Link to January 2015 video:

Link to September 2016 video: https://vimeo.com/c3media/review/185699250/24bdbf13d2

https://u.pcloud.link/publink/show?code=XZnJA1kZXQV33e1M0NBbwzaz7Pp4pjuyh0hX

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

She looks so good! And then she didn't....

At church on Sunday, numerous people told Sandy how great she looked - her countenance was good, her skin tone looked healthy, her eyes had that pain-free spark again. Her hair has really grown thicker the past few months, and she has not been itchy for quite some time. The only not-quite-right thing she had been noticing was a feeling in her abdomen that can mean the drain is on its way to needing to be replaced. However, she had decided it would just be fine until her next TX trip, since the last drain, which has been pain free and leak free, was put in during her last TX trip.

You know how Kansas weather changes on a dime? How it can be 85 and sunny one day and then 24 hours later it's snowing? Sandy is clearly a Kansas girl through and through.

Sandy woke up Monday morning with intense pain and pressure. By now in her journey, she recognizes which type of pain and pressure means a bad stent and which one means a bad drain. This time it was the drain. Her doctors scheduled a drain replacement at St. Francis at 1:30 Monday afternoon. First, though, she went to the Cancer Center for lab work, since her counts were too low last Thursday, which meant she'd had an extra medicine over the weekend to increase the counts...a medicine that makes her feel lousy. By the time she arrived at the Cancer Center, her fever was rising, she was freezing cold, and it was becoming more difficult to think clearly. The nurse at the Cancer Center has seen Sandy like this several times before, and knew what it meant - call in the PA, maybe the Dr., and look at a possible hospital admission, hoping to stay a step or two ahead of sepsis. 

Sure enough, after talking to the PA and the Dr., Sandy was wheeled over to St Francis. Her outpatient drain replacement became an inpatient drain replacement plus whatever was needed. Thankfully, they kept supplying her with warm towels, she didn't have to wait TOO long to be taken to a room, and biggest of all, the nurse was able to find a vein to draw blood for additional labs on the first stick - that's almost unheard of for Sandy.  

After the drain replacement, Sandy felt much better, though not great. Labs showed that her pancreas is kind of angry, which is not unusual for this type of procedure. She is still at St Francis, on a delicious clear liquids diet, hoping to be dismissed Thursday afternoon. She's on summer break, after all, and has better things to do than sit in a hospital bed! 

This is a great reminder to be thankful for each good thing each day, not because we're afraid it won't last, but because each day truly is a blessing, and we're only cheating ourselves if we don't fully appreciate them all. 

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