Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Catharsis, continued

I thought that hospitalists were internal medicine doctors, widely and deeply trained to deal with most every medical issue under the fluorescent lights of the hospital sky...

But I ended up being cared for by four hospitalists -- two were internal medicine doctors, one was an "intensivist," and the fourth specialized in "pulmonology." In addition, there was a cardiologist, a neurologist, my superb orthopedic surgeon's wondrous PA (Dr. ShoulderMan himself flew off to South America right after surgery), the pain management service (excellent folks), and the ID guru.

So explain to me how I ended up having to call my MDVIP (pseudo-concierge) go-to-guy from the ICU in order to get the folks listed above to actually *do* something that made sense?

Explain how my sore throat, which pre-dated the admission, was ignored -- how a simple order like lidocaine spray had to be made and remade three times, and the spray never arrived? Sounds like nothing, but it turns out it was a major deal. The ID's PA immediately added a Z-pack to the i.v. vancomycin yesterday -- and hooray, my fears of not-breathing are mostly allayed. I have to say that the PAs involved in my care hit homeruns -- they listened, they heard. She was the first to *hear* when it started, that it was not related to the intubation, that it was getting worse -- and to discover that the pre-op chest film already showed lower lobe pneumonia.

Ah hell. I need to get this stuff off my congested chest.

Interesting how medicos introduce themselves to patients, how they address the lazy bastards lolling around in those oh-so-comfy beds... A Bette-Midler look-alike was one of the internal medicine hospitalists. We first met while I was on the ventilator -- strangely lucid and trying to answer everyone's questions with paper and pencil. She had a lovely habit of not letting me finish writing -- trying to guess the next word, even grabbing the clipboard out of my hands and holding it up like we were doing a first grade show-and-tell. There was a complicated issue involving the interpretation of my echocardiogram, done a week prior to admission -- it had been misread (as a normal trileaflet aortic valve when, in actuality, it was a congenital bicuspid valve that was quite thickened and leaking, etc) and explaining this while intubated and hurting beaucoup was hard -- Bette Midler kept butting in. It took the cardiologist to save the day, as he muttered, "Let's just get another one..."

Bette never introduced herself. At all. The nurses, complete with eye rolls, did that for her. Two days later, back up on the ortho floor, she came charging into the room, threw back the covers, and began an unprecedented exam of my abdomen -- always top priority after shoulder surgeries. She looked vaguely familiar but I had trouble placing her -- she scared me to death. I kept saying "Who are you?" and she kept up her dedicated search of my belly. She was panicked, apparently, by the fact that my blood sugar had dropped into the 40s subsequent to an insulin injection. I was asymptomatic, drank some juice, and was given an i.v. dose of dextrose -- the blood sugar was up to 105.

She continued to ignore me, and began yelling at the nurse. I finally pretty much screamed, "Who are you?" The nurse placated her... I explained, upon her eventual introduction, that I was not "technically" diabetic, but that my blood sugar went up when infection reigned (as then) and when receiving stress-dose steroids (as I was then). I objected to the insulin, asking instead that she restart my oral meds, and allow me to finesse my hospital diet (have you ever looked at an ADA clear liquid diet??? It was all sugar!). She went ballistic and I began to regard her as an excellent cartoon.

I refused all insulin from that point on -- I mean, gee, an hour or so after getting the last injection, I had tanked -- duh! I had another medico reorder my normal meds, and never (well, only once) had another abnormal reading afterward.

Did she address the issue of me not breathing? The exacerbation-unto-hellishness of CRPS/RSD? The Fredster is convinced that CRPS/RSD is behind every symptom that presents... Did she take the time to go over the meds that actually were messed up? Do common sensical things like order the foley removed or discontinue the oxygen -- anything to expedite me getting the hell out of there and home. No, her last visit, announced by a tumbleweed whirlwind, consisted of her standing at the foot of the bed, both hands on my exposed, swollen, purple, ice cold, 10/10 pain-leveled ankles, saying something about the god-damned blood sugars and her objection to my use of oral meds.

She started a pain cycle that hasn't stopped yet. I was speechless from the pain, then in tears. I get that she thinks Amaryl will cause another "hypoglycemic" episode -- though pointing out the conspicuous role of insulin was futile.

