CLICK HERE FOR FREE BLOGGER TEMPLATES, LINK BUTTONS AND MORE! »

Saturday, July 12, 2008

A Miracle

Bryan's cousin Michele sent out this email. Aunt DeAnn (our Grandpa's bone marrow donor is Micheles mom). I thought she did a great job describing the transplant process and I learned a lot reading this! Thanks Michele!

Hi,
As you all know, Mike was diagnosed just over a year ago with leukemia. Right from the beginning, the doctors started talking about a bone marrow transplant. So Candice and my mom were tested to see if they matched Mike.

There are 10 antigens in the white blood cells that could match in the donor and recipient. A good match is 7 or 8. My mom and Mike matched all 10. An interesting fact is that they have different blood types - Mike is O+ and my mom is A+.

After the testing, they decided not to do the transplant last year. Mike received lots of chemotherapy and eventually the leukemia was gone.

On May 14 (his 59th birthday) of this year, Mike received the phone call that the leukemia was back. He was back in the hospital 4 days later having a chemo treatment and he called to ask my mom how her bone marrow was. They needed to do the transplant.

So, this week we watched this miracle happen.

Each morning for 4 days (starting July 3), my mom went in for a shot (in her stomach) that increased the stem cell production in her bone marrow. Her bones were achy and she got headaches. On the 5th day, she received another shot and got a catheter put into her jugular vein. Then that morning, over a 4-hour period, 14 liters of blood were taken out, run through a machine that removed the calcium first, then the stem cells, and then put back into her body. 14 liters of blood is approximately 2-2 1/2 times her body's full blood supply. The next morning, the 6th day, she received another shot and then they removed 14 liters of blood again.

The first day's collection was one cup. 1% of that cup of liquid was stem cells. It looked like watered down blood. There were 2.7 billion stem cells collected the first day. That's a lot but Shawn could probably count them. There were 3.6 million stem cells per some unit of measurement (I can't remember what). They said that was a great number. We don't know the number of stem cells collected the second day but they figured it would be about 2 million per unit.

My dad and I went to the hospital on the second day. We watched my mom's blood run through a machine and then back into her. The second day they warmed the blood before it went back because the first day she got really cold (which never happens) from the cold blood. They also put calcium back into the blood before it went back because she felt very tingly due to a loss of calcium. We saw the little bag of stem cells hanging there and the plasma that was also collected. We watched the tech pack it in a cooler that is kept at room temp. A technician stayed with my mom and the machine the whole time both days. The tech personally delivered the stem cells to the lab.

When my mom was done, all 3 of us went to Mike's room. He had received his last chemo treatment 2 days before (July 6). The infusion of stem cells from the first day had just started. They are run into him like an IV. He has a line into his jugular vein. It took just over an hour or so. I sat and held the little tube and watched the cells run through it. The nurse kept checking his vital signs to make sure he wasn't having a reaction to receiving foreign cells into his body. While we were there, the nurse and other staff members came in with a birthday balloon. They sang Happy Birthday to him because it was the first day of his new life and being a new person.

The stem cells will take 2-3 weeks to ingraft (I think that's the word they used) in his bones. Then they'll start producing A+ blood. So, Mike's blood type will be changed. Over the next few weeks, he'll need blood transfusions since he has no bone marrow to produce blood. They'll give him O+ red blood cells but A+ plasma and platelets. If there are any remaining leukemia cells, my mom's cells will kill them off. As soon as his white blood count is 500 then he can leave the hospital but has to stay somewhere close. I don't know how long he has to be here in SLC.

It is an amazing miracle and so neat to watch. I'll try to attach some pictures. You can send this on to anyone that you think might be interested.

I will send the pictures we took also. But I will need help so it might be a few days until I get that done.

Love, Michele

12 comments:

Mandi said...

What a miraculous process the bone marrow transplant is. Thank you for sharing that letter. I think that is awesome that the family is so involved and could actually be there to see the process take place. I hope he gets feeling better and that his numbers get to 500 so he can come home. We are continually praying for him.

We missed you last night...and Dave mentioned he missed Brian and your boys at the campout...I hope you had a fun night!

KerrieLeigh said...

That is amazing. I had no idea what the process involved on the donors end. I love that they sang Happy Birthday to him. So meaningful!

Aundrea said...

Rochelle was telling me about this email! It is so fascinating and truly a miracle! I hope his count is up to 500 very soon:)

Lisa said...

Made me cry, what a miracle.

Arah Debra said...

Amazing! The miracles of modern medicine. I'm so glad to here it all went so smoothly.

Chelsea said...

Pretty amazing! I hope that he gets better soon. We really are lucky to live when science can help so much.

The Lower Family said...

What an amazing miracle medicine is! I am so glad that everything went well. I hope that everything continues to get better and he will be good enough to go home!

The Brown 6 Pak said...

I loved reading that blog. I had a complete different idea of how they do a bone marrow transplant. Thanks for sharing. I also read the rest of your blog. Our computer has been weird lately, so I had some cathing up to do. The billboard slide looked like a lot of fun. Where was that?

Rochelle said...

I wondered if you would post this also. I'm so glad you did! I cried when I read Bonnie's and now yours.

Jessica said...

Thanks for sharing-I loved reading it. I remember once someone telling me dr.s extracted marrow from the bones and it was so painful. Maybe it was different 20years ago? We hope Mike is happy and see that your visit with him went well.
Neat. Jessica

Natelli Johnston said...

WOw! I am so glad everything is going well. I can't imagine going through all of that, what a great family you have!

maryam said...

Thanks for sharing that! Give us an update on how he is doing... Like you said, it truly is a miracle!