SUNDAY, DECEMBER 01, 2013
Next Up Surgery December 10
I have spent several days at Mayo Clinic over the past few months. It is time to remove cancer in my ear canal. I was sitting at work with my supervisor one day a couple of weeks ago, and she interrupted me to tell me that blood was dripping from my ear onto my shirt. Quickly grabbed a tissue and covered my ear. That blood is combined with blackness, I have to cover it constantly with tissue, or it will drip out--when the tissue is not in my ear, it feels as though the wind is blowing from one ear out to the other. To make light of this, but maybe there really is nothing in between my ears--haha, Dr. Barrs will take my ear off, lay it to the side of my head where he can see more clearly what is happening down the ear canal--my ear has had so many surgeries on it as a child. The ear canal is smaller than an infant's ear canal. It makes it hard for him to see how bad or good it is in there.
As a young child, I was standing outside of our home throwing a football back and forth to the neighbor kids across the street; someone had rolled over the ball with their car, and the tube inside the football was bursting through the seams, but it didn't keep us from throwing the ball we loved those simple pleasures. I caught the ball, and it blew up in my hands. I immediately grabbed my ear, as it began to bleed, my mother rushed me to the hospital, once again for another surgery. The eardrum broke again. The surgeon was not able to repair my eardrum. From that day forward I was not allowed to immerse my ear in water--no swimming, no baptism.
I remember being in that hospital more times than I ever wanted to be--same room--same nurses--same surgeries, to get progressively worse after each surgery. Dr. Borland was my ENT, I loved him because he loved my grandmother who was an RN at the hospital where he worked, and he always told me incredible stories about her--she passed away having melanoma and he was always impressed with her ability to live if she did--she was a fighter. I never swam, I was baptized at the age of ten with my ear covered in gauze packing, taped down, and covered with plastic--
At age 29, I began to have symptoms of my equal Librium being off, and I was falling to the ground. Actually, Eric and I would laugh about it. Being young and newly married, we had no idea what was going on--I went to see Dr. Borland he took one look in my ear and sent me to another ENT specialist, I'm assuming much like Dr. Barr's at Mayo Clinic, he specializes in the inner ear only, his official title is Department of Otolaryngology, Ontology, and Neurology department. He explained after he takes the ear off and can see the tumor, he cannot give me a clear indication as to the severity of it. However, he was 70% sure it is intact and will be able to be taken out. Then he will graft skin from my back or another part of my body to cover the hole in my ear drum. He will make a small hole in the eardrum to allow relief of pressure. Then he will attach the Bone Anchored Hearing Aid --the proper name is the Cochlear Baja device for people with SSD. (single-sided deafness) Basically I will never be able to have hearing restored in my right ear, but this device, will take the sound from the bone and nerves in my right ear to the bone and nerves in my left ear to help me hear better with the excellent ear --getting older it is getting even harder to hear, and this will give me a better quality of life.
The day before my mother died, I was told because of the Obama Care, what was approved last year is now not covered anymore--It was a letdown, but I have lived without hearing in that ear for so long, I can do it and continue to read lips until it is approved.
This recovery will be long and hard. 'I'm not sure what he means by that; chemo and radiation were no walk in the park, and I've had plenty of ear surgeries. Today,I tried to get a clear picture of what my ear looks like, but's hard to see in there, but I forgot to put the tissue in today when Kayla came over, and she was pretty sickened by what it looks like, so I'd better keep it covered and cleared from getting infected. You may be wondering why we are waiting until December 10 to have the surgery done. Well, that was my decision; I need to see one of my oncologists on December 03, which was the earliest Dr. Barrs could get me in, so I opted for my preop appointment on December 03 after my Dr. Magtibay appointment, then surgery on the 10th. Yesterday, Eric and I went to the Audiology department at the Mayo Clinic on Shea to have another hearing test done for the insurance company. I'm fairly sure the audiologist was grossed out when she saw the cotton ball soaked in black cancerous goop and blood, she asked, "Has Dr. Barr's seen you recently. Because that does not look good" After explaining to her I saw him a couple of weeks ago. Now he is on vacation, I do not want any other doctor doing this surgery, she proceeded with the hearing test, only on the left side this time since they now are convinced, I have 0% hearing in the right ear--left ear hearing is still there same as last year--just a tad bit worse--nothing to be alarmed about. Hopefully the insurance will listen to my plea for an exception to be made, so I do not have to go through yet another ear surgery.
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Carcinoma in the ear canal (I wish mine looked this good) |
1 COMMENT:
And some of us, who have never even met you, will be right there with you in spirit, Monya.