Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Diagnosis Finally Received
38 Answers
For Sqad and all you others who have cared and been interested in the mysterious and sudden illness which has hit Dave, my 68 yr. old Brother-in-Law.
I didn't think it was going to be good - and it isn't. I wish it had been quicker and he could have been spared so much pain and messing around.
I'd never heard of this:-
Mesotheoioma - a rare form of Asbestos Cancer. (I did know a fair bit about that because I lived for a while in Hebden Bridge in Calderdale and there was an asbestos factory.......)
Apparently it is not always caused by asbestos, but is associated with welding (car bodywork), which was Dave's job, although he became a specialist in the paint shop.
There has to be another biopsy to establish what stage he is at. I don't expect that it will be at the further end of the 5 mths. to 3 yrs. timescale he has been given, t.b.h..
This is devastating. He will be on morphine until the end of his life - not much use worrying about addiction now. I'm so angry and sad and want to cry. A hard-working grafter who started from nothing,almost illiterate since he switched off school after coming home for dinner and finding his mum dying (he made up for this lack). and ended up with his own garage.
My sister, understandably, doesn't want to talk right now (we arranged a conduit of news through my elder daughter) and it will probably be some time before she does.
I'd like to say thank you to you all, especially Sqad
Sqad - anything you know that could be of any help, please? Best to know where we are.
Thanks again, everyone,
I didn't think it was going to be good - and it isn't. I wish it had been quicker and he could have been spared so much pain and messing around.
I'd never heard of this:-
Mesotheoioma - a rare form of Asbestos Cancer. (I did know a fair bit about that because I lived for a while in Hebden Bridge in Calderdale and there was an asbestos factory.......)
Apparently it is not always caused by asbestos, but is associated with welding (car bodywork), which was Dave's job, although he became a specialist in the paint shop.
There has to be another biopsy to establish what stage he is at. I don't expect that it will be at the further end of the 5 mths. to 3 yrs. timescale he has been given, t.b.h..
This is devastating. He will be on morphine until the end of his life - not much use worrying about addiction now. I'm so angry and sad and want to cry. A hard-working grafter who started from nothing,almost illiterate since he switched off school after coming home for dinner and finding his mum dying (he made up for this lack). and ended up with his own garage.
My sister, understandably, doesn't want to talk right now (we arranged a conduit of news through my elder daughter) and it will probably be some time before she does.
I'd like to say thank you to you all, especially Sqad
Sqad - anything you know that could be of any help, please? Best to know where we are.
Thanks again, everyone,
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There was an asbestos works in Barking, so as a student nurse on the chest ward at Barking hospital I saw mesothelioma patients quite often. One thing our doctors did a lot was fit simple chest drains( just a bag with a double clamp to close when emptying) for the pleural effusions most of the patients developed. This helped a lot and reduced the number of inpatient admissions giving them more time at home with a better quality of life . I didn't realise it was rare until I moved out of the area.
Again, deep thanks. The next step is another biopsy to establish whether chemotherapy or radiotherapy is the best treatment.
There is a complication - because he has a heart pacemaker, they can't 'put him out' and he has to remain awake through any procedures. My sister has spent the day trying to help him to be positive. As we must now be, more than ever.
He'll be prayed for by everyone tomorrow at church.
There is a complication - because he has a heart pacemaker, they can't 'put him out' and he has to remain awake through any procedures. My sister has spent the day trying to help him to be positive. As we must now be, more than ever.
He'll be prayed for by everyone tomorrow at church.
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