What
is it called when a thing that was defined by necessity as
"uncertain" changes its very nature to become redefined as
"stable"? If I knew, I'd know how to title this post; as it
is, I'm waiting until I finish to figure that out.
I
ask that question because I've spent the majority of my life with a
sword dangling over my head, almost literally. The accident I wrote
of in "The Fall" left me with multiple complicated injuries
that went undetected for many years, then went untreated for many
more while a cadre of doctors from the four corners of the
Continental United States poked, prodded, X-rayed and examined me and
collectively threw their hands in the air about what, if anything, to
do to help me.
Eventually,
in 1984 when I was 25, I had cervical spine surgery to correct a
herniation with complications I will never truly understand. This
happened at Loma Linda University Hospital in Loma Linda, California
(east of Los Angeles). Four years later, I had another cervical spine
surgery at the same hospital. That surgery was botched but I wouldn't
find that out for 18 years.
After
Loma Linda, I went to USC University Hospital for Pain Management.
When my symptoms seemed to indicate more of the extensive damage in my
neck might need surgical attention (again), I was sent to the
Neurosurgery Department at USC. There I found a wonderful doctor, Dr.
Stillerman, who put off surgery, thinking it wasn't time to do more
than keep me as stable as possible -- my collection of neck braces
was impressive -- and see how I progressed. He was replaced by Dr.
Samudrala who has turned out to be my guardian angel.
In
2004, I went in with my annual MRI for my annual visit with Dr.
Samudrala and he looked at the new films and said I needed C-4/5
corrected as soon as possible, which turned out to be a week after
that appointment, on my 45th birthday. Surgical techniques had
changed over the years so this experience was vastly different
(better/easier) than my 2nd surgery 18 years prior. Once I'd healed
(this time, a plate was implanted so I had no neck braces), Dr.
Samudrala told me he thought I'd need at least one more surgery in the
near future. So I continued to be monitored by my Pain doctor and saw
Dr. Samudrala as needed.
He
soon moved on to Cedars-Sinai and I followed him there for annual check ins since he was
the one doctor out of dozens I've seen who spoke to me honestly and
simply as one person to another. He then moved to Glendale Adventist
Hospital and I followed him there, too. So, two years ago -- in 2013 --
when the little finger and ring finger on my left hand went numb
overnight, my first thought was "Oh, shit, it's my neck"
and I immediately contacted Dr. Rever, my Pain doctor, who ordered a
new MRI and, when she read that report, told me to go see Dr.
Samudrala, which I did.
At
that point, Dr. Samudrala was no longer doing complex surgery. He
said he thought I needed both C-3/4 and C-6/7 worked on and that
would be a long, hard, delicate surgery so he wanted me to go back to
USC. Which I did. This was in August 2014. The doctor I saw at the
USC Keck Spine Center sorta wasted a few months treating me as
though my injury was new, ordered a CT scan and flat X-rays, then
ordered an EMG (because my left arm from the elbow down was
tingling/numb even though I had elbow surgery to supposedly correct
that in early 2013). After all that, he said he wasn't comfortable
operating because he didn't think he could do enough to significantly
aid me in getting better. He sent me to UCLA.
After
days and days of phone calls, I got an appointment but it turns out
the UC system doesn't take my health insurance (I have
individual Blue Shield and no one wants to take individual insurance)
so I arranged to see someone at UC Irvine (they mislead me, telling me they
did take my insurance but, as stated already, it turns out no UC
hospital will take me). So, frustrated beyond belief, feeling
helpless and aggravated and in pain and exhausted, I turned back to
Dr. Samudrala for help.
He'd
told me months before that, if necessary, he'd help me get in to
Cedars-Sinai and it turns out they will take my insurance. But...
I
had an appointment yesterday (April 9) at Dr. Samudrala's new private
practice in Pasadena and the news was both really good and really
bad.
Let
me back up a moment. When I spoke to Dr. Samudrala on the phone after
the visit to UC Irvine, he calmed me down with a few words of support
and reassurance and told me to go see him. Two weeks after that
conversation, which eased a lot of severe stress for me, came my
appointment yesterday.
