The PET suite at Hudson Valley is a trailer in a side parking lot. Pretty much something you could load onto a tractor-trailer.
I got a 5cc injection of GA-68. Took about 40 minutes of waiting for the radiopharmaceutical to circulate, before the PET scan.
Had to raise my hands behind my head with my wrists crossed for about 25 minutes for the throat to kneecap scan.
So after a month of waiting-progress. I was told it would take a day or two for my doctor to get the results. I mentioned my Friday appointment with my urologist, and a helpful comment was to make a call Thursday to ensure that the radiologist report was received.
So I figure that my Cold Aglutinin Disease is a form Cancer because it is unregulated growth. Pretty much my body overproduces too much of this IgM antibody. My CAD is considered Idiopathic, mean for no known reason. Generally CAD is associated with Hepatitis-C which I never had.
Cancer by definition is unregulated growth…
Back when I was 49 I was diagnosed, and subsequently I was monitored closely for a decade. For some unknown reason I remained asymptomatic. At times borderline anemia, as my Red Blood Cells have short life spans. Generally in a healthy person Red Blood Cells live about 90 days, my RBC’s die younger, but my body is able to reproduce enough that I don’t get sick or weak.
Hematologists say I am a medical mystery, and the high levels of IgM in my blood would otherwise suggest a very ill patient. After quarterly monitoring for over a decade it was deemed I was a stable patient that remained asymptomatic, and that further monitoring is no longer required.
Then I had my bouts of cellulitis. This likely is due to the CAD because CAD can compromise an immune system. So now I am back to being monitored again by a hematologist because of my advancing age. Still asymptomatic if you don’t count the propensity for minor cuts to become dangerous cellulitis.
When CAD makes the jump to a full blown Cancer it generally transforms into a Lymphoma. When this happens the morbidity is almost always death, meaning not long to live. The CAD as a condition takes you out quickly.
The risk of Lymphoma is about 5% or about 1 in 20. So far I remain a medical mystery defying the odds. The point here is that this risk and uncertainty I have lived with for nearly 18 years. Kinda could be framed as living on borrowed time, but as I age of course the risk increases and the odds decrease.
The point I’m trying to make is I already have been living with a Cancer risk for a long time. This of course grounded my attitude and my thinking. This prostate Cancer is a bit of a surprise because my PSA did not really suggest I have an aggressive Cancer.
Oh-well…
Friday I’ll find out about the good, the bad, and the ugly..,
Generally some of the bigger symptoms are fatigue, weakness, and weight loss, but I have none of these symptoms.
Cal