Tuesday 13 March 2012

Radio and Herceptin

I've finished my first full week of radiotherapy as of yesterday, and am still feeling pretty good. My skin doesn't feel any more sore than after the first session (and it helps that I had almost 4 full days to recover between Friday morning and Monday evenings dose). Getting to the Bracknell clinic has been fine, and even getting in and out of Reading on Friday and Monday wasn't too bad.

I'm doing well on the energy front as well, probably helped by the last 2 days spent helping to construct the garden with my Dad and Simon, althugh today I'm having a restful day as I have an aching right arm. Having said restful, I've been setting up construction plans and drawings and talking to landscapers, but certainly more calm than the last few days.

I had my first Herceptin treatment on Friday, I was at Reading hospital by 8:30 (ish thanks to traffic), for radiotherapy, then up to the chemo suite for the Herceptin. Chemo suite there is much bigger than the one at Windsor, and is in what must be an old childrens ward from the 1920s - the walls are tiled in part with pictures from fairy tales, so it wasn't too bad of a location to spend the whole day. It took a fair while to get going with my treatment, as there was a problem getting into my port. I'm still quite swollen from the op, and the port seems to have shifted upwards to under the incision for it, so after 3 attempts at getting in (not painful, as I'm numb still on that part of my chest, but a bit uncofortable), and then an x-ray to check the positioning, they decided to try and go in on my arm as I was getting more swollen from the attempts. Thankfully there was a specialist vascular access nurse on duty through this, so she was able to put in a canula in my left arm using ultrasound. By my next treatment, the port should be fine, but a little annoying that they weren't able to use it.

By the time I was hooked up and ready to go for the Herceptin, it was 11:30, and through the 2 hour infusion I had to keep my arm straight, so wasn't able to do my embroidery. Thankfully I had Kate with me for company, and the lady in the next seat was chatty as well, so it passed fairly quickly. Infusion was done by 13:30, by which timer Kate had managed to find the M&S inside the hospital, so we were well provisioned with sandwiches, fruit and chocolate. Then I just had to sit and wait for 4 hours and hope I didn't have an allergic reaction. For this one I'd been given some Piriton before hand, so I was a little sleepy, but aside from that, no reaction. Some ladies report feelilng a little off for a day after the infusion, but I've not had any problems. Eventually, at half 5 I was allowed to go home having passed a pretty dull day sat in a comfy chair. Once I was detached from the drugs I did at least manage to get some stitching done.
Next Herceptin will be 30th March, where I'll have a 90 minute infusion and then go straight home.

Just 9 more radiotherapies to go and then the tough bits of treatment are over, finally.

No comments:

Post a Comment