Today Jason
received chemotherapy for the first time. He also received a drug called ATG
(Anti-Thymacite Globuline). He has had ATG before and his previous reactions
were not all that calm; he shook violently while being infused. However, this
time the drug was slowed and he was pre-medicated with Tylenol, Benadryl, and
Steroids. There were no real reactions this time around so we can be thankful
for the anti-climactic infusion.
Along with
all of the medications Jason still needs blood so he has received three units
today.
Jason needs
blood because one of the many awful problems with his syndrome is that his
lymphatic system (part of the immune system) reacts to his blood as an
infection and then destroys it. Sometimes the reactions can be small when his
body is infection-free but if Jason contracts a cold, flu, a cut, or some kind
of open wound then his body recognizes the infection, and his blood, as foreign
material and then destroys it. This is why it has been so serious for Jason to
avoid crowds, hugging, kissing, hand-shakes, etc. The reason he was
hospitalized this last time was because he was exposed to the flu and his body
started destroying his blood (which carries his oxygen). Without his blood
Jason has trouble walking, breathing, sleeping, and eating. Up until a couple
of months ago he was doing quite well but now he is receiving 6 or more units
of blood per week just to “make-up” for his constant blood loss/destruction.
Today was a
terribly busy day and we are exhausted. But we were happy to see Dave, a nurse
and gun enthusiast to whom Jason enjoys chatting. We were also happy to
discover the new TV’s in all of the transplant hospital rooms that are four
times larger than a year previous.
Hopefully this will be the miracle that we
have hoped to receive!