Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Checking in

Hi everyone:

Patty continues to impress with her health rebound. We visited Midwest Heart today, and they were able to again titrate Patty's dosage for her ACE inhibitor and beta blocker, and are shortening the timeframes between the increases. Provided Patty continues to tolerate these bumps in dosage, they will keep increasing the amounts until she is in a desired range. With the beta blocker in particular, Patty is a long way from the ideal.

The photo to the left was one of many I took of Patty during a recent field trip to Silver Springs State Park. I was so pleased to see Patty in action again, and I know that she feels most complete when she is teaching. She has wished aloud that she could teach full-time again, but I'm pleased that she is phasing back into these demands...no sense tempting fate. Having said this, if her health continues to stand up, she should be able to take on a full schedule next school year.

All things considered, our family is seeing 2007 as a pretty good year...knock on wood.

Love,
Brian

P.S. Please feel free to share comments, even if the postings here aren't coming fast and furious...Patty still gets excited every time she notices there's a comment.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Overeaters Not-So-Anonymous

Hi everyone:

Tonight, Patty and I celebrated the wonderful news about her improved condition by sharing a special bottle of wine Patty had purchased as a gift for me three years ago. We had been saving the wine for a very special occasion, and decided that there really aren't many circumstances that could be regarded as more special than what would seem to be a new lease on life. With no chemotherapy or other nasty drugs in her daily medicine regimen, Patty has gradually regained an appetite that had long been compromised. We ate a fairly substantial early dinner tonight, and then whipped up a potato/leek/thyme/gruyere cheese pizza about half an hour ago (trust me, you WANT this recipe.) Patty, who typically is a fairly light eater, scarfed back six good-sized slices without hesitation! All is well...

Love,
Brian

P.S. As I am reading this draft back to Patty, she will almost certainly be worrying that I'm making her sound like a pig. If this stays in, you'll know I was right...

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Something that wasn't supposed to happen

Hi everyone:

Patty had a telephone conversation with Dr. Costanzo on Monday afternoon. Based on the results of the exercise stress test, the echocardiogram and Patty's latest visit to the doctor, Dr. Costanzo has taken Patty off the transplant list for the foreseeable future. In fact, the doctor is recommending no further action be taken at this time other than increasing certain medicines that should protect Patty's heart going forward. Patty has somehow moved from a near-critical case to a simple heart failure management patient. How's THAT for an update?

Dr. Costanzo said that she had never seen a situation like Patty's before, where someone was so severely ill and then rebounded so completely. Almost all medical literature suggests that once heart failure begins, it typically gets worse and rarely gets better. The doctor won't even really guess why this has happened. Patty credits her mother, father, Ellen, Carrie and others for playing the role of guardian angels. I'm not sure what I believe, but I am very happy to hear some good news for my wonderful wife. We're realistic, of course -- Patty still suffers from fatigue, and she could have problems in the future -- but for now our patient is choosing to regard this as a miracle.

With this news, the infrequent postings may become even less frequent. I will pop in with a note from time to time, because I'm sure there will be other news to share along the way. I will certainly pick up the pace again if Patty's health slips at any point, but we're hoping that will never be the case. I cannot tell you how much it means to us that all of you have been checking in and pulling for Patty and our family. She is remarkable, and I again look forward to a long life with her.

Love,
Brian

Friday, October 05, 2007

One from the patient

Hi everyone:

This weekend is one filled with activities surrounding our high school's Homecoming. As we're the parents of a 14-year-old freshman (and a 16-year-old junior), we decided to immerse ourselves in Homecoming activities -- we did so in part because I have obligations to the school, and in part because we're being mother hens.
Tonight we all attended the football games, because I was hosting a face painting booth at which Patrick and several other NAHS students were working. PJ worked like a dog the whole time, and displayed a level of maturity that both surprised me and made me beam with pride. It was a successful evening -- we made a surprising amount of money, especially considering we were charging two dollars per face.
Tomorrow's festivities include the Homecoming Dance, which both Brian and I are chaperoning, and PJ and Kelly are attending. The preparation for said dance will likely be as exhausting as the evening.
I've been feeling just great these days, which is fortunate, because these activities are exhausting to everyone; I'm surprising myself and others by how well I am faring.
That's all for now; thanks for continuing to read this blog. Sorry this is such a boring entry to the collection; however, I've come to believe that BORING = GOOD, at least as the content of this blog is concerned.

Love,
Patty

PJ at work (the first of many customers)

Mr. Jumbohead


Monday, October 01, 2007

Three faces of...




A few funny heartbeats, more meds, etc.

Hi everyone:

Patty met with a nurse practitioner at Midwest Health (Edward Hospital) this afternoon. I had mentioned previously that Dr. Costanzo was attempting to increase Patty's dosage of both beta blockers and ACE inhibitors; this appointment was a check-in to evaluate whether further increases were possible. Last time, Patty's ACE inhibitor (lisinopril) dose was upped; this time, she's been asked to take a larger dose of her beta blocker (metoprolol). We will of course continue to monitor her blood pressure, but so far, so good.

One interesting thing (well, interesting to me, anyway) is that Patty has experienced a handful of minor arrhythmias over the past few days, after a fairly long stretch without anything that felt irregular. Unless I'm mistaken, increasing an ACE inhibitor or beta blocker dose will typically reduce the number of arrhythmias. Interesting...not necesarily meaningful, but interesting...

Patty and I are planning to chaperone the first-ever OEHS Homecoming Dance this Saturday, much to the dismay of our daughter, who finds the prospect "embarrassing." Patty noticed last night that she has plans for Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, in addition to her workday. I suspect that Sunday will be a major decompression day. Patty has more endurance than in the past, but she still has her limits, so we'll just have to see how things go.

Only about five months now until Spring Training...Go Sox (sigh).

Love,
Brian