Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Are You Feeling Brave?

Of course you are -- you stopped by my blog!

I owe you an update, so here it is:

1. All neuro/medical tests (i.e. MRI, EEG, extensive bloodwork) came back normal.

2. In theory, we celebrated. In praxis, not so much. Because we continue to teeter on the edge of the abyss -- and we continue to wait for an answer. We are dumb or naive enough to keep expecting one.

3. I researched prion diseases at the macabre (but well-intentioned) suggestion of a friend. This led to alternating periods of evil dreams and wakefulness. All. Night. Long. (If you were very, very brave, Readers, you could Google prion diseases too. The worst of the lot are Kuru and Fatal Familial Insomnia, and if you read about them you would be up all night worrying you have the latter -- and being thankful you are not a cannibal so you can't get the former. These are the stuff of nightmares.)

4. Benjy's neurologist promised me he does not have Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (I guess, given the other members of the family, you would have to call that the "good" prion disease), and proceeded to hand us off to psychiatry. It kind of felt like coming home -- in a pathetic sort of way.

5. Benjy's mental state has become such a wide, dark sea of sorrow that I fear, every day, he will slip under and I won't be able to pull him back up. I realized the other day that a sadness like this is not sustainable over a lifetime. And once again I am afraid we will not get to keep him if we can't figure this goddamn illness out.

6. The new psychiatrist prescribed a drug called Lamictal to address the bipolar disorder, particularly the overweening depression. She said, "A lot of people do well on this drug. There's only one downside: it can give you a rash. But this is not just any rash -- this rash can kill you."

7. Shit.

8.  I Googled Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (that's what a rash is called when it's a killer rash).

9. SHIT. (Warning: Wikipedia includes photos, which you do NOT want to look at. Trust me.)

10.  I slouched around and practiced avoidance for five days. Then I called Ben's PCP, who has been doctor to both my kids since babyhood. I figured she could help me decide which crappy path to take: Should I treat the depression that could kill him with a drug that could kill him? Or should I not? She explained to me that most or all of the class of drugs used to treat mood disorders can cause a Stevens-Johnson rash, so I really don't have a choice in that regard. She also told me she has several patients on Lamictal, and that they are all doing fine. The odds are low, she said, and Ben is suffering. Do a skin check every day, and if you see a rash, bring him in.

11. I decided to start him tomorrow. I am scared, but oddly enough  I am also brave. Simultaneously.

12. In the hopes that there may be some therapeutic benefit to improving his diet, I got referrals to "feeding groups" at Mass General and Children's Hospitals. These are practices within GI/Nutrition departments that work with kids who have food aversions, food anxieties, stuff like that. It has been impossible to feed Benjy properly his whole life, because of these kinds of issues. When he was younger (well, until he started Abilify), he was quite underweight, because there was very little I could induce him to eat. Now he eats plenty, but it is all TOXIC sugar, simple carbs, processed junk food. I know you are raising your metaphorical eyebrows at me. I know it should be simple: just don't buy that stuff. Well, I've tried that. It doesn't work. and these days he is RAVENOUS all the time, because his Abilify is like my Risperdal was. It's fucking with his appetite and metabolism and hijacking his body.

13. But I saved the best for last. (No irony here, peeps. You can read on without fear.) Today I wrote, for the first time in a couple of weeks. I'm not sure how I managed it but I did. I worked on an essay about me -- not about Benjy, not about disability -- and it felt GREAT.

And now I'm returning to my old coda, the one with which I closed most of my posts in the early days of this blog:

We take things one day at a time around here. And we shall see what tomorrow brings.

4 comments:

  1. So glad you had some time to write for yourself/about yourself! And I'll be thinking good thoughts for the Lamictal. I hate the way these meds take over.

    (FYI: name alert in No. 12!)

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  2. I've taken Lamictal and developed the rash. It is very VERY obvious, and comes on slowly. Even if he started to rash, so long as the doctor removes him from the med immediately, he'll be fine. It doesn't go straight into what you see on the pictures. For me it started as a large red patch on my chest that grew.

    Hope this helps!

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    1. Addy Rae, thank you so much -- it DOES help! I'm sorry it took me so long to acknowledge that. It's been pretty overwhelming around here, and a lot of things are slipping. But I read your comment right away and deeply appreciated it.

      How are things going for you these days? Always glad when you stop by and let me know you're reading. Hugs, Anna

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