Sunday, May 5, 2013

Celebrating 6 Years Old!


Happy birthday to our beautiful little 6 year old!  What an amazing weekend – getting to celebrate Princess Kennedy’s 6th birthday.  A little over a year ago, we didn’t even know if 6 was possible, now we know everything is possible! 

Things have been normal over the last month, which is great.  Being typical me, I never have enough time to sit down and catch up.  Since my last post, Kennedy had a spinal, some blood draws and typical LTM procedures.  Maddox went to her last spinal procedure and got a kick out of Kennedy waking up from the Ketamine.  I think she told him she loved him at least 20 times and ensured him that he had 4 eyes and 2 noses.  Kennedy is keeping up with gymnastics and dance and has been doing very well in school.  Can you believe she reads at a first grade level?  This too is amazing as chemo brain often causes learning disorders.

Shortly after my last post, our 13-year old floor friend Tyler passed away, as did 3-year old Jordan .  We were able to pull off an amazing experience for Tyler the Thursday before his passing.  I am grateful for everyone who stepped up to make his last days with his family amazing.  I only wish I could have done more and was secretly hoping that a little happiness would somehow save him. 

For now we are all  just staying busy and counting our blessings.  1 year, 3 months and 10 days left of chemo left.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Kennedy's Home and Team Tyler


     
Reading in the hospital with a rocking t-shirt.


Kennedy is home and is doing much better.  Her fevers stopped and we were released on Sunday night.  The blood transfusion helped up her counts and the chemo hold helped her liver recover.  We went to clinic today and her liver counts were nearly normal and her ANC was 700, all good.  We resumed chemo tonight.

I know I’ve said it before  - but we are lucky.  We are lucky because Kennedy has ALL Leukemia and is low risk.  She is doing a fabulous job of kicking cancer’s ugly ass – excuse the profanity.  Unfortunately, not all kids and families are so lucky.  Tonight I will tell you about Tyler Blatt.

There are a lot of things one is exposed to while spending a week in a hospital.  One, you see families grieving for children who choose to take their own life unexpectedly,  you see families that leave their children to sit alone in a hospital room all day, you see a tremendous amount of love and support when families face the news of despair and you also hear about fellow cancer patients struggling with their battle. I was hit hard this stay partially due to Jordan (the little boy I mentioned before) but mostly due to Tyler.

Miss. K helping make dinner
Tyler is 12 years old, maybe he is 13 now.  Back in March of last year, I met his mom Nancy when like us, they were hit with the news of Leukemia.  For Tyler, it wasn’t low risk ALL but a complicated form of AML.  Tyler had fallen playing basketball and was complaining of some pain.  Never would they have ever imagined the pain was caused by AML Leukemia.  They’ve had a tough journey.  We had six inpatient weekend stays at Loyola and for most of them, Tyler was inpatient.  I admired Nancy’s upbeat attitude and found the window chalk they used in Tyler's room really cool.  It’s funny the things your remember.  Mom made it so cool for Tyler to be stuck there.  The last time I saw Tyler was at last year’s Cure Search walk and I was so excited he was finally out of the hospital; that was in September.

Unlike Kennedy, the chemo didn’t work for Tyler.  He’s been subjected to chemo that most grown men couldn’t handle, that plus radiation and other intensive cancer fighting therapies, Tyler's body is tired.  At this point they are done fighting.  So why am I sharing this?  Well, I’m hoping to make Tyler’s next week/months AMAZING.  My heart is broken and I can’t even imagine what they are all going through.  I really don't know what else to do but give this kid some happy time.
This is Tyler (I stole this from his blog). 

I NEED HELP from everyone.  Any connections you have; please use them.  Theater, museums, any cool experiences you think Tyler would enjoy, let’s donate them.  A family photo shoot, a dinner out somewhere fun, a chance to do anything really cool,  a huge silly cake, anything!  I too am exhausting all of my resources so expect some calls!!!  Out of respect for the family’s privacy, if you would like to donate some fun for Tyler, please reach out to Megan Gertz, child life specialist at Loyola, her email address is  megertz@lumc.edu

I ‘m not one to ask for things but I need this for them; they need this.  Thank you in advance for anything you can dream up!  Experiences are needed more than money.  

