Thursday, November 09, 2006

Wisdom

Psalm 111:10 - "The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom; all those who
practice it have a good understanding. His praise endures forever!"

It seemed appropriate to start tonight's post with the topic of wisdom, because we sorely need it. Our appointment today with Dr. Bendell went fine, and we liked her well enough. She was very encouraging about the lymph node results, which actually weren't really even lymph in origin. She was encouraging that the long-term prognosis is very good. She was emphatic that the correct course of therapy is to do the stomach surgery to remove the antrum of the stomach.

Ugh.

(Heavy sigh)

So now we come to it, to the deciding point. Mayo says do not, under any circumstances, take out her antrum. In fact, I got an email from the doctor at Mayo last night reiterating that point (Dr. Thompson). The science behind this approach makes wonderful sense to the medical side of both of us. The desire to avoid major surgery, with a 6-9 month recovery, is obviously attractive. The avoidance of the risk of permanent side effects in her digestive system would be great.

At Duke, every doctor, physician's assistant, and nurse practitioner have all said to do the surgery. No exceptions. They have stopped just short of calling Mayo's "Surveillance Therapy" approach ridiculous and irresponsible, but they've come close. (Mayo, on the other hand, essentially called Duke's surgery approach barbaric and uneducated.) The reasoning behind Duke's approach is a bit more philosophical, and unfortunately for us, the folks who ultimately have to make this decision, it also makes absolutely perfect sense. Their reasoning is that she has cancer; it is confined to one location. If we do this surgery, the risk of further complications or spread are permanently eliminated. It is gone, won't come back, completely finished. She never worries about it again.

Also, and this is a part of medicine today, I am sure that everyone at Duke knows that if they recommend the surgery, there is no risk of me coming back 5-10 years from now with a team of lawyers because they failed to act and prevent the early death of my wife. If they go with surveillance, they are convinced that there is some risk of shortened life; why would we chance it, and why would they risk it legally? I just know that is part of their thinking.

Duke agrees that the risk of metastasis is very low, but refuses to say impossible. Mayo says they "think" it is impossible. Dr. Bendell said that if Dee Dee were 72, she would say not to do the surgery. But as young as Dee Dee is, it just doesn't make sense to leave the cancer inside her body when you have a guaranteed way to get it out forever, according to Dr. Bendell. By the way, Bendell is probably in her mid-thirties, female, and fairly thin (not as thin as Dee Dee, but slim). So, she fits the profile for higher risk of post-operative complications that Dee Dee would be at risk for. When asked today what she would do, Dr. Bendell did not hesitate: "I would have the surgery as soon as possible, and be done with it."

We told Dr. Bendell that we would take everything under advisement, but there was no way we were deciding this thing today. We got (more!) bloodwork done today - seven vials worth. They are scheduling the last study they want to do (Mayo agrees), an endoscopy with ultasound of the possible sub-surface tumors in the stomach. Then, we will talk a lot, pray even more, and decide what to do. Obviously, we don't get to simply refuse to decide; that then would be the decision to simply observe. We discussed, briefly, getting yet another opinion (from either Johns Hopkins or from MD Anderson in Houston); but to be honest, starting over at another center made us both feel a bit nauseous. We may revisit that idea later.

By the way, if we go with Mayo's approach, basically for the next several years Dee Dee would get endoscopy 3-4 times a year, CAT scan once a year, PET scan once a year, and octreatide once a year. After that, they would try to spread things out, assuming everything was holding stable. If the lesions grow in size or number, there is increased risk of internal bleeding. If they metastasize, there is risk of shortened life span. Obviously we can come back and do the surgery later, but with any cancer there is a "too late," although evidently that is a low (Duke) to no (Mayo) risk here. If we do the surgery, the cancer risk is gone, but there is between a 5% risk of the permanent digestive problems (per the surgeon, Dr. Pappas), to a 15% risk (per Bendell), to a 50% or greater risk (everyone at Mayo).

So we pray for wisdom. I pray for the courage to be a godly husband and lead my wife even in the scary times and the scary decisions. The Bible says that fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. Proverbs 8:13 - "The fear of the LORD is hatred of evil. Pride and arrogance and the way of evil and perverted speech I hate." So, I pray that we would fear God more, in the correct and proper way. I pray that our reverence and awe and humility before His perfection and holiness would grow. I pray that we would be more convicted of our sinful nature, and of our specific sins, in light of His holiness. This is proper fear of God. And this will lead to greater wisdom. It is a mathematical certainty. Fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.

People ask me if we want to flee, to just get away from this. No! I didn't ask for it, but I have asked God to take it from us. And He has repeatedly said, "NO." His answer, given that He has promised to only do good for us, is good enough. I will not deliberately try to avoid His plan. And by the way, I am not nearly brave enough, or good enough, on my own to stand up to this. It is Christ in me, it is the Holy Spirit comforting me, that enables me to talk about this candidly, to face it daily with sanity and some humor. Our younger kids sing, "My God is so big, so strong and so mighty, there's nothing my God cannot do." And while that does mean that He could take the cancer away, it seems in our case to mean that He can empower us to live as if Scripture is true, even when life circumstances turn scary and sad and hard.