She then gave me the results of several tests I did not have (MRIs -- impossible due to my bionic nature, and a TEE). I was also released with someone else's paperwork.

The other internal medicine hospitalist decided to go with the theory that the three episodes of respiratory arrest were due to seizure activity. He couldn't be budged from this opinion, despite the neurologist's own eye-rolling. I still have the damned goo in my hair from the EEG. I *have* a seizure disorder -- myoclonic -- but it is extremely well controlled and it's been years since it reared its ugly head -- I did not lose consciousness, or twitch, or nuttin' -- during the first two "episodes."

The pulmonologist was interested only in my lungs -- fair enough -- though he missed the preexisting pneumonia and decided to ignore the low O2 readings (and related alarm beeping beeping beeping beeping) during the last 24 hours there. He repeatedly asked me if I was sure I wasn't on oxygen at home. I repeatedly said something like "Hmmm, let me think. Ummm, no!" Still, he did his job, stayed within the lines of his "scope."

The intensivist? Crass as hell, rude, probably never heard a word I said -- and was the best of The Hospital-Acquired White-Coated Creatures. He made soliloquies, overweight, shakespearian as all get out. The one that allowed me to somewhat trust him? "You are in the worst possible place for your CRPS. There is nothing but stimulation down here..."

Geez. So many cooks, none really giving a damn about quality control (and very bad about passing on information one to another, failing to order schtuff because of the assumption that this was someone else's domain), never taking a history, even.

I woke in the wee hours of Tuesday morning, reached for a pen to write Fred a note, and was unable to grip it. I've had radial nerve palsy in that hand before -- but now it was the whole hand that wouldn't work. I found this alarming. Not one nurse, not one doctor took it seriously. I know that time is the cure -- but given everything that had gone on, I needed to hear that. My left arm was twice normal size following the surgery, so it mattered -- being handless. With a week's time, it has greatly improved, and now has an ulnar nerve distribution. As it happens, I see my neurologist on Friday, so at least it will get evaluated. What should a hospitalist do in this case?

I get the distinct impression that no one gives a royal shit if someone who was already pretty ill and disabled suffers worse illness and new disability -- I am a throw-away. Surely I am accustomed to things being bad, getting worse.

We would have been so much better served by remaining under the care of the orthopedic surgeon -- someone needed to orchestrate... even if the musical score sucks.

Whew. That's better. It wasn't my intent to relate so many pointless details -- but I was shocked.

The other shock was at the level of basic patient care. My sheets were never changed, except for a new top sheet whenever I managed to pour coffee everywhere. Smile. Fred gave me my one bath. The ICU nurse answered my request to "wash up" with: "Oh, they love to do that kind of thing on the floor. Let's wait..."

Thanks for listening -- whether you actually have or not. If not for the GD Sentinel Event back in 2002, would any of this be traumatic? I am trying to turn off the memory banks, trying to not fear you people... And the good definitely outnumber the bad. I think with great comfort and confidence of the respiratory therapists who saved the day, nurse Gwen who saved my life and gave all the glory to God (amazing, the number of nurses who want to PRAY with the patients! Oy!), Dana who kept me company during the last two beeping beeping nights, and who did some great nursing by violating orders and inventing a few protocols... And I am enormously thankful for the intensivist hospitalist and his direct approach, and for getting me breathing again.

Great food service, friendly housekeeping, stupid pain scores!

Monday, May 4, 2009

Four Dead in Ohio



O Lord, Hear My Prayer


I find it difficult right now to write anything. Putting cogent thoughts together, or even messy ones, distresses.

Just plain exhaustion and an increasingly pervasive depression.

Today, infectious disease appointments -- to draw a vancomycin "trough" level, get PICC dressing changed, etc.

Tuesday, The Boutiqueur and the infectious disease infusion center.

Wednesday, the orthopods -- stitches out? Some sort of plan?

Thursday -- sleep.

Friday, Hawaiian-Shirted Neuro-Man, a supremely important appointment.

We are infusing every morning at 11 am, though we'd like to edge that more toward noon.

It's babyish, but my throat bothers me more than anything -- it represents air and life, I guess. On the way to the hospital last week, Fred and I pooh-poohed said sore throat. Then, after being tubed, both for surgery and for intensivists' amusement, it was horrible. I sound like a croaking toad. Fred checked it and saw white patches on the side that hurts -- the ID Guy, when I finally whined enough that he actually looked, said it was "an ulcer." Fred rechecked it, saw no ulcer, still saw white stuff. The Bette-Midler-Lookalike Hearsepitalist -- oh, did we clash -- flashed a light on the right side of my throat and chirped that she didn't see anything. I'm sure she didn't.