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Inpatient at the Big House (AKA Loyola)


K and her new bald barbie
We were sent to the hospital on Monday night.  Kennedy had a 102.7 fever and instead of being directed to the emergency room, doc told us to have her admitted.  We are still here.

For the most part, outside of the cough and fever, Kennedy was feeling chipper for the first 2 days but has been feeling icky the last two, likely because she has been up coughing all night with an intermittent fever.  Her viral culture came back as Rhinovirus, which is a cold and no bacteria has grown on her blood cultures to say it is anything but that but they still have her on an antibiotic.

Warning Signs on her door
Her liver enzymes are 30 times the upper limit of normal so she is officially on chemo hold for at least 1 week until they go down to normal range.  Her ANC dropped from 19,000 last week at clinic after steroids to 300 which means she is neutropenic.  Her hemoglobin is low and she will be getting a blood transfusion today.  I’m not sure where all of this is coming from; it seems scary that a cold could cause this much distress on her body.
  
We escaped the room - shh don't tell
There are hazard signs on her door advising all nurses and visitors to be dressed in masks, gowns and gloves before visiting because she is contagious.   This also means Kennedy cannot leave her room and go to the playroom or for walks. I like the extra precaution taken by docs and nurses; I am especially grateful for the signs since she is neutropenic.  I can’t even tell you how many times docs and nurses didn’t wear gloves when the signs weren’t up.
Arts and Crafts

Last night, to prevent K from going stir crazy, we broke out (dressed in a mask and gloves) and went for a walk down the hall.  I also learned that dad did the same during the day.  It’s funny how breaking the rules makes her so happy!  It’s tough being in solitary.

We are hoping to go home on Saturday.  We need to be fever free for 24 hours and her white blood cells need to go up to be sent home.  So far, no such luck.  So we wait.  Praying her liver counts to down, her hemoglobin goes up and her fever stays away.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Special Spaces, Strike out Cancer and other wonderful things


  
K with Maddox at Wrestling
Yesterday was clinic and the beginning of maintenance cycle 3 of steroids and Vincristine.  Already we see a big change in her personality and cannot wait for this pulse of chemo to be over.  It concludes with another dose of Vincristine next week.  I received 3 calls at work today from Kennedy about her hair falling out and Gene has experienced the wrath of hunger, thankfully it is just seven days.  Not sure what is up with the hair!

Just being normal
We have been involved in some wonderful programming this month.  Gary and Alex (Kennedy’s BFF’s parents) nominated Kennedy to be the “Patient of the Year” for the annual bowling Strike Out Cancer event.  She received a ginormous bowling belt.  When the belt was presented, I must admit it was quite surreal.  The young man who presented Kennedy with her trophy told K’s story. I was so sad.  I felt so bad for the little girl and family going through childhood cancer but that family was us, me, her.  I was amazed at how far I’ve removed all of us from the equation; we just pretend everything is okay so often, we really do believe it.  Maybe that is a good thing.
K with her Strike out Cancer Belt

Brave at clinic - no tears!
Our neighbor and friend, Laura, also recommended Kennedy to a girl friend who is the director of Chicago’s chapter of Special Spaces, an organization that redesigns bedrooms for critically ill children.  Kennedy will be the organization’s second room remodel.  Kennedy is ecstatic.  I received a call from Kelly Knox, the Chicago chapter’s director and within a week, the entire team came out to meet with Kennedy to get her feedback and ideas. It was an amazing experience.  Kennedy’s new room is scheduled to be complete on May 4, one day after her 6th birthday.

