W
welshwitch
Guest
Hi all,
well I am now officially done with my PICC line and have successfully completed my first CF related "tune-up." It was unexpected and certainly a shock to the system to have to take such drastic measures, but I got through it.
The first 2 weeks of February I had a fever that wouldn't go away. I had never had that before. Instead of going to the dr. immediately like I should have, I waited 2 weeks, going to work most of that time. Symptoms I had never experienced: shortness of breath, trouble going up stairs, and extreme fatigue. But surprisingly no increased cough. I thought there was no way this was a pulmonary thing, but rather a severe flu.
When I got to the doctor, they immediately took my vital signs and measured my PFTs. My heart rate was way too high, my blood pressure was off and the worst part: when I blew PFTs they were in the high 40's. I had always had PFTs in the 100's before!
This was an absolute shock and I never imagined this was how my first tune up would go. I was given the choice of going immediately into the hospital or doing IV's at home. Terrified, I opted for the IVs at home option. But it took several days for the IV meds to get ordered. I spent the next several days at my parents' house feeling terrible and fearful. I had to go to the hospital and get the PICC line put in, another new thing for me. Finally, I had to learn how to do the IV's myself from a nurse while I was still incredibly sick.
In retrospect I maybe should have just gone into the hospital. The amount of work and strain it put on myself and my family with this unexpected illness was just awful. But I wanted to be able to be home and not in a scary hospital by myself.
After 2 weeks of home IVs they took the PICC line out yesterday. Admittedly, I feel GREAT and am looking forward to getting my life back. But the whole experience just felt like such a setback. I don't know if I had pneumonia or a CF exacerbation or just a severe infection. All I know is that it scared the crap out of me and was a huge wake up call. CF may finally be starting to catch up with me.
I'm hoping and praying that this doesn't happen again, or if it does, that I have much more control over the timing of this. Like, "Oh, I'm feeling like I need a tune up, let's do two weeks of IV's next month." Instead it was a pseudo-emergency situation. It just seemed to come out of nowhere, like my body just "crashed."
I feel like I had been doing every thing right. I got a flu shot (which probably didn't work in retrospect), I had been running several miles per day, had been working a low stress job. But then this happened anyway. I always imagined my first hospital stay or tuneup would be on my own terms, something I could schedule. This was just the last thing I was expecting.
On a more positive note, I'm MUCH BETTER and grateful to be "back." I'm going to do PFT's next week with my doc and I'm hoping that this experience didn't ruin my 100% numbers. In fact, maybe they will be higher? Overall, I'm a survivor, and this has made me tougher.
Stay strong everyone!
well I am now officially done with my PICC line and have successfully completed my first CF related "tune-up." It was unexpected and certainly a shock to the system to have to take such drastic measures, but I got through it.
The first 2 weeks of February I had a fever that wouldn't go away. I had never had that before. Instead of going to the dr. immediately like I should have, I waited 2 weeks, going to work most of that time. Symptoms I had never experienced: shortness of breath, trouble going up stairs, and extreme fatigue. But surprisingly no increased cough. I thought there was no way this was a pulmonary thing, but rather a severe flu.
When I got to the doctor, they immediately took my vital signs and measured my PFTs. My heart rate was way too high, my blood pressure was off and the worst part: when I blew PFTs they were in the high 40's. I had always had PFTs in the 100's before!
This was an absolute shock and I never imagined this was how my first tune up would go. I was given the choice of going immediately into the hospital or doing IV's at home. Terrified, I opted for the IVs at home option. But it took several days for the IV meds to get ordered. I spent the next several days at my parents' house feeling terrible and fearful. I had to go to the hospital and get the PICC line put in, another new thing for me. Finally, I had to learn how to do the IV's myself from a nurse while I was still incredibly sick.
In retrospect I maybe should have just gone into the hospital. The amount of work and strain it put on myself and my family with this unexpected illness was just awful. But I wanted to be able to be home and not in a scary hospital by myself.
After 2 weeks of home IVs they took the PICC line out yesterday. Admittedly, I feel GREAT and am looking forward to getting my life back. But the whole experience just felt like such a setback. I don't know if I had pneumonia or a CF exacerbation or just a severe infection. All I know is that it scared the crap out of me and was a huge wake up call. CF may finally be starting to catch up with me.
I'm hoping and praying that this doesn't happen again, or if it does, that I have much more control over the timing of this. Like, "Oh, I'm feeling like I need a tune up, let's do two weeks of IV's next month." Instead it was a pseudo-emergency situation. It just seemed to come out of nowhere, like my body just "crashed."
I feel like I had been doing every thing right. I got a flu shot (which probably didn't work in retrospect), I had been running several miles per day, had been working a low stress job. But then this happened anyway. I always imagined my first hospital stay or tuneup would be on my own terms, something I could schedule. This was just the last thing I was expecting.
On a more positive note, I'm MUCH BETTER and grateful to be "back." I'm going to do PFT's next week with my doc and I'm hoping that this experience didn't ruin my 100% numbers. In fact, maybe they will be higher? Overall, I'm a survivor, and this has made me tougher.
Stay strong everyone!