Part 2: Induction Treatment
Chemotherapy Cycle 1
11 January 2005I was up early around 8 and after having breakfast mum and I walked over to the hospital where I will spend the next few days having my first of fourteen cycles of chemotherapy. I can remember sitting in the room waiting for the chemotherapy to start with no idea of what to expect. I sat in the chair next to the bed at first fully dressed as I figured I didn't feel sick, lying in the hospital bed is what sick people do. At around 10 in the morning a nurse brought in the pump ready to start my chemo. The drugs I will be treated with for the first six cycles of chemotherapy will be Vincristine, Ifosfamide, Doxorubicin and Etoposide. The nurse instructed me to lye on the bed and connected the pump to the hickman line, for the next few days I will be attached to this pump. The nurses had provided me with a spare TV and Katrina has loaned me her PlayStation 2 for the next few days to keep me entertained. While the nurse began setting up the pump to begin treatment I was playing on the PlayStation. The first drug (Vincristine) was injected and it wasn't long that I went from feeling fine to feeling nauseous and straight away I vomited. After vomiting I felt better but was given an anti-nausea drug straight away. The nurse then proceeded to inject the other chemotherapy drugs. The Vincristine is injected once into the Hickman line at the start of treatment the other drugs will be given on the second and third day of chemotherapy as well. The Etoposide will be injected into the Hickman line and once injected the Doxorubicin and Ifosfamide are pumped into the body through the Hickman line using an IV pump over 4 hours. Once the drugs have been pumped into my system I then have bags of Mesna, Sodium Cloride and Potasium pumped into me this is to protect my bladder as the effects of the Ifosfamide are likely to damage my kidneys.
After vomitting I decided that is was best not to play games that required any concentration so as a result I spent the rest of the day watching DVDs feeling not too bad I was able to eat meals fine and drink fine but later in the evening I felt tired quite early so mum left early to allow me to go to sleep.
12 January 2005
Day two and I was awoken early for breakfast and I seemed to eat this fine, a nurse
disconnected the pump after breakfast allowing me to shower and after getting dressed
the nurses proceeded with giving me my second days chemo. I was feeling full of energy when
mum arrived and was able to eat lunch fine, I spent the afternoon writing letters and
sending texts to my friends on my cell phone. I think it was after midnight by the time I
went to bed that night.
13 January 2005
Day three and I started going down hill from when I woke up in the morning. I ate
breakfast ok but started to loose energy after having a shower. In the afternoon mum left
and allowed me to have an afternoon nap, I can remember waking up around 3pm which is around the
time the nurses change shifts. While undergoing chemotherapy I am on Fluid Balance, what this means
is that the nurses require a record of every liquid that goes into me and every liquid that goes out
this means that I can't just go to the toilet I have have to urinate into a bottle and the nurse
then measures how much urine I passed. The smell of urine when you are going through chemotherapy
is horrible and I can remember there being no empty bottles in my room and really needing to go and
not being able to find anyone to get another bottle. Eventually I actually went to the reception in
the ward and asked simply because I couldn't find any nurses around.
The results of the Bone Marrow sample taken earlier in the week have come back and it appears it is
clear of cancer, this now makes me at "Good Risk." In the evening Katrina came to visit and at this stage
I was so drained of energy I could hardly say anything. Mum and Katrina left at around 8 and I went
straight to sleep.
14 January 2005
I woke up and could hardly face any breakfast or drink any coffee instead I just wanted to
sleep all morning. Mum rang the ward to ask if I was awake and they rang the phone in my room, mum
didn't want to talk to me, she just wanted to know if I were awake so she could come and visit.
Today I had no chemo running through but there were still bags of
mesna running through until 8 o'clock at night. I could hardly eat my lunch and after
lunch I just lay down and watched DVDs. Mum then left early in the afternoon allowing me
to sleep. When mum returned the nurse let me go outside taking the pump with me so I could
have some fresh air. It was so hot I didn't stay outside too long. On return to my room my
meal was bought in and I lifted the lid and the smell just hit me so bad that I vomited
after this I decided I no longer wanted to eat hospital food and even picturing the
hospital trays in my head was enough to make me vomit. Finally at 8:30 the final bag of
mesna was pumped through and I was disconnected from the pump, I was required to stay in hospital
for the rest of the night. It was a very long and sleepless night, it was so hot and it was
like my whole body was just twitching like my head was asleep but the rest of my body felt full of energy.
15 January 2005
I woke in the morning still feeling awful, the nurses organised my discharge and inserted
a sub cut line in my stomach this is so I can inject Neupogen into myself. The Neupogen
will boost my white blood cells lowering the risk of getting sick, I will be required to inject myself with Neupogen every day for the next ten days.