He
looked at my test films (CT, MRI, X-ray) then came into the room, sat
down near me, looked me in the eye and said, "Let's see what
your reports say". These were the reports from USC and the test
reports. So he read them sitting there with me. Then he looked at me
and asked what my main symptom was and I said what I've told every
doctor, "Pain". I have no obvious neurological symptoms: no
paralysis, no weakness in my limbs, no obviously treatable issues
that can be traced directly back to specific injured nerves,
herniated discs or bone fragments.
He
asked me to refresh his memory of the surgery that he did 10 years
ago so I did and he said, "Now I'm remembering. Actually, I'm
remembering the nightmare." The look he gave me spoke volumes.
He told me he remembered opening me up and seeing a mess inside, that
he probably should have cleaned out more bone but he was mainly
concerned with correcting a rapidly moving forward bend to my spine
that was impinging on the spinal canal at that time. So he did that,
put in the plate and closed me up. That was a long enough surgery.
A
few weeks later, when I returned for my first post-op visit with him
at USC, he said he thought I'd need at least one more operation "by
the time you're 40". As I said, I turned 45 on the day of
surgery. He can't tell age very well I don't think.
He
was pleased with my healing and, three months later, after spending
all that time healing at my parents' house, Dr. Samudrala released me
back into Dr. Rever's hands.
Back
to yesterday. After reading all the reports and looking at all the films, speaking to me and listening to me, he said, "The reason no one wants to do any
surgery is because it's too dangerous and no one wants to make you a
quadriplegic.” He said that if where we were sitting was “1”
and the moon was “10” on a scale of how dangerous surgery would
be for me, I'm at about 7 ½ to 8, far too dangerous right now. And I
agreed. So did my dad, who usually goes with me to these kinds of
appointments just to be a 2nd
pair of ears.
So,
while Dr. Samudrala scared me with the prospect of the danger of
surgery, he reassured me that my neck is pretty stable right now.
“You grow bones where you shouldn't be growing bones,” he told
me. “The entire right side of your cervical spine has boney
growths.”
He said I could go see one of 2 doctors at Cedars-Sinai but they won't do surgery on me, either. I see no point in putting myself through unnecessary doctors' visits, not to mention the drive from east of L.A. to Beverly Hills.
All
of this was scaring the hell out of me, you understand, and I walked
in to the appointment beyond stressed. The past two years have been
their own kind of hell that no amount of description will truly
describe.
I,
of course, asked where this left me and he said it left me with him.
He wants to see me again in 6 months. Then he did the most remarkable
thing anyone has ever done for me. He'd been holding my hand
throughout this discussion but he squeezed my hand and said: “I'm
not going to leave you. I'll always be here for you.” I must have
looked as struck dumb and as amazingly grateful as I felt because he
said, “Does that make you feel better?” and I nodded and said,
“You have no idea. You're going to make me cry.” He said it was
okay to cry but I held off until I'd made the appointment for 6
months from now and Dad and I left the office. Once in the hallway,
though I sorta collapsed against the wall and started to cry. I was
overcome by his compassion, his honesty, his reassurance, his
humanity not to mention the cancellation of the on-going, threatening near-certainty that
I'd need a 4th
cervical spine surgery.
A
weight that was becoming almost too heavy to bear lifted off of me
yesterday and I've been in a bit of a mental muddle since.
My
next step will be back with my Pain doctor now that we have a clear,
realistic view of my physical situation. Dr. Samudrala said that now
I need to treat my pain. I need to medicate myself, something I've
been loathe to do for many years. I have a cocktail of pain-blocking
meds but they only work so much. I've had prescriptions for
narcotic-strength pain meds for many years but have rarely used them.
I need to use them now. And I need to ease the hell off myself. I've
had to be strong for nearly 35 years. It's hard to relax from that
kind of hyper-vigilance.
It's
going to take some experimenting and a
lot
of work on my part to learn how to be this new evolution of myself,
this person who is truly a chronic pain patient. I've known that's
described me for many years but I never really accepted what that
means and it's going to take a little while for me to internalize,
understand, and accept this new designation. But I will work it into
my world view. It may take some time but I'll get there.
This
post is by way of me expressing just how important Dr. Samudrala has
been -- and continues to be -- to me. This is why I tell people that if they're uncomfortable with a doctor or what a doctor says doesn't ring true, then that isn't your doctor. Keep looking for the right person who fits your needs. And I think I just found the title of this post.