Teary eyed moment for mom
K with Ella at clinic while we were away
I’ve been bad about blogging lately because everything has been normal.  We feel like we have a normal life.  So here is my update since my “Toxic Liver” post.  While on vacation, Kate, Ella and Grandma Linda took Kennedy to clinic and everything went well.  K’s liver counts were only 10 times more toxic than normal (down from 20).  One week later at clinic they were up 12 time the upper limit, still within acceptable range.  One month later, she is still trending at 10 times the upper limit of normal.  The doctor told us to expect liver toxicity, it is just a part of the chemo treatment and it is hard on her organs.

That’s all for now.  Praying that we will get through the next 6-days without pain or incident.  Fingers crossed.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Toxic Liver


Getting hydrated at clinic

This week threw us for a loop.  When things seem to be going well, there has to be hiccup.  We planned an adult only get away; that should have been our clue that something was going to happen.  Kennedy started showing symptoms of a cold last Friday; which kept Mom and Kennedy home from a ski getaway with Dad, Maddox and some friends. K started feeling better on Wednesday and we were all set to send her to school on Thursday - wrong.  Thursday morning she threw up.  This made me worry and I started to add up symptoms – bruising, joint pain, headache, stomachache, nausea, cough, stuffy nose, night sweats, weight loss - the same symptoms we saw when Kennedy was diagnosed.  I stayed home and called Dr. Manera and he told me to bring her in on Friday morning.  She threw up again on Thursday night and was miserable.  I did everything I could not to panic.

Friday it snowed and the world forgot how to drive.  It took us nearly 1.5 hours to go 25 miles to clinic  When we did get there, doc determined K’s counts were good but she was severely dehydrated.  They pumped two bags of fluid into her and sent her home.  She also lost some weight (3 lbs) so we were able to decrease her weekly chemo by ½ pill – which was fine because I took it upon myself to decrease it by that much the night before.  I mean, who can give a pill that causes nausea to a kid that just threw up so I gave her the smaller dose.  (She takes 1.5 pills of 6mp four times per week and 1 pill 3 times, I gave her 1 on Thursday night versus the scheduled 1.5).

Two hours after we left clinic Dr. Manera called, our conversation went something like this (of course this is abbreviated to edit out me panicking):

Doc: “We got her virus culture back and it is rino-virus, aka the common cold”
Me: “That’s great, just a cold…hmm, why is she throwing up?”
Doc:  “Lots of kids have been very sick from rino-virus, in fact, I’ve had to hospitalize a few for dehydration and fevers”
Me:  “Okay, guess we are one of the lucky ones”
Doc:  “There is another thing….her liver enzyme counts were very high, more than 20 times the normal level of toxicity”
Me:  “Well, what do we do, what causes this?”
Doc:  “It could be the chemo, we will need her to come in on Wednesday and have her blood taken again for counts, if it is still high, we will need to put her on chemo hold”
Me:  “Oh no, Gene and I will be on vacation, should we stay home?
Doc:  "No, no big deal, lets test her the following Monday then"
Me:  "But then she will have another round of Methotrexate on Wednesday night, I’m sure I can find someone to take her”
Doc:  “Just make sure they have a POA”
Normalcy - K lost her first tooth

I got off the phone and flipped out.  First, how could I send K to clinic with anyone but us?  Then, of course I played doctor by researching on the internet and learned that many docs stop chemo when the patient’s liver enzymes are 5 times toxicity.  Of course I paged the doctor back and told him we should put her on chemo hold now.  He talked me out of it - stating that by Wednesday it might go down, it could just be from the cold and dehydration.  I made him swear that her best interest was taken into account, regardless of the protocol.  He assured me her best interests were being considered first.  I can’t do anything but trust him, he is one of the best and he told me he’s seen this countless times.

Then the planning started…do we stay home?  Do we send her to clinic?  If so, with who?  No one knows where clinic is, or about how we don’t sign in, where to sit so we are away with flu-sick peds kids, how to put on Emla cream pre-clinic, etc.  I called 4 people to figure it out – Grandma and my 3 new friends that I made from clinic during the past year - Kate (Ella’s Mom who’s been through this), Donna (her son is also in treatment) and Megan (the child life specialist at Loyola).

