x during rads...


Michael | 53 | SCC | Right Tonsil | Dx'd: 06-10-05 | STAGE IV, T3N2bM0 | 3 Nodes R Side | MRND & Tonsillectomy 06/29/05 Dr Fee/Stanford | 8 wks Rad/Chemo startd August 15th @ MSKCC, NY | Tx Ended: 09-27-05 | Cancer free at 16+ Yrs | After-Effects of Tx: Thyroid function is 0, ok salivary function, tinnitus, some scars, neck/face asymmetry, gastric reflux. 2017 dysphagia, L Carotid stent / 2019, R Carotid occluded not eligible for stent.2022 dental issues, possible ORN, memory/recall challenges.
#18054 08-13-2005 01:51 PM
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Yes you are being a big baby! The mask will fit tight in the beginning but will loosen up as you lose weight. If you are really uncomfortable however, let them know immediately. Every now and then they would use the wrong head rest or orient the correct one backwards. You must take some responsibility for your comfort level.

Cisplatin is a bitch. Eat first before you have treatment - it's easier on a full stomach. STAY HYDRATED. The stuff will kill your kidneys if you don't drink 2-3 liters of water every day. You will get some ringing in the ears, give the doctor lots of feedback how you are reacting, especially hearing. They will typically infuse you with Zofran to mitigate the nausea. Stay on top of all the meds they give you. Keep in mind that Zofran loses its effectiveness after 3-5 days of continuous use so have other anti-emetics at the ready. I would suggest having compazine suppositories on hand in case you are throwing everything back up.

Cisplatin also does a number on the stomach lining so industrial strength antiacids are a must.

I didn't have a tube so I can't comment except hearing stories like yours makes me even more grateful I didn't get one.

That's a wierd protocol. My Cisplatin protocol was about 4 hours every third week. The infusion itself wasn't any big deal. Bring a walkman or iPod with you. Ask them for a heating pad for your arm - it's makes it a LOT more comfortable.

Burn a good CD for your radiation treatment sessions. It really helps to pass the time.

You had a baseline TSH right?


Gary Allsebrook
***********************************
Dx 11/22/02, SCC, 6 x 3 cm Polypoid tumor, rt tonsil, Stage III/IVA, T3N0M0 G1/2
Tx 1/28/03 - 3/19/03, Cisplatin ct x2, IMRT, bilateral, with boost, x35(69.96Gy)
________________________________________________________
"You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes" (James 4:14 NIV)
#18055 08-13-2005 02:23 PM
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Michael,

What 20-30 minute burn time? I have had........75 daily radiation treatments in the past 3 years and none were more than a few minutes on the table. The only exception would be the radio surgery, that was 2 X 25 minute treatments in a 1 hour period which targeted 17 spots in a 1 innch area. You DO understand that the treatments are nothing like the simulation. You will feel the cumulitive damage over a period of time, not the rads. And Gary is, as always smile , correct, the mask will loosen quickly.

Glenn

#18056 08-13-2005 02:25 PM
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My first smile face, I didn't know it did that. I may have to head over to the fields!

#18057 08-13-2005 03:13 PM
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I was on the table for 40 minutes every day excpet when I had weekly x-rays then it was longer. Rads are accumulative - that is why there is a maximum lifetime dose.


Gary Allsebrook
***********************************
Dx 11/22/02, SCC, 6 x 3 cm Polypoid tumor, rt tonsil, Stage III/IVA, T3N0M0 G1/2
Tx 1/28/03 - 3/19/03, Cisplatin ct x2, IMRT, bilateral, with boost, x35(69.96Gy)
________________________________________________________
"You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes" (James 4:14 NIV)
#18058 08-13-2005 03:37 PM
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That sounds like my bad! I had conventional radiation. I guess the IMRT takes a bit more time. I had 3D conformal for the LC and I guess that was a bit longer than the neck treatments. I'm thinking the actual treatment time, actual radiation, was under 5 minutes.

#18059 08-13-2005 04:56 PM
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Gosh, cisplantinum sounds pretty harsh!!

A lot to go through for a negligible gain in long term survival.

I'll ask for the heating pad and I've been drinking TONS of fluids the last couple of days to try to be well-hydrated.

Did the anti-emetics actually work? Or do they just lower the nasuea a little..?

How long do the "effects" last?
(Kidney damage, Mouth Sores, Nausea, etc)

Until the next infusion?

Will it be awful the whole 2 months? Especially with the concurrent radiation problably, huh?

Yes, I got the TSH and many other labs done 10 days ago at home.

Glenn, I got the time estimate from the RO...She said the actual BURN TIME is 10 to 15 minutes, but setting up, calibration, etc takes a while.


Michael | 53 | SCC | Right Tonsil | Dx'd: 06-10-05 | STAGE IV, T3N2bM0 | 3 Nodes R Side | MRND & Tonsillectomy 06/29/05 Dr Fee/Stanford | 8 wks Rad/Chemo startd August 15th @ MSKCC, NY | Tx Ended: 09-27-05 | Cancer free at 16+ Yrs | After-Effects of Tx: Thyroid function is 0, ok salivary function, tinnitus, some scars, neck/face asymmetry, gastric reflux. 2017 dysphagia, L Carotid stent / 2019, R Carotid occluded not eligible for stent.2022 dental issues, possible ORN, memory/recall challenges.
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