Throughout this entire Christmas break I have been trying to come to grips about the fact that I still have Cushings Disease. This was suppose to be the time of recovery and a fresh start but instead I am still fighting. I have got into some wing dingers with my doctors about how to proceed. I have been called anxious, depressed, and difficult- YES to all 3. Sometimes it is so frustrating to have to explain the very disease for which I already have been diagnosed-to the very same doctors who have given me the diagnoses. To explain that living with this disease is very different than seeing it on paper. So when the questionnaire came in the mail- I responded...
To: (I have omited the doctors names in this blog for privacy)
and
all other doctors who cared for me whom I have never met or met under
my post operative drug induced state.
Last
week I received a questionnaire in the mail regarding the care I
received during my recent stay. After reading through the questions
and seeing the 2 lines for comments I knew it was not enough space and I should write this
letter, something I have been putting off for quite some time.
Let
me first say that although I am not cured or in remission I am not
sorry for my decision to have surgery. I know that the surgical team,
led by Dr. Atkinson did all they could. I am thankful at this time
that Dr. Atkinson again made the decision to try, and for that I am
grateful. Even though the statistics were against me and cure rates
were not on my side at least we tried and that is all I could ask
for.
I
have also appreciated Dr. Norman's efforts and time since I returned
home. By having and open line of communication available, it has
eased some of my worries.
With
that said, I must also say that I was not prepared for how difficult
it would be to hear this news out loud or to actually see it on
paper. The thought of never being healthy again is something that I
simply can not and will not accept. I must know that I have done
everything possible to regain my quality of life.
To
all of you, as doctors, as people who are trained to see in numbers
and clinical findings it is difficult when someone like me comes
along. I am not the textbook case. I may be as far from textbook as
one can get. I do not have any of the classic features and realize my
labs, although not normal are not off the charts. BUT -the fact of
the matter remains- You have removed 2 ACTH secreting tumors from my
pituitary and half of that gland and you diagnosed me in 2008 with
Cushings Disease which is why I am having such a difficult time with
what has been happening since returning home.
Since
the time of my second surgery life has been difficult partly due to
the effects of surgery and partly because I am again defending the
very disease for which I have already been diagnosed. I have been
told either directly or indirectly I am anxious and/or depressed
-which I agree, I am, but it is not because I am an anxious or
depressive person, but because of the situation I am in currently. I
am lacking a cure, a solid plan, or a reason for what is happening.
The things I need , if for no other reason than to have hope for my
future. And for that yes I am anxious and I am depressed. I am sure
you are all aware of the statistics that relate to cushings disease
and I am sure you all know what I should look like, act like ,or what
my numbers should be but what you are not understanding is that no
diploma, no degree on the wall and no amount of statistical research
will allow you to know what living with this disease feels like on a
daily basis.
While
at times you have told me to become more symptomatic, to have higher
labs, to talk with counselors I still have to live my life. I still
have to be a wife, a mother, a sister, a daughter and I know,
statistically speaking, people with this disease loose their quality
of life no matter what symptoms are occurring and what their numbers
say. I do not agree that you can have LESS Cushings. It is either
there or not and I would hope this would be confirmed by my past
laboratory findings. I sometimes feel like if I were a 500 pound
diabetic this would be easier but I am not that way because I am
aggressive in obtaining treatment, I would not let myself get to that
point. In case you haven't noticed, the words no and can't and wait
make me fight harder because saying no and wait to me only mean I am
losing more time with my kids, my family, with my life.
So
in case you are wondering what my life has been like since surgery so
you can understand why I might be a little anxious or depressed
about my future and to know why numbers and symptoms are different
that actually living with this disease. I will tell you:
Every
day my body aches. I feel like I have the flu all day.
My
muscles are weak and stiff, especially my calves. I walk like I am 80
years old. Getting off the couch requires an all out effort involving
all family members including the dog. Because even the smallest tasks
are difficult, my children have become my caretakers for even the
smallest of tasks. Things like opening up a bottle of soda which by
the way, is a full time job alone, considering the amount of liquid I
consume in a day. These are tasks I should be able to do, but can't.
After opening the 6th bottle of sprite yesterday, my 7
year old asked to be fired.