That's really all I/we are doing: living daily as if the Bible is actually true. After all, we're Christians; shouldn't we live this way?

Tony

Proverbs 2:6-7 - "For the LORD gives wisdom; from His mouth come knowledge and understanding; He stores up sound wisdom for the upright; He is a shield to those who walk in integrity"

Proverbs 8:14 - "I have counsel and sound wisdom; I have insight; I have strength."

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Final report on the "Lymph"

We had our appointment today with the thoracic folks at Duke. Basically, all GOOD NEWS! They said that she is healing as expected, and that her incisions are great. The pain, and more recent addition of significant burning, are normal and will pass over the next two-three weeks. The doctor said that you can tell a great deal about a person's overall health by how they do while under general anesthesia, and that Dee Dee is "the very picture of excellent cardiovascular health." One of the anesthesia docs commented that he needed to get on "whatever workout program this lady is on." That's my bride!

And best of all, the lymph was actually more of a blood vessel problem, totally benign, unrelated to the stomach in any sense of the word. It was large enough that they are glad to have it out, but suspect that it had been there for years. Amazing! The thymus gland was partially involved, and they removed part of it, but that, too, is no big deal. The thymus is hugely critical in developing immunities during the first decade of life, but by age twenty it begins to atrophy, and by now is mostly inert tissue. It has done its job, so it basically goes away over time. Again, we are fearfully and wonderfully made. If Darwin himself could see the human body with the level of medical and scientific knowledge that we have today, he would scoff at his own theory.

Thanks for continued praying, and meals, and notes and cards. She has never been a big fan of spending time on the phone, but she's even up for more calls and visits now. Thanks for your continued efforts to encourage her, and me, and all us Clarks!

Tony

Monday, November 06, 2006

One week post-op

Greetings! I know it has been a while since my last post, but that's simply because not much has changed. Basically, this has been a much more painful and slow surgery to recover from than we had anticipated, but she is getting better. Yesterday, for example, she had to leave church early because it just hurt too much to stay.

However, she is clearly better now than she was 2-3 days ago. That is how we have realized that we must think of this process: looking at several days for progress, not daily progress. This is not easy for two sinfully self-sufficient, strong "type A's" to readily accept. We are sort of wired to look at the new morning and compare it to last night. Or, for me to get home from work and want to know how much better she is than that morning. So, it seems, God intends to teach us patience through this process, among other things.

When Gabe was sick, exactly ten years ago, I remember saying that there are times that God shapes his children gently, with very fine sandpaper. There are other times that he is a sculptor, using chisels to knock off great pieces of sin. This is a new time of sculpting for us, and self-sufficiency and patience are two of the chunks getting leveled! Maybe if we'd learned those lessons well enough last time....

Now, I'm not saying that God has sent Dee Dee's cancer purely as discipline. He may very well have sent it simply to refine us, to strengthen our faith. However, His word is clear that he will also correct His children when they are in sinful patterns that they seem unaware of, or unwilling to repent of. Therefore, we would be remiss not to do some introspective soul-searching any time difficulties are sent our way. All opportunities to learn more of our sin, of our need for a savior, should be welcomed and vigorously pursued. This is one of those times, when we are driven back to Christ. We should be thankful when God, in His love and grace, works to get us back to the cross! This is the concept we see in so many Psalms, where He searches our hearts (Psalms 4:4, 7:9, 139:1, 139:23).

Some good news: the preliminary pathology results for the mass removed last week are that it is benign, and unrelated to the stomach cancer. We should get final results tomorrow at her appointment at Duke. So, the surgery was able to be done locally (not at Mayo); in the least invasive manner possible (no broken ribs or sternum sawed in half); with what appears to be the best pathology result possible. Praise God! The pain can wear your body down, but our hearts rejoice in the goodness of God.

Our upcoming schedule looks like surgery follow-up on Wednesday; and first official appointment with the medical GI oncologist at Duke on Thursday. She, we assume, will then schedule the remaining test to look at the sub-surface lesions in the stomach that were seen at Mayo, and then we will decide on further treatment.

I was thinking, how things that you would not really expect to minister to you during troubling times, actually end up being part of the key ways you are blessed. Now, I know you all will laugh at this, and say to yourselves that every Clark male would say the same thing, but food really has been that for us. Many have brought food, both for lunches and dinners. Thank you all! We know some very good cooks! It has been a blessing not to need to figure out menus, try to get them prepared, or just constantly go for take out. Thank you.

Another unexpected blessing: When Gabe was ill, one of our dear friends really ministered to our hearts regularly. Doug and Susie then moved to Oklahoma (proving the depravity of man and that all sin and fall short!), and we have missed them ever since. As we have gone through this, I have missed Doug. I have missed his laugh, his genuine affection, and his ability to quickly connect to my own emotional state. Sunday afternoon, I got a call from this dear man telling me that he would be in my house in about 2 hours. What a treat! He was just in for a brief trip, knew of our situation, and came to spend a few minutes with us. It reminded me of .... the last time I approached this level of hurt/pain/ fear/helplessness, and how God used this brother to minister comfort and peace. In Is. 61, He promises to bring beauty from ashes; isn't it great when He let's us be a part of that process?

Tony