Sunday, April 10, 2011

Recent Email

From: (Rockridge Counsellor)
Sent: Thursday, April 07, 2011 11:06 AM
To: (Rockridge Teachers)
Cc: Cynthia Miles; Paul Balfour; Phys Ed
Subject: alex balfour

Hello teachers of Alex,

Alex will be beginning his year at Rockridge, after undergoing treatment for Leukemia since July.  I have met with his parents, and our goal is to have him integrate into his classes gradually.  We will start with morning classes only for the first week or 2, and will see how he does.  He will begin on Monday, shadowing a friend, then will begin his own classes on Tuesday.

He has been working with a tutor and (xxx)  (Home and Hospital) on math, science and a bit of English.  For now, he will audit his classes (tests and quizzes will be for practice only for the first 2 weeks) to get his body used to the new demands.
 
Alex is a bright kid, who should be able to pick up the material, but the doctors say that he may not have the stamina to participate fully at the beginning.

Please let me know if you have any questions or concerns, and feel free to contact Paul (father) or Cynthia Miles (Vince mom) at the addresses above.

Thanks everyone,

 (xxxxx)

Counsellor,
Rockridge Secondary School

Monday, February 28, 2011

Grinding It Out

As noted earlier, last Tuesday was expected to be, and was, a very long day.  We got home about quarter to seven that night, about an eleven hour stint.

We went back on Wednesday for more "Ara-C", which is a nasty one.  We went back Thursday for more.  And we went back Friday for more.  Grind, grind, grind. In between trips, Alex has been in bed pretty much the whole time.

Wednesday and a good chunk of Thursday were pretty tough for Alex.  He didn't really eat or drink for 24 or 36 hours. Miserable.  This would have been due the cyclophosphamide and Ara-C combined.   Fortunately, he wasn't throwing up and didn't get dehydrated.  He felt sick and pretty beaten up, not a lot of fun.  On Thursday afternoon he started to improve a little and ate and drank a bit.  On Friday, we were in a bit earlier in the morning and glad to be finished fairly quickly.  Alex drank very well that day and ate sparingly.  His mood was a lot brighter though and he continued to improve over the weekend and was up and downstairs eating tacos last night and in good spirits.

Oh, you're feeling better?  Let's whack you again!  Our appointment today was at 10:00 a.m. but things were a little backed up and nothing really happened until 11:30.  Then Alex had another lumbar puncture to receive methotrexate in the spine.  The kids often like the sedative that goes with this and can be a bit giddy afterwards but today Alex was a bit more subdued than usual.  One needs to lie flat for at least an hour after an LP and then he had another dose of the Ara-C.  We got home about 2:30.

Alex's blood counts have been declining through this, his haemoglobin was down to 90 today and the white blood cells and platelets are also well below the low end of a "normal" range.  This is to be expected but it makes you feel pretty crummy.

We go back tomorrow and Wednesday for shots of Ara-C (in theory these should be quick in-and-out visits but that happens maybe a third or half the time - that's not a complaint, my BCCH friends! It just is reality.)

On Thursday, Alex's blood will be tested again then  he'll have a final shot of Ara-C (Hurray!) but we'll have to hang around and wait for the bloodwork to come back to see if he needs a blood transfusion.  Chances are pretty good he will, in which case it will be another fairly long day.  A grind.

Alex is in pretty good spirits tonight, all things considered.  This week might be a little easier than last week as he didn't have the cyclophosphamide.  Offsetting that is that he's a lot more beaten up than last week so we'll see how these next few days go.

In the meantime it's one day at a time.

Grinding it out.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Christian Meier, Professional Cyclist, Rides for Alex This Month

Christian is a professional cyclist with UnitedHealthcare Pro Cycling and was the 2008 Canadian National Road Champion.  You can read about Christian at www.uhcprocycling.com/team/christian-meier 

You can read what Christian says about Alex here: bikingbros.com/i-am-riding-for



Thank you, Christian, an honour for Alex!