Before being discharged I was given some simple instructions to follow in the days following my chemo:
- I am to flush the toilet twice for the next 3 days whenever I use it to ensure anything that comes out of me is flushed away.
- If I choose to engage in sexual intercourse I must wear protection to ensure I am not transmitting any of the chemo that is in me to my partner. Not that this will be a problem for me right now.
- Also I am not allowed to kiss anyone except a kiss on the cheek or a short peck on the lips.
After being discharged I spent the rest of the morning at Ranui House and waiting for our Taxi to arrive. The most comfortable place to be was in the foyer as this area didn't get much sun so the temperature was bearable. The Taxi arrived and took us to the airport, a Corporate Cab we travelled in a Holden Statesman it was very comfortable and good with the Air Conditioning on. Stepping out into the airport car park we really felt the heat it was 36 degrees, I hadn't experienced temperatures like this since my trip to Los Angeles when I was 17 and right now there was no way I wanted to stay outside for much longer. We finally boarded our flight at 2:30 and it was a long and painful wait, waiting for the plane to take off. I started to feel better once we were in the air but the flight was very uncomfortable, we were in a 16 seater plane and I had to wear a face mask the whole time in case I picked up anything from anyone else on the plane. Wearing a face mask made it hard to breathe and added to the uncomfortableness of the flight. We landed in Invercargill at 4PM and it was a relief to be home the temperature, of 18 degrees, was much more bearable. My parents took me back to their place and I will stay there for the next few days until my white blood cells are normal, it is a bit hard for me to be in my flat when I am sick as I am not capable of cooking myself a meal or doing housework and cleaning up after flatmates. At tea time I managed to eat a small amount of food, dad mashed the potatoes especially for me since it was easier to eat mashed potatoes and I had one chop and no other vegetables this is all I could eat. Dad took me down to my flat later in the evening so I could say hello to Aimee as she was the only person home and I could collect my mail. I went to bed at around 10pm and stayed in bed until lunchtime the next day.
16 January 2005
I felt really run down still and just spent all day resting around the house, the
district nurse came and made sure I could flush my Hickman ok and inject myself with the
Neupogen. I started to feel better in the evening and that night it took me a while to
get to sleep.
17 January 2005
I still felt real bad when I got out of bed at lunch time. I started to feel better when I
sat down and relaxed at the computer but then I started to feel worse again when the
district nurse came. The district nurse spent an hour and a half making sure I could
flush my Hickman line and change the plugs. As well she organised a housekeeper to help
mum out, really the place I needed this was in my flat but since I was staying with my
parents this wasn't possible. After the district nurse left I went around to my flat so
that my flatmates could shave off my hair, one of the side effects of this treatment is
hair loss and I decided it was best just to get it over with instead of watching my hair
fall out. It was so good to see everyone in the flat again and talk to everyone. I had so
much to tell everyone and we all had a lot of fun shaving off my hair. I even stayed at
the flat for tea but before I even ate tea I suddenly got a real pain in my stomach that
lasted a while, all I had in the flat was a cup of tea and a glass of iced water.
I would say the water would have been the cause. Later in the evening the pain went away.

My hair before it was shaved off later in the day

Having my hair shaved off, first image shows the back of my head being shaved, second image
shows my streaked haircut being shaved off with Beni in the background, the third images
shows the final result with RaeAnne tidying up my hair. I decided to only shave to a number 1
due to the fact that the clippers may cut my scalp and cause infection.
18 January 2005
I woke up feeling much better even though I was dragged out of bed at 10am to go and see
Kate Bayston, the head of oncology at the Southland Hospital. After being examined I was
given the good news that perhaps some of my treatment could be done at home in Southland
this would make things so much easier for myself and my parents. In the afternoon I had
the chance to go around to my flat to use my computer for a while and then at 4 I went
down to BP to catch up with my old workmates to tell them how my treatment is going.
I was going to visit Aimee in the evening as she was at her mothers but I decided
against it as I started to feel exhausted. That night I started having stomach pains
and diarrhoea and I have never had it this bad before it was like I was getting up every
hour and worse is I had no idea what I could take to ease the pain.
19 January 2005
I woke up at lunch time and my body felt exhausted and my bones were aching.
During the afternoon I went back to the flat briefly to pick up more mail and use my
computer. I spent the evening at home resting and then I started to feel cold I complained
about how cold my parent's leather recliner chair was and it was then that mum thought I
must have a temperature. My temperature showed 37.8, 0.2 degrees below the dangerous
level but mum and dad decided not to take any chances and at 11 o'clock that night I was
in the Emergency Department where I ended up waiting two hours before they finally
admitted me. None of the Doctors or Nurses in the A&E department at Southland Hospital knew
what a Hickman line is and they had to get someone down from the medical ward to take
blood off my line. The cancer patients at Southland Hospital do not usually have Hickman
lines. The antibiotics were finally started at about 1:30 in the morning and all through
the night I was woken up.
