Friday, September 24, 2010

CHUY DAH - September 2010 issue part 2 (Or the "Now, where was I ?" issue)

INTELLIGENCE OFFICER'S REPORT (SUPPLEMENTAL): The test went fine, they found nothing wrong with my colon, I have to take more fiber, but I can live with that. I also am over-stressed, so the doc told me to relax more, LOL hard to do with no blood wine around.

Capt. Kh'Per Nveid


ADMIRAL'S MEDICAL REPORT (SUPPLEMENTAL): As of 1009.23, I've now had 3 chemotherapy treaments, and was accompanied to this last one by Commander Khavid. The doctor says that the tumor is indeed shrinking with every treatment, and possibly -- when the time for surgery comes, there may not be that much to excise.

I've also had a scan of my heart this month, which years ago was damaged by past chemotherapy treatments and resulted in my suffering a bout of congestive heart failure. In 1999, the first scan revealed that my heart was only pumping at 22% (the normal average is 50%); as of this month, it has IMPROVED to a new rate of 36%.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

September 2010 (aka the "Where's the CHUY DAH at?" issue

FROM THE ADMIRAL'S CHAIR

Greetings to one and all -- and yes, this issue is another late one. For those of you who know my current status, you know why. For those of you who may not, my Medical Status report:

I'd started into my chemotherapy treatments, when I developed a fever that started off at a temperature of 100.4 degrees and leveled off at 104.2 degrees. This little development landed me in the hospital for a week, whereupon the doctors discovered that the port-a-cath implant they'd put in the left side of my chest was being rejected by my body, due to my somewhat diminished immune system. (This is what you get when you don't use Imperial technology!)

So, they removed the implant from my chest and installed a line in my left arm (so if you see me wearing what looks like an elbow pad, it's for protection of the new line).

After 7 days, they allowed me to return home, with the options of either driving back and forth to the hospital for continued antibiotic therapy for a 18-day stretch or having a home health care nurse come to the house and run the IV there. (The 3rd option was staying another 18 days -- I chose to pass on that...) You can guess which I chose.

This also entailed being at the hospital every morning of those 18 days by 9 am (8 am on Saturdays and 8:30 on Sundays). With all that driving, I gotta tell you, I was tired. Bone-tired. And thus, things got put off -- like this issue of CHUY DAH.

So, now you know.

On the plus side, I'm doing well thus far, with no real side-effects from the treatments (2 as of this report) save for a new hairstyle...

OPERATION: YARD SALE (MISSION UPDATE): It's been decided that -- due to real-life complications incurred by the crew -- the operation, which was scheduled for this Saturday, September 11, is officially ON HOLD until next month.

There will be a Gereral Meeting to plot the logistics of this event (as well as catch up on ship business) at the Bread Head Bakery on Saturday at 1 pm.


TO BE CONTINUED