It’s been a while since I last updated my blog. I guess there is not too much going on in my
cancer life – everything is reasonably stable.
I am scheduled for scans, 5-HIAA and other tests in early October and
I’m hoping I’m still stable. Last month
I marked the 4 year anniversary of my diagnosis. This coming week marks the one year anniversary of
my de-bulking surgery. A few days ago, this
blog reached its 100,000th pageview! These are some serious milestones.
I am feeling less stressed out since my retirement a few
months ago. I thought that stopping work
would help my bowel issues tremendously but it has only helped
incrementally. I still need to be near a
restroom and every day is an adventure as to bowel frequency, consistency and
color. I do have some days where I only
have one bowel movement and this makes
me reminisce about my pre-surgery days.
My second NETest showed an increase from in my score from 3 to 4. The range of scores is 1-8 and 1-4 is considered
low or “residual disease”. I still have
one test to go in a few months and I hope it remains in the same range.
I am doing a better job on eating appropriately now that I am
not working. I don’t digest fat very
well so I take CREON, a pancreatic enzyme 3x a day. My doctor told me that I should eat more
soluble fiber and take metamucil or benefiber daily. Soluble fiber attracts water and forms
a gel, which slows down digestion and can help stop diarrhea. Sources of
soluble fiber include oatmeal, oat cereal, lentils, apples, oranges, pears, oat
bran, strawberries, nuts, flaxseeds, beans, dried peas, blueberries, psyllium,
cucumbers, celery, and carrots. Since I
have been eating more soluble fiber, my bowel movements have improved but are
still not “normal”. I have also been
eating 4 smaller meals a day and trying to eat softer foods.
Some of the foods that work for me are below:
- eggs (scrambled, soft/hard boiled, omelettes, deviled or egg salad-with light mayonnaise)
- roasted turkey or grilled/rotisserie chicken
- any grilled, baked or broiled fish
- tuna fish sandwiches made with light mayonnaise - sometimes with reduced fat cheese for a tuna melt
- soups that are not cream based - I try to make my own soups rather than eating canned.
- creamy peanut butter and jelly/marshmallow fluff/fig butter (pick one) sandwiches
- crackers with laughing cow light or other low-fat cheese
- fat free feta cheese in my omelette or on my (small) salad
- greek yogurt
I stay away from celery, corn, nuts, seeds and popcorn. I
don't intentionally put these into anything I eat. When I make a salad, I chop
it up into small pieces and chew thoroughly.
I’m sure that eating better and more frequently plus the reduction of
stress in my life has helped with the slight improvement in symptoms. I’ve also not had another full bowel
obstruction since my emergency room visit in April. I did have a “bowel kink” or perhaps a
partial obstruction in July but it cleared before I needed to see a doctor or
go to the ER.
Finally, I read an interesting article in “The New Yorker”
titled “The Transformation Is
it possible to control cancer without killing it?” It’s about the new treatments that are being
tested and used now. The intent is not to cure cancer, but to keep patients
alive with a higher
quality of life for longer. The link is
below: