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Not a Hysterical Report



If I had written this post several days ago, I may have been called it Hysterical Report. Actually, I thought about renaming this blog to The Hysterical Report. I'm glad I waited. I'd rather not be hysterical about anything.

I am on a new adventure. No. I take that back, it's not new. After 12 years, this adventure's path has come into the foreground. It's simply not a good idea to let the grass grow over this path anymore.

My in-my-face-but-not-hysterical-adventure is an upcoming hysterectomy. Da-dah!

Oh-oh, did I lose you? Come back when you can wrap your head around the concept of a hysterectomy. It took me awhile. I realize it helps for me to write about it.

Yesterday afternoon I got a chest x-ray, one of my three pre-op things to do. The other two are an EKG (next week) and several blood tests (a week before the operation). Did you happen to flash on the Operation board game, by the way?

Because I did the X-rays in town, I repeated myself a lot to the lab receptionist and the X-ray Lady about faxing the X-rays to the Gynecologist-Oncologist's office several cities away. Only after this conversation with the X-ray Lady did I confident that the results will be faxed.

"What kind of surgery are you doing?" asked the X-ray Lady.

"Hysterectomy," I answered. 

"We still have to do that?" she asked, which got me wondering if she was in menopausal mode.

"They found precancerous cells."

"Oh."

Yeah. We don't think of grey-haired postmenopausal women as needing hysterectomies. Certainly, not I. My Gyn-Doc wanted me to get a hysterectomy 12 years ago when the biopsy of a uterine polyp showed the cells to be in a state of complex hyperplasia with atypia. Untreated, there was a good risk of me getting cancer. Not having health insurance, I needed to find another route. So the Gyn-Doc put me on birth control pills for several months which chased that condition away and, until this year, the pathology results of subsequence polyps reported benign cells. Yaay!

I went 12 years before complex hyperplasia with atypia reared itself up again.  Only this time a pathologist said I had "precancerous cells" and that meant my Gyn-Doc put her foot down. The only treatment was a hysterectomy. 

Not totally convinced, I took the Gyn-Doc's referral and met with the Gyn-Oncologist Doc over a week ago. I thought he would take another sample to double check that I got the same result. Nope. The Gyn-Onc Doc said that during the hysterectomy he would take another biospy. The lab results I have were good to go by, he said. Oh.

Then he convinced me I wanted this hysterectomy. He drew two lines on a piece of paper. The left column was Good, the middle, Precancer, and the right, Cancer. In the middle column, he wrote I, II, and III. He circled III and said, "That is you."  He wrote 40-50%. "That is the risk of developing cancer," he said. He paused, then continued, "There is no hard line between precancerous and cancer."

In other words, I could develop cancer, I could not. I could already have cancerous cells growing. That latter thought sunk in quite quickly and deeply. Now having affordable health insurance (thank you, President Obama), I did not have a reasonable excuse to dilly dally about shall I take the risk, or shan't I.

I'm slated for a laparoscopic hysterectomy in 34 days. The Gyn-Onc Doc will use da Vinci robotic technology. That's cool, don't you think? I almost want to be awake to watch. Gyn-Onc Doc suggested I look it up on You Tube instead.

So there you go. Stay tuned to more of my trying-not-to-be-hysterical adventure.

Joyful joy, joy, and joy.

Comments

  1. Thank You for Taking Care of YourSelf.
    The newer technology means you'll heal quickly and have less noticeable symptoms . . . (yay!!!) Cheering for YOU!!!
    love & love,
    -g-

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I imagine you swishing pom poms in the air. :-) Thank you!

      Delete
  2. Hope this will keep cancer from gaining a stronghold in your body and that your doctors are being pro-active.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Ellen. I'm fortunate to have pro-active doctors who are willing to work with me. :-)

      Delete
  3. Well, I'm so sorry to read this because you have to actually think about money when it comes to your health. I'm not saying we don't run into some money issues but when we need an operation, we can get it done and all we have to show is our health card. From what you wrote, I'm glad you are getting this done. I am keeping my fingers crossed all the way through

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Birgit for your positive thoughts. Makes me stronger.

      I would love for our country to have single-payer health insurance. Our insurance system is simply ridiculous. And, now with the leaders in Congress and the White House being such greedy numbskulls, we have no idea what'll happen.

      Delete
  4. The only way I knew I have thyroid cancer was via a shoulder x-ray for something completely different. Otherwise we might not have caught it for another couple of years. As it was we were just in the nick of time before it started spreading. (which is why I'm not messing around with this whole menstruating thing) ... so good on you for biting the bullet ... and thank you too, to Mr (he's a 'Mr' now, right?) Obama for helping my friend SusieeeMac stay alive for many years to come.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank goodness for happenstances that work in our favor.

      I don't know when it began, but we address the former Chiefs as President Obama, President Bush, and so forth. This current guy will not ever get me to recognize him as a capital P.

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  5. I'm so glad you have health insurance and can have the surgery. I wonder where "replacing Obamacare with something so much better and affordable" has gone? My son might be losing his SS and Medicare. I always thought Obamacare would be there to hold him over until someone was willing to take a chance on him and give him a job. He's been unable to work for so long. Will they take a chance? He's no longer able to do the physical work he used to do. He's taken medical coding online and needs a job with medical insurance. I couldn't believe it when all the Congressmen cheered like they had won a football game. It's not a game...it's human lives.

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    Replies
    1. Betty, I wish your son the best in finding a job with a decent employer. I want to think that good wins over evil, and all these greedy, disgusting men and women in power get their comeuppance infinity-fold!

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Thanks for the good cheer. :-)

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