Cookies made by K when sick
We figured it out.  Kate is going to go to clinic with Grandma and Donna and Megan will be there too.  Kate even made it one step more special by letting Ella miss school to keep Kennedy company. Kennedy is ecstatic she can sleep at Grandmas the night before and can’t wait for her clinic play date with Ella.  She hasn’t had a play date in months!

I spent the last few days scheduling every day we are gone.  Who goes where when and what meds are given on what days and who will give them.  I have a daily calendar that is structured by the hour.  For me this is huge, I am NOT an organized person.  If anything, we are 5 hours away.

Now to get on the plane tomorrow morning….




Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Kicking Cancer's Butt and Icky Chemo


Waiting at clinic

Today marks almost a year since Kennedy was diagnosed with ALL B-cell leukemia.  It was February 2, 2012, when we learned our 4-year old baby was in for the fight of her life.  Here we are, almost a year later and we are 1/3 done with treatment.  Some how we face the year anniversary of her diagnosis with dread; I don’t know if we will ever erase the feeling of that day from our hearts but we will certainly try to move past it.  So now it’s time to party, to celebrate her life and this past year of kicking cancer’s butt.  I’m not quite sure what we’ll do yet but we will definitely thing of something!

CureSearch 2013 Brochure
I mentioned in my last blog that Kennedy was being used in a video montage for CureSearch.  Well, we also found that they are using Kennedy for the nationwide CureSearch Walk brochure cover.  It’s part exciting and part sad.  It’s exciting that out of a ton of patients and pictures, they chose Kennedy to represent CureSearch in a big way.  It is sad because it is for children’s cancer and I wish from the bottom of my soul that she didn’t have cancer to be a model for.  Guess what charity is my focus this year????  Anyone gearing up for that September, CureSearch walk yet?

K and Zoe Snowball
Kennedy had chemo on Wednesday – the yucky kind called a lumbar puncture (or intrathecal).  They inject Methotrexate into her spine to prevent any rogue cancer cells from entering her brain or spinal column.  This treatment is the worst for us as parents to watch since Kennedy is put under.  This time it was particularly painful because she was overdosed with Ketamine and it took three attempts to puncture the correct part of her spine.  The procedure started with the anesthesiologist (that I never met before – Dr. Ebogi?) administering 20 mg of Ketamine.  Her normal dose is 20 mg and he pushed it in rather quickly.  Once Dr. Sarvita punctured her back, Kennedy mumbled “ow” lightly; this is typical.  Then K repeated “ow” and then added “Hi Doctor” – not good.  The anesthesiologist decided to administer more Ketamine, 10 more mg, way more than she needed.  After 2 more attempts, Dr. S punctured the correct part of her spine and we were done.  Another highlight of last weeks visit is that her 6MP dose was upped.  K didn’t gain weight but she did get taller – darn those growth spurts.

The after effects of the chemo weren’t good.  She normally handles it all pretty well but she was terribly nauseated for the rest of the day, exhausted and complained of back pain.  All of which could have been avoided.  The good part about the clinic visit that day is that we were in and out quick, under 2.5 hours, which never happens.  Also, Kennedy received a special bald American Girl Doll from Megan, K’s child life specialist and my friend.  Her new friend’s name is Zoe Snowball – aka Snowy.
Roller Skating

Skiing
Safari Land
Safari Land
Outside of an unpleasant clinic experience, all else has been going well.  Mom had the flu so we spent a week a part where I couldn’t hug or kiss my princess - masks and sanitizer were a big must in our house.  I took 2-weeks off during holiday break and spent much needed time with both kids.  We went ice skating, roller skating, had play dates, visited John Hancock Observatory, Safari Land and anywhere else we could think of.  When dad was home we did more ice skating and even went skiing.  As a crazy working parent, this time with them was more precious then I could have imagined. Going back to school and work was sad for all of us!

