Welcome to our family blog to keep you updated on all the happenings around the Walker cottage and "farm". Even though we live in a rural section of the Tennessee Mountains life is far from boring as you will see.

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

2025 JANUARY & FEBRUARY WALKER NEWSLETTER

Hello!

Warning: This will be a lengthy newsletter as my New Year

 really arrived with an unexpected bang.

I've told you about all the pain I've had for eight months now with my left hip trying to keep my pain level down, walking with two canes, and living in the recliner.

Annette, Curtis, and little Ellie came over the New Year for our family Christmas. On the night of January 2nd, when I went to bed and rolled over on my right side a sharp pain hit me in my hip & spine.  I spent the night in the recliner with icepacks. By morning, my hip & spine were still hurting, and I had a headache, so figured my blood pressure was up. Dwight called a nurse, she came, checked my BP which was 110/90, and immediately called for an ambulance. Just being jolted over the rough gravel in our driveway getting to the ambulance, on the stretcher, raised my pain level even more. You know your BP is high when they take it twice in the same arm, switch to the other arm, and then take your BP manually. By then I was having a horrible headache.  I knew things were bad as the siren was going and we were racing around the curves fast. Then I heard the guy beside me holler to the one driving that I was stroking and to call for a helicopter. They couldn't get a helicopter so rushed me to the local ER.  The staff rolled me on my left side, even though I kept telling them my left hip & spine hurt to get x-rays, ruling out that I didn't have a broken hip, and the joint was still in place, leaving me in terrible agony.

I was transported to Vanderbilt that afternoon. When the ambulance arrived at the ER, we had to go through security. The guard ripped off the blanket covering me, leaving my chest exposed from where they put cardio strips, waving a wand over the entire stretcher. That was my first time having a strip search.  I don't know it they thought we were trying to smuggle guns into the hospital or what. When he yanked the basin out of my arms, even the EMT protested. As soon as I was wheeled inside, I was surrounded by staff digging in my stomach and poking me everywhere. A young girl, who said she was the neuro specialist, began examining me too. After shining a light in both eyes and asking questions, she took a mallet and began hitting my right side. I told her not to touch my left side. Didn't she go and hit my left ankle? I started crying asking her to stop but she kept hitting it saying, "It isn't your hip, so it doesn't hurt." Then didn't the crazy girl begin hitting my left knee with the mallet! My pain immediately spiked, and I started screaming in pain. I heard them say, "Let's leave her to rest a bit." and they all walked out of the side room, with the monitor screeching loudly without any call button to push for help.  My head was killing me, and I began throwing up again. Several people walked by, looked in, and kept going- even though I called for help. Finally, a colored maintenance guy appeared, looked at me, and ran for a nurse. A nurse came running, yelled for a doctor saying, “She’s stroking and giving the room number” as she began pushing, running my stretcher down the hallway. The left side of my face had dropped again, and my left side was weak. I finally got through that Annette was there. After the ambulance took me, Annette packed some stuff for me and stopped by the local ER to see me telling me that she’d meet me at the Vanderbilt ER, on their way back home to Madison. Annette stayed with me through the long rough night as I was NPO and kept throwing up- even with the meds they gave me for nausea- so was dehydrated as due to my high blood pressure they wouldn’t give me IV fluids. Early

Sat morning they wheeled me down the hall for a C-scan, but I was so nauseous that they couldn’t do the scan. A young girl popped in the ER room and said she needed to do an echocardiogram and wanted me to lie on my left side or back, which I couldn’t tolerate because of my pain. She left and someone else came and took me back to do the C-Scan again. This time I kept my eyes shut as they ran my stretcher down the hallway. I was flat on my back in the machine so was hurting when it finally got over. There was a group that looked like college kids doing the scan. I could hear them talking and laughing over the mike sounding like they were having a party as I waved and hollered trying to get their attention that the scan was finished. They finally all came rushing back to me and I was whizzed back to the ER room again. I was at last allowed to have something to drink. A nurse brought me some packs of plain crackers as I told them I could feel my sugar dropping.  The crackers were quite stale- who knows how old. My mouth was so dry; I choked trying to eat the cracker. So, I dipped the cracker into my ginger ale until it was soggy but when I’d bit it and tried to chew it, it was like chewing cardboard. Knowing I had to get something in me before I passed out, I dipped and chewed up several packs of those stale crackers.

