Friday, November 28, 2008
Black Friday
My head is hurting today. The fluid near my implant has not started to go away, in fact, there seems to be a larger area. I think it is because I am sleeping on it during the night.There is no redness, and the incision is almost totally healed, but I am going to call my surgeon next week just to play it safe. I don't want anything to delay activation.
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
I did quit wearing my hats today, except to go out in the cold. The bands kept rubbing against the implant and I was getting headaches. They also made my glasses rub against my incision and that part is sore now. Most people don't even seem to notice and if they do, and don't know about the surgery, I imagine they just think my last haircut had a minor glitch.
All in all, not a great day, but not a terrible one either. Nothing major, just annoying. 29 days and counting till activation.
Monday, November 17, 2008
Back to work, ho hum.....
Friday, November 14, 2008
Post Op checkup and I have my activation date!!
Today went really well. We had to drive back down to Wilmington to see my doctor, but since the appointment wasn't until 9:20am, we got to sleep till 6am. I thought the people in his office were really sweet. We signed in about 20 minutes early, and before I could make it back to our seat from a quick trip to the restroom, they were escorting us to a different part of the building to wait for the doctor. It only took a few minutes to realize that they wanted me to feel comfortable with my lovely new haircut, even though I was wearing a hat. They really are such nice people and really seem to care about their patients. Dr. Brinson was really pleased with my progress and he took the tape off the incision and all the stitches had dissolved away, just like they are supposed to. I did have an allergic reaction to the triple antibiotic I had used, so he wrote out a prescription for an ointment for that as well as an antibacterial drop for my other ear. Since that ear uses a hearing aid with an earmold, it had developed a small problem that the drops will fix in no time. My activation date is set for December 18th, in the afternoon and I am so excited. It means I just might be able to understand my granddaughter at Christmas time, which can be hard enough when they are only 15 months old. Oh, and to actually be able to follow a conversation again with my daughters...I am so thrilled and just want the time to fly by. I know it won't be easy, but I am hoping that since my hearing loss took place in such a short time I have an edge that will allow me to learn this new way of hearing quicker. Will try and keep this going at least once a week, but life will be pretty mundane and quiet until activation.
Good-bye icky pressure bandage!!
I finally get to take that nasty thing off. It has been the most uncomfortable part of the post surgery experience. Bob says my ear incision looks really good, even if my ear is all scrunched up like a cauliflower. It feels so good to have it off, and I can nap more comfortably, too. I have done a few loads of laundry, no major activity, other than cooking supper. That wasn't really hard, nor did it take long. I have even taken back the chore of feeding all my critters (dogs (2), and cats inside and out). They seem happy to have me back, so that makes me feel good. I just wish I could hear the cats purr, I really do miss that sound. All in all, I feel really good and though still kind of blah energy wise, I know I have been very lucky.
Day two
Slept off and on in the recliner and didn't need to take more than a few pain pills total. I just hate the additional "loopy" feeling I get from drugs more potent than tylenol, so that is all I am using now. I have stopped taking the nausea pills as well, since they aren't needed. The incision area still doesn't hurt that much but this "glasscock" pressure bandage is so damned annoying. Even though it is velcro'd they added extra surgical tape to my forehead and it pulls every time I smile or frown. I don't have a lot of energy, but over all feel good. Just watching a lot of TV and taking lots of mini naps. Hubby is waiting on me as needed, which has been kind of fun, and a change of pace. Bob has taken the entire week off from work to be home with me. Such a sweetheart.
Surgery Day!!
Wow, what a long day. My husband and I got up at 3am and made the drive to Wilmington in plenty of time. Both my daughters were there, along with a friend, to give me support, or so I thought. I spent the last half hour before being prepped for surgery cuddling the girls like I used to then they were little. I think it made them both feel better, and didn't hurt me either. I was taken into pre-op for all that mundane stuff that needs to be done and then settled into my gurney and made comfortable. The girls came in with my husband and friend and stayed with me for a while. After they left (all but hubby) the surgical team went to work on my "little cocktail". Once that was given, hubby left and they started to wheel me towards surgery, that was it, lights out and I dont' remember anything until they woke me up in recovery.
From what my husband has told me, here is a quick rundown on what happened to turn a three hour operation into four and a half hours. They started the procedure, got the implant in place with no trouble at all. Then, when it was time for the electrodes to be threaded into my cochlea, the trouble started. When the surgeon drilled through the mastoid bone to the cochlea, he found ossification (boney growth) in that part of the cochlea. They had to stop surgery right then and there and take x-rays to determine whether the ossification was full or just partial. I was lucky, and they were able to find a spot farther along to drill and complete the threading of the electrodes. It turns out I had meningitis as a child, with a high fever, and didn't know it. Not unusual for the 50's, I suppose, but I was once again lucky in the fact that the fever broke before taking my hearing all those years ago. My surgeon thinks that the combination of the ossification, a genetic link to early hearing loss and the MM all added up to what has happened in the last three years with my hearing.