I asked for throat lozenges beginning on Tuesday evening. They were reordered twice. Never showed up. When The Fredster settled me in bed here in my beloved Marlinspike Hall, deep, deep in the Tête de Hergé, he ran by the grocery and picked up four flavors, all sugar-free. Some lowfat plain yogurt. Feline supplies.

The dead zone in my right lung is back, in spades. ["in spades"?] Technically, I have pneumonia. Thick yellow crap. You are welcome!

The Boutiqueur, from a distance of safety, opined over the phone that maybe what happened was an assault by mucus plug. All I know is that I have reexperienced the breathless terror twice at home when the I-cannot-swallow thing happened. He always tells me it is anxiety.

I don't think so. It doesn't happen when I am anxious, for one. For two, I am fairly insightful about my emotional life, cognizant of schtuff like anxiety.

Back away, back away from the volatile.

Would you believe that the only "washing up" that happened in the hospital happened with Fred's help on Wednesday night? That the bed sheets were never changed -- only a new top sheet whenever I managed to spill coffee on it. Cough. Patient care? What patient care? It was all meds, meds, meds. If Fred hadn't been there, my teeth would have grown brown fuzz.

Hey, maybe that was the idea. My brown-fuzzed teeth were at the center of a grand immunological experiment. I'm just saying.

I made an ICU nurse cry. And not from hurt, oh no. She wanted to KILL me. I kid you not. Is it my fault that she was the person who finally pushed me over the edge? She decided to invent information rather than say "don't know but will find out..." That happened a lot. I consider it lying and, at least, unhelpful to my recovery to be given misinformation. She lied about the echo results, about the monitored bed, about the phone, about my meds, about the palsy in my hand -- but above all? She ignored, and was pissed off by, my frequent frequent frequent requests that she stop-the-fuck touching my legs.

I don't do the 20 out of 10 pain scale crap. For the first time ever, in hospital, at least, I went to 10/10. It felt like every nerve fiber, muscle fiber, was twitching nonstop. My legs burned like dry old wood in a fresh flame. Yes, very Joan of Arc -- nod to Leonard Cohen (and Jennifer Warnes). No, I don't see my battle as kin to her fiery epic; Yes, I find the transcripts of her interrogations and trials fascinating reading.

So, anyway, it hurt like hell. My right foot and leg were caught up in horrible contractures. Every time someone decided to pat my knees, pass a cord or tube over my body, brush me with their humongous booby, it was like an electrical jolt that served to amplify the pain that had already been keeping me company.

I would say to This Weepy Nursey, "Please don't touch me..." This Weepy Nursey would snarl, "I know, I know, you don't like to be touched." Like to be touched? Hell, I LOVE being touched. Ah, but don't go down that road. Let her think I am just some effed-up eccentric.

They all had their ID cards hanging by lanyards around their tiny little easily-snapped necks. Bend over a patient's bed and these laminated thangs, they land on the patient. "But I didn't touch you. Gaawwwddd!" complained This Bitch of a Weepy Nurse. Leaving me to explain about ID cards, cords, tubes, boobies -- sounding like an insane person. Leaving This Bitch of a Weepy Nurse to roll her eyes, and do it again.

"But I BARELY touched you!"

So I had a meltdown. So I called her some sort of idiot in front of a colleague. So I maligned her knowledge base. She had it coming. "You don't have to talk to me like I am an idiot. Just explain it to me," said This Bitch of a Weepy [sobsob] Nurse. "Apparently, I do," was my response.

She actually brought me my standard dose of methadone as a response to the pain arc. When I told her something more immediate and short-acting was called for, she practically threw it at me and I could see "Effing Drug Addict" play across the marquee of her mind. I spared her a recitation of the half-life of methadone.

I take 15 mg of percocet for bad breakthrough pain. Two 7.5/325 tablets. And that's what the pain management service ordered for me in hospital. This Bitch of a Weepy [sobsob] Nurse, however, decided that since they only carried 5 mg tablets, that two 5 mg percocets was the equivalent order. Hellloooo? I tried pointing out that if we tried three 5 mg tablets, we'd be doin' good. But that's too much Tylenol, she countered. Damned if it doesn't come in immediate release form without ANY apap, and at the 15 mg dose, too...

