Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Back from Bronch Procedure: 8 Days Post Transplant

Ok, well, Mitch is back here, in the room. They actually did not do a biopsy as planned. They spent the time clearing out all the airway secretions which had a lot of mucus. They will culture those samples and get the results anywhere from 24-72 hours. This will give information on what type of infection is present in the new lungs so they know which antibiotics or meds he needs. The reason he has secretions is because they connected his new lungs to the old connections of his upper airways which had the old CF bugs present which have traveled down to the new lungs. The difference is, his new lungs do NOT have CF and with antibiotics, the secretions will go away and not come back. Sometimes, the mucus can also travel from the sinuses too. Like I said though, that is treatable/curable with antibiotics.

They cannot do a biopsy while they clear out secretions because the infection could then get into the blood stream, which would not be good. So they will do another bronchoscopy to get the biopsy before Mitch leaves the hospital.

Becky, Mitch's patient care coordinator, was just in here and she said that from a clinical perspective, Mitch does NOT have any indicators of rejection; based on his oxygen saturation, his vitals, and his xrays. The only way to tell for sure is by the biopsy. There may be some indicators in the cultures of clear fluid they took from the bronchoscopy. If it contains a lot of lymphocytes this is an indicator of rejection. So..we shall see...
Becky said Mitch MIGHT, might- go home next weekend: as in the end of the month. Which seems, well, really soon and hard to imagine at this point for both of us. They start the education part of the process next week!

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Rebecca & Mitch,
16-20 days in hospital is not uncommon. Next Thursday or Friday is well within the window. Think positve about discharge. You are staying in Chapel Hill and thay will re- admit you if they think it's necessary. Keep pushing forward and learn to enjoy the pain. Someone once told me "Get comfortable being uncomfortable". It will get better every breath, every day, every night without bottled oxygen....Trust me!
Ian

Yameen said...

This sounds so amazing! Keep up the good work guys! Mitch, you are a lucky man to have a wife like Rebecca. I'm also very happy to hear in the previous post that you are now wearing boxers, rather than the tighty-whities you were famous for in high school. Looks like you're making improvements on all fronts.