Wednesday, 23 March 2011

Hopefully, The Last Posting

Saw the GP again today. Apart from slightly raised cholesterol, all the tests were fine. I told him that I still have short strange episodes followed by cold shivers but they were becoming less intense. Obviously, I am hoping that they continue to improve but they may be something I just have to accept.

The good news is that he is happy for me to travel abroad.
The bad news is that I cannot drive for twelve months!

I expect to see the consultant again in a couple of months but (fingers crossed) there no longer seems any need to keep this blog active. Consequently, this is the last report that I hope to be posting on the subject.

My thanks, as ever, go to the very many of you who have provided such valuable moral and practical support to Margaret and me. You know who you are and we are deeply grateful for it.

Don

Friday, 18 March 2011

Contact achieved

Not much to report except that contact was acheived between my GP and my specialist who is on holiday in India. Basically he confirmed what I had already been told.

I continue to have some strange little episodes but they are progressively less marked. I had some blood tests on Tuesday and get the results next week.

More when I know something!

Don

Wednesday, 9 March 2011

Nowt To Report!

My GP still hasn’t heard from the consultant.  Efforts are being made to track him down in India but meanwhile we are working on the old adage of no news being good news.

More when we know something!

Don

Friday, 4 March 2011

Two Heartfelt Words

I went to see my GP today hoping to discover more of what has been going wrong.  However, it turned out to be an anti-climax as he had not yet received the report from the consultant.  I have grown to accept that slow news tends to be good news in this arena so I have rescheduled for next week without too much anxiety!

All of which leaves space on this posting for my Thank Yous.  This goes to all who, one way or another, whether in person, by post, telephone, text, blog , e-mail  or carrier pigeon, sent their best wishes.  Those with relevant experience helped me face the hospital procedures with much higher confidence in the system and the future than I would have had only a few weeks ago.  And the thoughts of all of you have helped Margaret and me enormously.  It has been quite humbling to realise the strength and extent of the support we have received.

To all, I have just two heartfelt words to say.  Thank you.
Don

Tuesday, 1 March 2011

Siderenios, or a Surprise Development!

A big day yesterday.  Jamie and Margaret took me down to Preston in good time for my  MRI scan.  This is the test that I should have had last Wednesday but the machine had broken down.

The test was expected to last about forty minutes but, with the various variations that the consultant had requested, it lasted almost twice that time.

We then had a long afternoon to fill before the scheduled admission at 5 p.m..  Fortunately, they were able to process me an hour early which left Jamie and Margaret free to get off home.  I asked the ward sister if I might see the neurosurgeon before he finished for the day as I had a few questions about the procedure and the aftermath.  She agreed to see what she could do.

The ward into which I had been booked was new and spacious.  The other occupants, Sid, Rod and Ron were very friendly.

Tea was a little strange.  It had been someone else’s choice, that of a lady who presumably had been let out that day.  The main course was Butter Pie which I was told was a Manchester dish although I have no recollection of it from my childhood.  Wikipedia says it is a Lancashire Catholic dish made of potatoes and onions to be eaten on a Friday.

Some time later, my consultant arrived and led me to his room.  As I pulled out my pad of questions, he said I might not need them.  The results of the scan were, he told me, much better than the previous set and he was now of the opinion that I did not have a tumour (you may recall that no tumour had been spotted previously) nor an infection but that the cause of my problems had been a mini stroke.

Obviously, this is a diagnosis not without implications but equally obviously, it is a rather better outcome than I had been anticipating.  And it meant that I was to be released immediately, without the need for surgery or having to consume any more Butter Pie.

Margaret drove down to collect me and I arrived home to a great surprise.  Danae, whose last night it was in England, had been hard at work, not just making dinner but also, with Emma, decorating the kitchen for a Welcome Home party with the Greek word Siderenios, meaning "Ironman" or "Man of steel", hung across the room.  A lovely surprise, complete with celebratory champagne.

I, we, just need to remember that I have not been given a clean bill of health but rather a diagnosis less traumatic than the alternatives with which we had been faced.  There are still issues and steps that need to be taken but the outlook is significantly better than it might have been under the alternatives.  I will find out more when I see my GP in a few days time.

Don