Xeloda update.
(More Pics coming soon)
This drug has definitely brought
me to the edge of despair. I know I should be sorry to say good-bye to it but
quite frankly, it was not worth it for me. This is not easy to admit because I am stoic and can endure but I still have to live my life and
go to work every day. Good-bye was far too easy.
- Flossing teeth can result in a nasty cut on the hands as everything tears through the skin.
- Washing hair is best done with gloves on because the hair catches on loose skin, tearing it.
- Bending your finger causes the crease in your finger to open up into a painful gash.
- A bit of paper on your finger turns out to be shredding skin. It’s best not to pull on it.
- A run tears up your feet so that walking for the next 5 days feels as though you have broken glass underfoot – trapped in your socks.
- The infernal tingling and burning comes on at the most inconvenient times.
- Popping open a lid requires a knife
- If you have no one available to unscrew the lid of a bottle, you go thirsty
- You pick up everything that may be remotely hot with a cloth because you cannot feel if you are burning.
- You cannot go to the hot tub – no soaking.
- Showering burns your hands and feet like the devil.
- If something slips through your fingers, it’s going to cause a great deal of pain.
I watch him effortlessly open a
can with a can-opener and remember that I used to be able to do those things.
What I wish I had known and special thanks to @groz_P
I wish I had known about Revitaderm
with 40% urea. It’s available from Amazon without a prescription. It softens
the skin so no more blisters. I hated pricking those never-ending blisters that
always formed. I put it on twice a day and over it, I put on Sudocrem. I have
to get that from the UK, It’s a nappy (diaper) rash treatment. According to the
nurse (who asked a pharmacist on my behalf), urea softens the skin so that
other treatments can penetrate through the skin. That’s why I add the Sudocrem
on top of the Revitaderm. It softens and heals. However, it does nothing for
the toenails and they keep popping off like popcorn in hot oil. OK, that has
put me off popcorn. Ignore that comparison.
The skin still peels horribly but I
no longer have to keep putting on hundreds of Band-Aids and dressings. I just
have to add gauze to the most painful areas. I very rarely get to wear regular
shoes. I found a pair way too big for me and carefully arrange cotton padding
around my feet.
In between I use shea butter to
moisturize and I love my white gloves.
It’s been a week now since I
stopped the Xeloda. It will probably be a few more before my hands and feet
heal. All I know is that I could not go on like this. Every task was an effort
so that I balanced whether it was worth it or not.
The cost of a quiet walk.
Nasty pictures below:
After 1 day |
||
Before treatment |
Agghhh. I read about so many women saying they tolerate Xeloda so well. Makes me nervous for my turn.
ReplyDeleteThere are things that can be done to make it easier but no one told me ahead of time. Not everyone has these s/e. "Only" about 40%.
ReplyDelete