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A Lot to Consider

Posted Feb 03 2009 1:22am
Another good day. My radiologist highly recommended IMRT (Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy). Click on the link to get a full description. The two cent version is that IMRT is a highly precise radiotherapy that is used to avoid causing unnecessary damage to cells anorgans d in the immediate area surrounding the tumor tissue. And thee's a lot of close organ proximity in the pelvis. I would receive chemotherapy in conjunction with the radiation to maximize the effectiveness of the radiation. The radiotherapy kills some cancer cells while only injuring others. The chemotherapy is designed to destroy the cells that are injured but not destroyed.

Currently, I am leaning toward receiving treatment here at the Eastern Regional Medical Center. Daniela and I have been talking all evening about his - going back and forth with the options. It would require me to be away from my family for six weeks and that would be difficult. Daniela is committed to being down here with me for two or three non-consecutive weeks - that will mean the world to me. And I'm lucky enough to know she wouldn't have it any other way. It will be a push to be gone that long, especially if the side effects are heavy, but what means a great deal to me is the phenomenal relationship the staff have to the patients and to one another.

The staff at CTCA are clear that a patients emotional health is as important as their physical health if the goal is to achieve the absolute maximum effectiveness with treatment. Do I feel strong enough to handle it in another environment, i.e., locally and at home? Absolutely. But to be treated in a facility where all aspects of my therapy are covered by one group of closely knit staff is a rare opportunity.

Then I must take into consideration that the oncological therapy could cause temporarily debilitating side effects such as serious skin irritation or significantly increased pain. There is also the possibility of permanently debilitating side effects. With that as a possibility, I like knowing that those who will treat me already have a rapport with one another, as well the same context from which they take on their commitment. It's just not common and from where I stand today, it seems like an incredible opportunity to maximize the effectiveness of my healing.

I had a CT scan this morning. An hour later I was meeting with my radiologist and reviewing the scan images on his computer. In my experience at the hospitals I have been to thus far, that kind of turn around time is unheard of. Usually CT scan results take days to receive. Yesterday my blood was drawn and hours later, the doctor was reviewing the results with me. If I have any kind of problem or the the doctors have any uncertainty about me, the tests are completed and the results are reviewed in hours, again with the entire team available to consult one another. Now I understand why people come here from hundreds of miles away. The service, like I said, it just phenomenal.

And, at home...having family, and the kind of community I am blessed with so close by is also a powerful strength. I have not made my decision yet. Tomorrow will provide more answers. And then I will have a few days - maybe a week - to make up my mind.
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