Andrews Organ Recital: Difference between revisions

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=<span style="color: firebrick">Organ Recital: a tale of woe, my organs and cancer=
=<span style="color: firebrick">Organ Recital: a tale of woe, my organs and cancer=
(As you get older conversations drift into a comparison of ailments, organs and illnesses. In our family this is called an ''Organ Recital''.)
(As you get older conversations drift into a comparison of ailments, organs and illnesses. In our family this is called an ''Organ Recital''.)
=<span style="color: firebrick">Or: are you over 45yrs and male? Please monitor your PSA annually=
=<span style="color: firebrick">Or: are you over 45yrs and male? Please monitor your [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostate-specific_antigen PSA] annually=
I didn't. '''I didn't do ill. Until it was too late'''. PSA>45, stage 3 prostate cancer with very bad histology, inoperable. <br><br>
I didn't. '''I didn't do sick'''. <br>Until it was '''too late'''. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostate-specific_antigen PSA]>45, [http://www.cancerresearchuk.org/cancer-help/about-cancer/what-is-cancer/grow/the-stages-of-a-cancer?gclid=CKPfq4HXg7gCFXDMtAodkWEA4g stage] 3 [http://www.cancerresearchuk.org/cancer-help/type/prostate-cancer/ prostate cancer] with very [http://www.cancerresearchuk.org/cancer-help/type/prostate-cancer/treatment/types/factors-in-deciding-treatment-for-prostate-cancer bad histology], inoperable. <br><br>
'''You can do different''' (as the UEA motto says) and monitor your PSA. With PSA<10 what matters most is the doubling time. Doubling times of years might need attention. Doubling times of months are dangerous.<br><br>
'''You can do different''' (as the [http://www.uea.ac.uk/ UEA motto] says) and ''monitor your PSA''. With PSA<10 what matters most is the [http://news.cancerconnect.com/prostate-cancertipsrising-time-of-psa-levels-shows-aggressiveness-of-prostate-cancer/ doubling time]. Doubling times of years might need attention. Doubling times of months are dangerous.<br><br>
Unexpectedly, I have survived 5.5 years on hormone therapy. Physically it has not been a comfortable period. I shed my academic activities (Head of School, etc.) and focused tightly on the research for which I had grant, and therefore, post-docs.<br><br>
Unexpectedly, I have survived 5.5 years on hormone therapy. Physically it has not been a comfortable period. I shed my academic activities (Head of School, etc.) and focused on the research for which I had grant support, and therefore post-docs (and I had no energy for anything else such as computer vision).<br><br>
Now (June 2013), however the doubling time is one month and I'm hoping chemotherapy will hold it back. And there are side effects of both cancer and the therapy - I've just survived the consequences of a DVT. Time could be tight.<br><br>
It has been doubling in one month now however, (October 2013) chemotherapy is holding it back, not reducing it. Unpleasant side effects of both cancer and the therapy make work harder and I've just survived the consequences of a pulmonary embolism (just another side effect). <br><br>

Latest revision as of 20:45, 25 October 2013

Organ Recital: a tale of woe, my organs and cancer

(As you get older conversations drift into a comparison of ailments, organs and illnesses. In our family this is called an Organ Recital.)

Or: are you over 45yrs and male? Please monitor your PSA annually

I didn't. I didn't do sick.
Until it was too late. PSA>45, stage 3 prostate cancer with very bad histology, inoperable.

You can do different (as the UEA motto says) and monitor your PSA. With PSA<10 what matters most is the doubling time. Doubling times of years might need attention. Doubling times of months are dangerous.

Unexpectedly, I have survived 5.5 years on hormone therapy. Physically it has not been a comfortable period. I shed my academic activities (Head of School, etc.) and focused on the research for which I had grant support, and therefore post-docs (and I had no energy for anything else such as computer vision).

It has been doubling in one month now however, (October 2013) chemotherapy is holding it back, not reducing it. Unpleasant side effects of both cancer and the therapy make work harder and I've just survived the consequences of a pulmonary embolism (just another side effect).