As
a result of this relentless intake of liquid, I am up every night,
all night in the bathroom. It is usually around 2 AM when I weigh the
benefits and drawbacks to Depends undergarments. The labs here say
everything is normal. I have to disagree. Normal does not include
coming home from the grocery store with 60.00 worth of soda and no
food.
Hot
flashes- not the mild, I think I need to take off my jacket and fan
my face kind, but resisting the urge to strip down naked in the
checkout line at Target.
No
energy. It takes every ounce I have just to shower. Which I only
consider doing on occasion since surgery.
I
AM anxious and I AM depressed. I just disrupted my entire families
lives. I just had a huge surgery and spent a month in bed, only to
find out I still have this ugly disease. Couple that with the fact
that I have had inconsistent care from my doctor here and I would say
being anxious and depressed is what one would expect.
I
also feel that to understand how much Cushings disease has taken from
me, and how my life has changed- you must understand what my life was
like before it entered my life and even during the period of
remission.
I
was fun. People actually liked to be around me and on occasion, I was
considered the life of the party. I was always willing to try new
things and put myself out there. I smiled, I laughed, and generally
had a good time.
I
was smart. I graduated with honors with a double major now I
struggle to spell the simplest of words or compute fifth grade math
problems.
I
was physically fit. I ran races, participated in boot camps, enjoyed
kickboxing, lifted weights. I played outside with my children.
I
had a career. I was a teacher- I could handle the rigors of the
profession. I won awards for my teaching and accepted some
challenging positions- now there is no way I could handle the demands
of being a teacher again.
I
was an attentive wife. I ran our household with precision. I was
organized, efficient and my house was clean. I was even able to cook
an occasional meal. I gave my husband the attention he deserves.
I
was a better Mom. My kids could count on me to be at their events, to
volunteer in their classrooms, to help with their projects. I was
able to give my kids the time and energy they deserved. The time I am
loosing with them because of this disease can never be recovered.
Moving
forward is difficult and something I do not yet have a grasp on.
I
am confused. I am upset. I am sick. The one thing I would like to
make perfectly clear is that I am not sick BECAUSE I am anxious. I am
not sick because I am depressed.
I
am anxious and depressed BECAUSE I am sick, because I do not have
answers, because my life has been turned upside down and because I
simply want to get my life back.
I
am very aware that I do not present with Cushings in a way that is
either typical or normal. That has become very clear to me. But here
is what I do not understand. These are the questions I would like
answered so that I can move forward in the best way possible.
We
know that 2 ACTH secreting tumors have been removed from the right
side of my pituitary. We also know the right side of my pituitary was
removed. We know, based on numbers I am not in remission, I am not
cured.
Is
there any other explanation, other than Cushings Disease, for these
tumors?
Could
the reason for no cure be, the left side, or diseased tissue around
my carotid artery, or in the cavernous sinuses?
Is
there a possibility that there is a tumor somewhere other than my
pituitary?Before I make any more decisions or a decision that is
life altering, I need to know- that we have explored every other
option, possibility or diagnoses- as remote as they can be, knowing
that my next step will be life changing and not something I am going
to do without knowing- it could be NOTHING else. Is there any other
tests to be done for the adrenals to test for functioning, etc.? Is
there any possibility that a CT scan would not show everything? Is it
possible that there could be a tumor hidden in the middle of these
glands going undetected? If there is further testing that could help
in these areas, I would like to explore those possibilities before I
consider any more treatment.
With
ALL of this said, I hope that we can move forward in figuring out the
best way to beat this. I am sick. I am sick of talking about
Cushings. I am sick of researching Cushings. I am sick of writing
about cushings. I am sick of being sick.
I
hope together we can exhaust all other possibilities before moving
forward with something that will ultimately exchange one disease for
another but one that I will move forward with if there is a chance at
regaining my life.
Again.
Thank you for sticking with my case, as difficult as it has been, I
want you to to know I am grateful and thankful for all of you!
(See-
2 lines would have never been enough!)
Mary
Kahl
Mary you did right! writing about all your feelings should help you but mostly them to try to find the definite cure. If there is another tumor they have to find it and eliminate. Always praying for your recovery and still waiting for your visit here!love, Pereiras
ReplyDelete