That’s all for now…18.5 months until we are done with stupid cancer!
Observatory

Hanging with Emma


Thursday, December 20, 2012

Hair-loss, Clinic and CureSearch


Holiday Fun
Health wise, the month has been good.  Kennedy had clinic last week and her counts were 900, we lost enough of the steroid weight to prevent an increase in her meds and everything is returning to normal.   Emotionally, it has been a tough month.  Her favorite nurse wasn’t at clinic and one of the newer nurses missed her port causing much distress.  Also, Kennedy’s hair started to fall out again. 

Missing Hair
Clinic is traumatic enough for K; a missed port access causes so many problems I can’t even explain.  It takes months to overcome a miss.  After the ER visit miss, Kennedy has been anxious and distraught about clinic visits.  The ride there is tense and once we get to clinic, she clings to me or Gene for dear life and screams in horror when the needle (the size of a fishing hook) comes at her.  Her favorite nurse Anette calmed her fears by hitting it dead-on the last few visits but all that was erased when Anette wasn’t in clinic last week.  I had to listen to Kennedy scream as they kept adjusting the needle to get in; very traumatic.   The whole process makes me ill.

Making Hair-loss fun
Two weeks ago we noticed her hair started falling out again.  I can’t explain the dread or pit in my stomach when I noticed this.  At first I noticed it getting thinner, I could have sworn it was coming in thicker.  Then, as we were putting her pigtails in, I noticed the parts seeming overly wide; then it hit me.  I ran my fingers through her hair and more than 30 strands easily came out.  I did it again, and again they fell out, strand by strand.  Gene and I looked at each other and we both felt it. It is hard enough to know your 5 year old is fighting cancer but for some unexplainable reason, seeing it (through the nausea or hair loss) is so much more devastating.  I took a time out and cried (privately).   Our nanny thought we shouldn’t tell Kennedy about it but we promised we wouldn’t keep anything from her; I mean what if it all falls out again?  We told her how pretty she is so it really doesn’t matter, it fell out once and came back, etc - thankfully she agreed.  I had her laughing and she seemed fine with it all.  She’s got such a great spirit.   Over the past few days, it seems as if the hair-loss has slowed.  Hopefully it just thinned and will grow back quickly.

Some good news:  CureSearch reached out this past month to include K in some of their campaign collateral for 2013.   They requested a few pictures and quotes and put together a short 30 second slideshow video of Kennedy’s journey to be used on the website (see inset).  They will also be including her in some of the campaign collateral.  Kennedy loves the attention.  I love the meaning behind the organization.  Every day, 36 children are diagnosed with cancer, 1 out of 5 children won’t make it.  That translates to 7 of the children diagnosed today will likely die.  CureSearch works on raising money to find a cure.  Unlike some of the other great pediatric cancer charities out there that provide gifts and great experiences for kids with cancer, this one actually aims to stop cancer if it hits.  This is so important considering only 4 percent of funds raised for cancer by the American Cancer Society goes towards curing pediatric cancer.  The study Kennedy is on is backed by CureSearch.

Kennedy at her holiday show
This last week has been tough on the world with the loss of so many lives, mostly children, in Connecticut.  I’ve been trying to not watch TV, read the newspaper or follow Facebook so closely.  It is so emotionally painful, I try to tune it out.  For the first time probably ever, most of the world envisioned what it would be like to lose a child; they put themselves in the shoes of the parents that will never see their little ones again.  For me, I can’t do that, I try so hard not to.  It’s has taken me months to not think about what it is like to lose a child.  When Kennedy was diagnosed, pushing those thoughts out of my head was a daily challenge and I can’t go back to that place again.  A day after the tragedy, a friend asked innocently “can you even imagine what it is like to lose a child?”, and sadly I answered, “I have thought about it too much”.

Hold your kids tight, kiss them often and let them know how much you love them.  Never take a single second for granted!