Guest guest Posted July 12, 2006 Report Share Posted July 12, 2006 I was in the hospital June 28 to July 4; In the month previous I had pretty much become a shut-in. My activity was down to throwing a stuffed animal for my dog in the yard for five minutes a day. Prodigious (up to 480 mL) dark-colored sputum production began going down, under 240 mL, and I began to feel that my left lung was turning from a sponge to a stone. " Ballooning " pain in my left shoulder suggested heart problems, too. My peak flow dipped under 400, and was at 350 just before my in-laws drove me to the hospital. A bed opened up at 6pm, right around nursing shift change, so I didn't get hooked up to IVs until 10pm. Blood draws kept me up 'til midnight--I don't think I slept more than 20 hours total in the six evenings of my stay. I was on big bags of IV potassium chloride with IV antibiotics of Amikacin (also known as Amikin) and Meropenem (AKA Merrem), as well as 2x daily IV shots of Solumedrol and the oral AB Rifampin, best known as a TB drug but used for other infections. I impressed the night nurse with my knowledge of bronchiectasis and my dogged attempts to get well--so much so that she got me a private room the next day (a good thing; my roommate, whose stay appeared to be drug- or crime-related, had bad taste in afternoon TV.) Care of me started in earnest in the private room; respiratory therapists showed up every four hours with SVNs and percussion therapy; where the one first-night RT used her hands, I had a string of folks who used a clear, soft-plastic mask with a rolled edge, beating me with it. That was just okay--the best RT's, I found, are slightly-built women with light hands and arms, who can let the " pop " of cupped hands mobilize secretions, as we euphemize it. I forgot how violent RT was; I could only take 10-15 minutes of it before I was dripping with sweat and gasping. Then again, I am in a weakened state, having lost 5% of my body weight in a month. Also, I have used the Vest for 7 years now, exclusively. With a new health insurance plan, I am going to look into having a home RT person pound me every few weeks to a month. My wife would do it, for that matter. The RT people aren't the resource they were my last hospital stay, 8 years ago--those folks were full of concern, sharing therapy ideas--indeed, a young woman RT with bronchitis had sampled the Vest the morning before she pounded me 'way back then; it wouldn't be too much of a stretch to say she saved, or at least greatly altered, my life--the RTs this time were quiet, overworked, working 8- or perhaps 12-hour shifts. Older nurses will tell you how task-, rather than patient-oriented new nurses are; I was just another gross container of phlegm for too many RTs--most didn't bother to introduce themselves. Like nurses here in the USA, there is a shortage of RTs; I felt this most when I had neither pounding or SVN for a 15-hour stretch; I finally had a nurse find vials of ipratroprium and albuterol and figured out the wall air spigot. A couple of RTs gave me oxygen after rougher post-pounding coughing spells. I shied away from oxygen, fearing it'd be like an instantly-addictive drug, remembering long-ago ice-hockey TV broadcasts, the fleetest players coming off the ice and just whiffing away like the oxygen was something savory and delicious. I strapped the stuff on and said, " yeah, so? " I guess I've got good SATs, is that it? On night number 3 I was watching TV (I am the only person left who has neither dish nor cable; viewing cable only confirms how easy it is to save $40-$50 a month) when a pain began in my right lung, mid-front. Coincidentally, my brother came to visit and the night nurse came to check my vitals--maybe start an AB IV, and an RT started an SVN. The pain began rising, like a bubble in a Lava Lamp, slowly moving up my lung. Nurses ask what pain is like on a scale of one to ten; I said this was a nine. Did I want a pain pill, she asked. I rolled my eyes. " Pain MEANS SOMETHING, " I said--either infection, or...I went on to say that this pain was like pneumonia pain, but it was up high in my lung, and it was sudden. The nurse left and returned. Here, take this nitro pill under your tongue. " My heart is GOOD, " I thundered. " 140 over 100 is my 'hospital' blood pressure--I'm stressed because I'm here. " (My brother stood a couple steps from the bed, watching bemusedly.) The pain kept rising, pushing up, up. The RT offered another SVN and oxygen and I took him up on both. After a few minutes the pain lessened and became less frightening; the nurse went and called my doctor as I asked her. The RT left and my brother and I had a talk. The next morning the crack-of-dawn RT let slip that charts on my room door suggested I had TB (I didn't) and had had a pleural infusion (the source of the pain--opinions vary.) Earlier day three I was seen by a very-well-regarded infectious disease specialist; he confirmed the move to a private room by putting me in isolation, closing the door and having everyone entering wear a mask, (and sometimes a gown) and having me wear one on trips for x-rays, echocardiogram and PICC line installation. The ID doc was terrific; our talk was as substantial and thoughtful as those with my lung doc, whom I've known for 15 years or more. The one IV drug, Amikacin (pronounced am ih KAY cin) evidently is an older drug that has been shown to be recently successful in (I think it was) some journal article. As kind of a terrycloth bathrobe takeaway gift, my last and best RT, Vicki, gave me a disposable, single-patient-use " Vest " --I use quotes because it's more of a flat shape, 8 inches by about four feet. You wrap it around yourself like a big bandage and affix it to itself with Velcro. Hoses insert into soft-plastic/clear latex openings, rather than fitting over nozzles. So you have sort of a disposable paper-plastic life preserver around you, more or less only around the bottom of your ribs; then you turn on the compressor and adjust pressure and frequency. Another difference is a small vent that bleeds a bit of air near the hoses. The big advantage to me over the full Vest (which resembles something a SWAT team member wears) is that this band would work on pleuritic pain/congestion, at least in the lower lung area where i have to resort to a hand-held G5 percussor. The all-white strip is labeled Single Patient Use The VESt Airway Clearance System/Hill-Rom A Hillenbrand Industry. I don't know if the Vest folks sell this; given their rebuff when I asked if they'd sell me a custom-made vest (with rear-mounted hose nozzles), I'd suggest asking an RT or hospital if they'd sell you one. I felt my lungs clearing; they worked silently. My mind had thoughts of working around the house, painting, outdoor work--surprising, alien ideas to my long-sick self. Hospital food was delicious, ordered by phone, showing up bedside an hour later. I had liquid supplements at every meal. My legs made me think of concentration-camp survivors; I've never had body-image problems, but I hated the feel of my leg bones jarring together at night when I tried to sleep. I was too embarrassed to ask for a second pillow. By day six my lung doc said he wanted to get me out of the hospital before I caught something; the next afternoon I was home, a nurse waiting for me to teach me how to self-administer needleless IVs. Squeamish as I am (I hide behind a pillow watching TV medical dramas) I have done all right for a week now--though I am waiting for a nurse to come and open a blocked line. I am home all alone as wife and daughter cool off at the beach five hours west. The IV schedule doesn't allow much sleep, as one AB is every 8 hours, the other every 12, and sputum color indicates there's still a battle going on down there. Volume is down to 60-120mL a day. I am still somewhat exhausted, but a tiny bit less each day; took the dog out in the back yard last night for the first time in 2 weeks. I have the feeling if I just can get enough rest, I'll feel better--I look forward to getting out of the house, getting some exercise. My doctors and a bunch of nurses and respiratory therapists, as well as dozens of people praying, have pushed back death for me; I have great hopes all their hard work was not in vain. Speaking of Vests, I have to go shake. Hope I haven't bored you. 55, Bronch 20 years, Arizona USA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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