Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Just over two weeks...

... until my oophorectomy.

I haven't given this surgery much thought since I first made the decision to have it. Therefore, it's kind of crazy to me to think that it's just over two weeks away.

This surgery was originally scheduled for August 4. My pre-op assessment is when a tumor was discovered in my bladder, and things very quickly detoured at that point. I was diagnosed with bladder cancer and have had treatments for that.

And now pre-op is in just three days again. I'm hoping and expecting that it will go fine. But it's hard not to think that it won't, since it went anything but fine last time.

So on November 17, I will be having my ovaries and fallopian tubes removed. After this surgery, I will go into "surgical menopause." I don't think Dr. P. is planning to put me on HRT (hormone replacement therapy), but I intend to clarify that on Friday. I won't be able to naturally have more kids, but I am extremely content with the kids I have, so that doesn't phase me at all.

This upcoming surgery is more life-changing than I've allowed myself time to think about. But now that it's coming soon and pre-op is happening soon, it's on my mind a lot. I am so excited to ELIMINATE my risk of ovarian cancer. I am, as always, nervous about being put under anesthesia for the surgery. But it's a short outpatient surgery (just expected to be a couple of hours), so I hope and expect it to go as well as the TURBTs I've had in the past couple of months. This one does require gas to expand my abdomen, and I've heard that can be a bit painful until the gas works its way out, but I'm okay with that. Small price to pay for some medical peace of mind.

And now I am back to where I have to tell people things. One of my kids sort of knows what's going on but the others have no clue. And some of my family knows what's going on but others have no clue (some really do need to know, others don't). So I have to find time and a way to tell the ones who need to know.

A bit of advice for anyone going through anything similar to what I am: All of this is as hard emotionally as it is physically. Give yourself time, space, and grace to deal with the emotions. Don't feel bad or dumb or selfish. It's hard. But you WILL get through it. You are STRONG and you are WORTH IT.

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Overdue Update

So much going on. So many emotions around it all.

I had my second TURBT on September 25. This time, they did a catheter and Cysview blue light dye. It lights up any cancer cells. The intention was to make sure there was no regrowth. They did find a tiny (3mm) hanging tumor. They're not sure if it was regrowth or if they missed it the first time. They did scrape it out. Post-op was harder this time, and more gross (though I'll spare you the details). I'm just glad they got it out.

It's hard to imagine another tumor growing in a mere six weeks. But it's also hard to imagine any tumor could have been missed after an ultrasound, a cystoscopy, and a TURBT. I'm not so much concerned with why it was there. I just want to know if it's going to happen again. Of course, there is no way to know that.

The pathology on the tumor is the same. Slow-growing, early stage. So Dr. H. says if it does regrow, it will likely be slow-growing too. My next cystoscopy is in early January. So now to pray and pray and pray some more that there are no new tumors then. IF there were any new tumors, we'd likely treat with medication (something new that's replacing Mytomicin and has bad side effects but ones that aren't as bad as the side effects of Mytomicin).

So the bladder cancer is under control for now and we've got approval to move ahead with the BRCA stuff.

So... my oophorectomy is on November 17. Removal of my ovaries and fallopian tubes. It's a relatively short outpatient surgery. I expect I'll be working from home the following week and then back to work.

And my mastectomy and DIEP flap reconstruction are now scheduled for February 2. It's expected to be an 8-10 hour surgery with 3-5 days in the hospital afterward. I expect to take vacation days for the time I'm in the hospital and then work from home until I am comfortable to go back to the office. Drains, worry of infection, being allowed to drive... it's a lot to coordinate.

I have a ton of doctor appointments between November 3 and February 14. Pre-op assessment visits, pre-op surgeon visits, surgeries, post-op visits, mammogram, film consultation, cystoscopy. Two days in a row in January, I have three appointments each day. In Ann Arbor. But at least it's not six separate trips there.

Physically I'm fine. Emotionally, I'm up and down. I'm scared of such a long surgery, I'm afraid of dying during surgery, I'm afraid to tell my kids about the BRCA stuff, but I'm so excited to eliminate some risk and greatly reduce other risk. This is such a hard road.

So there you go. More than you wanted to know, more than I want to deal with. My reality.