End of Life Issues
Related: About this forumHi, I'm actually GliderGuider, who posted below
I ran afoul of the admins over a political issue (what else), so I had to start a new handle. Life goes on.
The update is that my beloved is in her end crisis. The cancer moved far faster than we were prepared for, and appears to have taken out a lot of her digestive system. 24 hours ago she was good enough to go see our family doctor, now she's too sick to take an ambulance to emergency. She can't hold down food or liquids, even water. She is is vomiting every ten minutes or so, and is throwing up what appear to be pieces of stomach tissue. Since she was still depending on oral pain meds, and doesn't have approval for injectables yet, that is a problem. Between bouts of vomiting I'm trying to keep enough oral hydromorphone in her to ease the discomfort. This is an extremely rapid and merciless crash.
I'm becoming a psychopomp whether I want to or not. Please ask the universe to ease her passage.
sweetroxie
(776 posts)Why is hospice not involved? Surely they could reduce the misery.
The_jackalope
(1,660 posts)It's just that this all went pear-shaped so damn fast, we didn't have all the pieces lined up. We're doing it on the fly. I've got a headset on and working the phone as I type. I expect I'll be able to get a palliative care doctor over here today.
My wife doesn't want to go to emergency because of the risk that they'll admit her. I know that sounds odd, but it's very important to her that she not be under institutional control during these final days or hours. I know why that's so important to her, and I agree with her.
The situation is fluid, and we're playing it out in real time.
kimbutgar
(23,382 posts)My Dad died in a cold hospital room. He told me to go home because he didnt want me driving at night then he passed. I always regretted that I didn't bring him home. 19 years later my mother ended up in the hospital she got stabilized and I got to bring her home where she passed 10 days later In her home with me holding her hand. So peaceful.
My sympathies and my thoughts are with you.
FM123
(10,126 posts)The_jackalope
(1,660 posts)samnsara
(18,290 posts)...Godspeed to your beloved for a safe passage unto the next phase of her existence....
The_jackalope
(1,660 posts)We have both sensed that there is a large and happy welcoming committee assembling on the other side. Keeping my fingers crossed.
Hayduke Bomgarte
(1,965 posts)`
lunasun
(21,646 posts)more morphine and an emergency call was answered
Yes I will ask and also ask peace for you. Little time left hold her with love
Leghorn21
(13,743 posts)to be hospitalized), I just inserted his morphine tablets up his butt. The hell with "protocol".
Caregiving is the hardest job we'll ever have...but you'll do a fine job, though it may not feel like it right now.
Keep us posted, please, and keep doing what you're doing -
HUGS
mr_lebowski
(33,643 posts)Hydromorphone (Dilaudid) is one of the higher bio-availability via oral route opioids so you probably don't need to cut the dose TOO much when going the 'opposite' route (basically rectally admin ends up being pretty close to the strength of IV usage, though spread over much more time ... it's going direct to your blood stream). If you had to go that route I'd cut the dose in half to start to see how it affects her.
Sorry for your families suffering ... hope your pain is eased soon ...
cilla4progress
(25,954 posts)Blessings to all!
appal_jack
(3,813 posts)I wish I could be of more help, but fwiw, there's someone way down south wishing you both as much fortitude & peace as possible.
-app
radical noodle
(8,677 posts)Prayers (and purrs from my cats) that she will have a gentle journey and that you get the help you need. Love to you both.
LiberalLoner
(10,189 posts)I hope her passage is eased and I wish for peace and comfort for you. I'm just so sorry.
WinstonSmith4740
(3,157 posts)I am so sorry you're going through it. Hospice workers are angels on earth...they will really help you both through this difficult passage. My thoughts are with you. Message me if you want to vent.
Bernardo de La Paz
(51,009 posts)Drugs can be absorbed faster and more completely in the rectum sometimes.
But read up and get medical advice if you can, even over the phone.
volstork
(5,593 posts)May you both be surrounded by the support of those you love in these days.
WhiteTara
(30,185 posts)May her next life be auspicious. My heart is with you.
world wide wally
(21,832 posts)Moral Compass
(1,812 posts)My sympathies go out to you and your spouse.
nolabear
(43,233 posts)HAB911
(9,363 posts)I just did with my older brother in Hospice
Peace to you both
Ligyron
(7,904 posts)We used to dissolve that drug in water and inject because it breaks down very, very easily hence the "hydro" in hydromorphone. People drop Dilaudid right in the barrel of the syringe, suck up some water, shake, get the air bubbles out and inject in upper arm, where ever.
Can't throw that up.
I'm just telling you what I know...
Good luck.
Plucketeer
(12,882 posts)I know what you're going thru and I wish I had something stronger than an easy passing to offer. Peace
catbyte
(35,841 posts)would be very effective for her pain. The fentanyl is absorbed through the tissue in the cheek so swallowing & keeping down the meds isn't an issue.They're wicked expensive, though. I used to be on them for pain control, but I lost my great prescription drug benefits when I retired so I had to find something else much less expensive. Again, I'm so very sorry. I've seen family members & my spouse of 30 years through terminal illnesses and it's just plain horrific. Please don't forget to take care of you.
dbackjon
(6,578 posts)Moostache
(10,166 posts)I do truly hope that she finds respite and you find comfort in this terrible ordeal and when the storm has passed and the grief run its cruel and inevitable course, that you are able to reflect on the warm and happier times and hold those dear the rest of your days and that the memories and torment of the present slips effortlessly into a deep past to never be revisited.
DonCoquixote
(13,713 posts)I would not wish this on anyone, especially as this is ery close to the fate I am trying to keep my mother from. Godspeed.
pangaia
(24,324 posts)So will she....each in his or her way....
I do not know her.. or you, really. But, I will carry each of you today, lightly, one on each shoulder...
Eliot Rosewater
(32,537 posts)BRAND NAME(S): Phenergan, Promethegan
guaranteed to do wonders on nausea and is a suppository
Duppers
(28,248 posts)I've thought of your wife's health for months but am now at a loss for words. I hope she is resting without pain now.
Hugs.
The_jackalope
(1,660 posts)In the emergency department she was treated with IV Dilaudid and anti-nausea medication. That helped. Then they admitted her to the hospital at 2:30 am and her care fell apart. No further pain management or anti-nauseants, with no prospect of any until after 9:00 am. Plus she contracted diarrhoea from somewhere. She ended up almost as sick as she was when she went in. She is apparently too sick for the hospital to manage effectively. Even worse, they were talking about a multi-day stay which she was not prepared to accept. So she took some of her own Dilaudid and called me to bust her out. At 6:00 am I got her home. She says if she's going to suffer she wants to do it at home where she has more freedom to act, and things happen on her schedule rather than when the institution gets around to it.
She is emphatic about not allowing herself to be put under institutional control of any sort - even something as benign as a voluntary hospital admission. If she decides to leave the world, she doesn't want anything standing in her way. I am, as always, in full agreement, and as a loving partner wholeheartedly support her in determining the course of her own life - or death.
So for the moment, life goes on.
Thank you everyone for your thoughts, suggestions and best wishes. It means a lot to have this place to come to and vent.
babylonsister
(171,640 posts)Any chance of getting hospice involved? They helped my mom, and can prescribe what may be needed.
The_jackalope
(1,660 posts)She understands our situation, and is extremely compassionate. However, we need a palliative care doctor to visit before they can prescribe. I'm going to start shaking the hospice tree today to see if one falls out.