So, after being rudely woken up post surgery, I was back in my clothes and in a wheel chair heading out the door by 1pm for a long drive home. I stayed awake in the car and actually wanted food about half way through the drive. We stopped for french fries for me (no salt) and a burger and fries for hubby. I had no dizziness at all, and no real nausea, just indigestion and mild discomfort in the incision area.
Once we got home, I crashed in the recliner and stayed there all evening. I finally emailed my family (my kids had made the basic calls earlier) and checked in with my friends at the forum and now it is lights out.
Surgery is tomorrow...
I am so wound up I know I can't sleep even though I have to get up at 3am to make the trip to Wilmington, NC with my husband for my surgery. We have to be there by 6am with the operation scheduled to start at 8am. I have spent the last months preparing for the worst, but hoping for the best. My will has been written, as has my power of attorney and living will. Not that I think they will be used any time soon, but I learned after that passing of my mother-in-law that you just can't leave things like that undone.
I have spent the evening vacuuming, doing laundry, making my bed, moving a recliner into my computer room so I can sleep there and watch tv, use my computers and not have to do much walking around. I don't know if I will be dizzy after the surgery, as each person reacts differently. With the help of friends at my alldeaf forum, I have taken care of all those "little things" you don't really think about. Like paying bills in advance, buying items I might need after surgery, making lists for my husband and daughters, just getting totally organized so I have nothing to worry about after surgery except getting better.
Making lists and planning ahead
After meeting my new ENT doctor last week, I was getting anxious about my surgery date. We got the call today that my CI surgery will be done on Nov. 7. Wow..less than a month away. I am nervous, kind of scared, but excited and hopeful at the same time. I have had my meningitis vaccine, had a second CT scan so the surgeon knows what is going on in my head and now it is just a waiting game. I am a list maker, so I know that is what is going to get me through till the surgery date.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
How it all began...
Hi, my name is ET (Elizabeth). For all practical purposes, I am deaf in my left ear and have profound hearing loss in my right. What hearing I do have in the right has been hampered by nerve damage. This causes me to “live in Charlie Brown’s classroom”.
I have Meneire’s Disease (aka: Morbus Meniere or MM ). No, it is not contagious. There is no known cause, nor any known cure for this disease. It attacks your balance, your hearing (to some degree) or both. Vertigo (this is where the world is spinning out of control and you are standing still, it can be quite unsettling) is another aspect of MM.
People with MM that have major vertigo attacks often end up worshipping the "royal thrown". They have a hard time just walking and many of them spend days in bed (either with the actual vertigo attack or the aftermath). I have been lucky in that respect and my attacks last for only a few minutes, if that at all. I have not been able to walk a straight line in two years without concentrating and I have heard that some people think I am mad when I am walking. This is not the case at all, I am just trying to walk the best way that I know how, without looking like I have been drinking or bumping into walls. Stress is also a factor with MM and can bring on an attack.
As I have stated, hearing loss is common with MM, closely followed by Tinnitus (sounds in the ear that do not exist except in the brain). For me, I hear whines, hums, chirping, cicadas, etc. (one ear has had the sound of a weed eater that never runs out of gas) and lately, I hear heartbeats and planes taking off (before this happens, I can lose hearing altogether until departure time). Oh, and recently I have added a full mariachi band as well as sci-fi sound effects. The Tinnitus is 24/7 and for this reason I no longer sleep through the night. Through all the testing, they also found that I have a genetic link to early hearing loss, but no autoimmune problems that can be detected and no other known reason for my sudden hearing loss.
If my hearing continues to deteriorate, I have been told that I am a good candidate for a Cochlear Implant. So, who knows what the future holds? Being hard of hearing has so many levels that people with “normal” hearing just don’t seem to understand. If I said I was deaf, you would know that I heard nothing. If I said I was blind, you would know that I saw nothing. But, when I say I am hard of hearing, you have no clue as it differs from person to person.
Update:
Well, I am now at almost zero speech comprehension in my “good ear” so I am going to have a Cochlear Implant. I have done all the tests (and flunked them) and should find out my surgery date within the next few days. I will be out for a minimum of one week, then it will take 4 to 6 weeks for the swelling to go down and the healing to finish. Once that is done, I will be “activated” but it will take a while for me to be able to understand speech again, if it works.
I am so excited!!