Once out of ICU, there was no quibbling back-and-forth about it. People also had to be told "please don't touch; please ask/tell before touching" only twice or so, and then were kind enough to spread the word. The problem on the floor? Inexplicable! Big old white bandage on left shoulder... But still, fairly hefty "pats" on the shoulder. I never said anything, but felt my pupils explode and the smile on my face freeze into a death mask grimace... That hurt a heck of a lot less than the slightest touch to my arms or legs.

I've got to stop.

In case you don't see it, or get it, or feel it? I think there is PTSD lurking in me whenever stuff goes even slightly wrong in the hospital -- when things go majorly wrong? As Mr. T might opine: "I pity the fool."

It goes back to May 22, 2002.

The final thing that wants to leak out of my fingertips this morning, before trying to clean up this bloated corpse and set off to see the ID folk, is an accounting of how frustrating it is to explain to the student nurse in ICU that the ventilator had been turned off for a trial prior to extubation. "It's breathing for you, sweety!" she kept chirping. I wanted to scratch her face off. Finally, I put my hand on my chest, so that she could see its rise and fall versus the non-activity of the machine. "oh!" she said, and ran out of the room, ostensibly "to tell somebody." Thank God for Respiratory Therapists... I had been started on my "trial" a good 45 minutes earlier, unbeknownst to my caretakers.

See? That kind of thing doesn't matter. Best to forget it. Don't dwell on the negative. Make like a duck and let it roll off your back. Don't sweat the small stuff.

Have you ever had pneumonia, lousy O2 sats, and tried to breathe through a straw, all the while trying to positively impress the People in White with your... vivacity?

All right, next time? I will continue to exorcise my demons, particularly The Bette-Midler-Lookalike Hearsepitalist who tried to kill me with insulin.

I am so grateful for this space.

And I am sorry for making the nurse cry, for enraging her, for putting her down. I am sorry I told her that the ICU needed to do an inservice on CRPS/RSD. I was basically alone, and afraid, and in pain. And stuck back in 2002, when forces -- in the guise of Doctors and Nurses -- conspired to devastate me.

Someone, Anyone -- give me a week, and then kick me in the butt. Okay?

(O Lord, Hear my prayer! Let something treatable have grown in the lab, one of Your smaller creations that wants a more hospitable home.)

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Friday, May 1, 2009

Be/Loved


Hello, Dedicated Reader Base!


I was discharged from the hospital yesterday afternoon, to the great relief of everyone involved, particularly the hospitalists and nurses. When I am a little stronger, a post on hospitalists and certain types of RN will be forthcoming. I am pretty sure that the three hospitalists (one an intensive care hospitalist, one a pulmonologist, one a whiz-girl at internal medicine) were not "Happy." And I am positive that Happy the Hospitalist (The Happy Hospitalist) would not recognize himself in the performance of these particular three colleagues.


Anyway, the short version:


Surgery went well, although we failed in our goal of putting in a full shoulder prosthesis because the orthopedic surgeon found more infection... that continues to *not* grow in petri dishes. Later that night, I twice went into what we will call respiratory distress -- O2 sats dropped from the low 90s to the 30s within 5 seconds. I learned the meaning of gratitude at that moment, because my nurse happened to have just walked in the room. I mean, being on continuous monitoring doesn't do a whole heck of a lot of good if no one is watching! She stuck to me like glue until a Super-Duper Respiratory Therapist arrived, who then rescued me a second time. We were on our way to Intensive Care before the third episode even had a chance. I don't remember the third go 'round, anyway, as I was, if you can believe these medical types, "obtunded," and they proceeded to tube and then attach moi to a vent.


Yadda yadda -- I'll spare 'ya. [EEGs, CT scans, MRIs, echos, blood sugars and more!]


After some mis / management -- that wasn't all that big a deal, so long as you weren't the patient -- and a few days time, I am home. With the infection still blooming, and the explanations still lacking. We're doing i.v. vancomycin through the PICC line again.


The Poor Fredster. He is sleeping in this morning, and I am so glad. He is lovely, have I told you?