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Back At It and the Power of Doritos

Alex has had a bit of a break since the last round of heavy duty chemo on January 31st.  It usually takes two to three weeks (mostly three) for a patient's white blood cell count to recover before the next batch of treatments begin.  Alex of course also had three days in the hospital due to the onset of some incredibly severe pain back on February 6th that was likely caused by the heavy doses of steroids he took as part of the treatment and some pancreatitis.  Fortunately the painful part was "only" a few hours long and the next two and half days consisted of sitting around.

We checked Alex's blood last Wednesday but his neutrophil count while having rebounded from basically zero, was too low at 0.50, a count of 0.75 is needed to begin the next stage.  Yesterday it was 1.1 (pretty close to normal really, all his counts were very good) and so today he has begun again.  Feeling better?  Great, let's whack you again!

The last few days have been particularly good.  Alex has been quite active, the steroid "blues" are behind us, things have almost been normal.

Today is a big long day.  We arrived at quarter to eight this morning and I think we might get out by 6 p.m. tonight.  Alex had a lumbar puncture this morning to have methotrexate injected in his spine.  That's not as bad as it probably sounds.  Actually, the kids kind of like it because the sedative/anaesthetic they get makes them quite loopy!

Following the "LP" Alex had Pentamadine, a drug that prevents a particularly nasty type of pneumonia.  This is inhaled through a ventilator over a fifteen to twenty minute period and tastes horrible.  He doesn't like it but has to have it every four weeks.  (In between he ate a sausage,egg and cheese breakfast sandwich concoction.)

He has been receiving a lot of fluid intravenously to "pre-hydrate" him for the next item on today's menu, good old Cyclophosphamide (old being the operative word, this drug's origins date back to the fifties) which can be quite hard on one's kidneys.  The pre-hydration takes two to three hours, the "cyclo" as the nurses call it, takes about 30 minutes to administer, following which he will receive post-hydration for another three or four hours.  After that, dessert is a dose of Ara-C, shorthand for a drug called Cytarabine, which is pretty quick to administer.

And then we can go home.

Alex will take another chemotherapy drug called Thioguanine orally every day for the next two weeks.

He comes back tomorrow and the next two days in a row for a shot of Ara-C each day.  He has the weekend off and then back Monday for another lumbar puncture, more Ara-C and then three more consecutive days of Ara-C.  If that all sounds pretty intense, it is.  Eight out of ten days at the hospital.  By the time he is finished all that his blood counts will be very, very low.

The great news today was his weight, checking in at 47.8 kilograms.  That's an increase of about (a much needed) 5.5 kilos in just a couple of weeks ! The nurses asked him how he did it.

Grinning ear to ear he said, "Doritos!"

Paul Attacked by Rabid Dog!

Minding my own business at the Heritage Classic hockey game in Calgary on Sunday when the beast was upon me.



I fought back and when I had hold of the brute's tongue I said "Craig McTavish says hello!" 

(At the time head coach of the Edmonton Oilers, McTavish pulled Harvey's tongue out when he felt the mascot had gone a little too far.)

Friday, February 18, 2011

Monday, February 14, 2011

For B.C. Residents:

I didn't actually find this easy, I found it a bit of a pain actually, but it is something we should all do.  It was much easier when one just signed one's driver's license.  Have your CareCard ready. (Thanks to MH for prompting me.)

From: BC Transplant [mailto:info@transplant.bc.ca]
Sent: Monday, February 14, 2011 6:43 AM
To: Paul Balfour
Subject: Organ Donor Registry Confirmation

Thank you for registering on BC's Organ Donor Registry! If there are any issues with your registration, someone from BC Transplant will contact you.  Forward this e-mail to let your friends and family know just how easy it is to register their decision on organ donation at: https://www.transplant.bc.ca/onlinereg/bcts.asp
Thank you for taking the time to make this important decision.

BC Transplant
an agency of the Provincial Health Services Authority  
1-800-663-6189 or 604-877-2240