20 January 2005
At 7 in the morning I was awoken by a nurse to tell me I that he would be looking after me
today and then tried to force some breakfast into me I just told him that I wanted to sleep.
I had doctors come in and see me at 9am once again waking me up and then after finally
getting back to sleep I was dragged down to the x-ray at 10am so an x-ray of my sinuses
could be done as I have mentioned a bit of blocking in my nose. At lunch time I had some
food put in front of me and I couldn't even look at it, even though the food was in
different trays to those ones at Christchurch Hospital it was still hospital food and it
made me sick. I tried sleeping all afternoon but with mum and grandma coming into visit
this was interrupted. In the evening I complained to the nurse while mum was visiting
about how it was impossible for me to eat hospital food. Mum asked if it were ok to bring
in food that could be cooked in the kitchen microwave, the nurses response was that
there is no way they can allow patients or visitors to "take over the kitchen" and what it
would be like if everyone used this small kitchen and that I shouldn't be so fussy and
just eat the hospital food. I explained how the smell of hospital food makes me vomit
and the nurses response was that I should just open a window since I was lucky to be in a
room where the window can be opened this is not possible in the negative pressure rooms.
I was given a list of food that it is safe for me to eat while I am neutropenic and
told it is possible to have food bought in provided it is on the list and with hot food
it must be straight out of the oven wrapped in foil. While being neutropenic I am not
allowed certain foods such as salads and fruits like apples and grapes unless I peel off
the skin. I am allowed biscuits but only if they are fresh out of the packet, an hour
after opening the sealed packet and the biscuits in that packet are no longer safe for me
to eat. Foods that sit on a hot cabinet like pies in a bakery I can not eat unless the
food has come straight out of the oven. I am allowed takeaways such as fish and chips,
KFC, McDonalds but for some reason not Pizza Hut or the Potato and Gravy or salads
from KFC. I also assume that I am not allowed Subway due to the way it is served.
21 January 2005
I was awoken many times through the night to have antibiotics and in the morning once
again unnecessarily woken up. Doctor Bayston came and saw me again in the morning and
delivered the bad news that I would have to stay in hospital over the weekend as my
neutrophil levels were still too low. I explained that I would be better off at home
since I could get better quicker if I was able to sleep something I was not getting in
hospital. I was told that I could go home each night for tea so that way I was given a
break from the hospital each day. Another blood test was taken to check my neutrophil
levels once again. The dietician came around about my eating and allowed me to have food
bought up from the hospital cafeteria such as cheese rolls and mousetraps for lunch.
At 4 mum came and took me home for the evening and I was able to eat a good tea of pork
chops and vegies much nicer than hospital food. I stayed at home until later in the evening
when I was required to return for my next course of antibiotics.
22 January 2005
Another day in hospital I was given the results of the previous day's blood test and my
neutrophil levels are now high enough that I can go home only this won't be happening
today as there is no doctor around to discharge me. I had a visit from Aimee and her mother,
it was nice having one of my friends come visit me and have a good laugh. While having a
shower I suddenly noticed hair on my body was just shedding at a very fast rate, at this
point I still had the remaining hair on my head since my head was shaved using a number 1
clipper. I gave a bit of hair on my head a pull and a heap came out I knew it was a matter
of now only weeks or even days and I would be bald. It also then occured to me that I never
had a shave this morning, normally by now if I didn't shave it was be very uncomfortable and
I would want to have a shave but obviously the regrowth of hair wasn't coming through anymore.
23 January 2005
Once again I am still in hospital and my neutrophil levels are now at the point of a
healthy person but still no discharge because it is still the weekend. Both Aimee and Matt came
to visit I can remember Aimee helping herself to a handfull of gloves kept in my room.
24 January 2005
It's Monday morning and the best part is that Doctor Bayston has come back and I am now
allowed to go home. I rang mum to ask to be picked up only it wasn't possible for mum to
pick me up until around 3. When mum arrived we found our prescription wasn't ready and had
to wait nearly 2 hours, I was I told I could go home at 9 and it took until 5 before I left
the hospital, I think I read just about every article in the paper that day. I spent the evening
after tea visiting Aimee at her mothers, when I saw Matt
that evening he was suggesting that I take my possessions out of my room and the flat rent
out my room on a temporary basis to one of my flatmates friends until after my treatment.
I decided this was probably a good option since I didn't like the idea of spending all
year in different places it was bad enough staying in Christchurch and then ending up in
hospital in Southland as well.
25 January 2005
Mum and dad bought a laptop computer that I could use while I am in hospital this will
help me take my mind of things while on treatment. When I went around to the flat Matt
noticed how the back of my head was getting thinner obviously from having my head rub against
the pillow when I sleep.
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