In July 2011, I strained my back working on our house and moving furniture. Mainly because I have no history of significant back problems, I did not think much about it and tried to take it easy. A week or two later I developed numbness down parts of my legs, the outside of my feet, and my heels.
I went to my internal medicine doctor, Dr. Reznik, who recommended some basic exercises, not lift anything over ten pounds, and to come back in 6 weeks. Nothing improved, I was walking funny and in pain so I went back in four weeks. This time I was prescribed physical therapy and a mild pain killer.
The physical therapy focused on the likelihood of a pinched nerve, but after three sessions I quit because I was not improving and the therapy was painful. At my request my doctor prescribed a stronger (but still mild) pain killer and for me to see an orthopedic doctor.
All this time I had no clue my problems were anything other than a back strain.
Dr. Dennis, the orthopedic doctor saw me walk and took an x-ray. She immediately diagnosed my problem as a bulged degenerative disk, the lowest one, that was pinching a nerve. Fortunately, she ordered an MRI to observe the nerve damage. On Saturday October 29th, I had the MRI. On Halloween day, Dr. Dennis called and told me the MRI revealed three tumors, one on my right kidney, one in my sacrum and lower spine, and one on my right hip bone. The radiologist reported it was Renal Cell Carcinoma. She advised for me to contact a oncologist and to come to her office and pick up the report and images from the MRI, and ended the conversation by praying with me.
Well it only took me 10 minutes to find and read the wikipedia entry for the disease to realize my condition is serious.
The oncologist, Dr. Klass at Kennestone Hospital immediately referred me to Emory for consultation. I met with Dr. Viraj Master and Dr. Wayne Harris. They are part of the urology team that will treat me. Unfortunately, this type of cancer does not respond to chemo or radiation, which is why it is so serious. The standard treatment is to remove the affected kidney, try to treat my whole body with a high dose of Interluken II, and then several oral medications that work differently for each person. The interluken actually has a cure rate of 5%, so that would be awesome if I could respond to it.
During this time, I had a low dose radiation treatment on the tumor in my sacrum area to try and reduce it so I can walk better, reduce the numbness, and slow or stop its growth.
Scott
This is my brother Get your own. Scott has achieved 99.9% of his dreams and/or desirse. It is only a matter of time before he demolishes this obstacle. This is not faith, this is truth!
ReplyDelete