A little latter, a friendly woman about my age came into the room and said she would do the echocardiogram. I told her that I couldn’t lie on my back or left side because of the pain in my hip & spine.  She said, “Don’t you worry, dear, I can do it however you are.”  She then proceeded to set everything up with the equipment, muttering to herself as she moved stuff around saying, “Now where did I put that?” When the regular gram was over and she had to do it again with dye, she apologized for the taste saying she didn’t know why they couldn’t have something better tasting like bubblegum or something. We were laughing and talking having a lovely time together. All too soon it was all done. She put all her equipment back and wheeled the cart around the side to the bottom of my stretcher when she remembered that she had left some trash on the counter. She turned back to get the trash leaving her cart. For some reason my floor in the ER room was slanted. Every time someone would unlock the wheels of my stretcher to take me somewhere and turn around to get something, the stretcher would roll across the room sideways, and I’d find myself lying partway underneath the computer the nurses used.  As soon as the staff person would turn back and see me, they would pull the stretcher out and apologize. So, lo and behold, didn’t the electrocardiogram cart begin rolling across the room heading right towards the doorway while she, with her back turned to it, was throwing the trash away. I started laughing. When the lady turned, she looked around and asked, “Where on earth did my cart go too?” Thankfully, the cart had stopped sideways at the door. I told her it was like the gingerbread man running away.

My breakfast tray had arrived earlier. I was so hungry but agreed to do the electrocardiogram first. So, at last I could eat.  I was starving! I sat up and eagerly picked up a fork to eat the scrambled eggs.  I had only taken three bites when I started throwing up again. I was so disappointed.

I had been told halfway in the night that an MRI was scheduled where I’d be put under. I thought, great, I could finally get an MRI done instead of waiting until April. When the new shift nurse came in to talk to me about the MRI, I found out that for the MRI would only be sedated but I’d still be wake. I panicked as I’m very claustrophobic- even the fifteen minute open scan that morning had me stressed out until it was over.  I knew I could never go through being put inside a machine awake. I started crying. By then Dwight had arrived. He had taken care of the animals, packed up, and started out for Nashville the night before and was partway when he remembered that he had forgotten to get his factor.  So, he turned back and called Annette, who told him to wait until the morning to come as she was staying with me so he could get a good night’s rest as Dwight was so stressed and worn out.  Annette had texted Dawn, and they all wanted me, since I was already at Vanderbilt to go ahead and do the MRI.  Dwight tried to calm me down too. The nurse came back and told me she had checked to see what sedation they were planning on using as her mother was the same way hating MRI’s having bad arthritis and being claustrophobic. She told me that the sedation scheduled was the best, I’d not even know what was happening, and as soon as I said to “stop” if I couldn’t take anymore, they would immediately stop.  If I refused, I’d end up being discharged. She told me that I really needed to have the MRI of my brain to check for bleeding before I left.  When I found out it would only take ten minutes, I agreed feeling dumb that I had put up such a fuss thinking it would be my hip and take a least an hour. The nurse called ahead to tell them to be sure and give the sedation to me as soon as I got back there. The sweet nurse also checked and worked it out where I could also get the hip MRI done as well that afternoon. The last thing I remember was being raced down the hallway and getting to the room only to wake up back in the ER room again with everything done.

I was transferred to another room- still part of the ER- after the second MRI. It was so good to get out of the main noisy ER section. The neurologist specialist and team came by and then the spinal surgeon to let me know that everything was clear and ruled out. For supper, I ate a dry roll and sipped on ginger ale as Dwight tried to a spoonful of mashed potatoes into me. He slept on a chair that night beside my bed.

Sunday morning, we were wakened really early by someone coming to draw blood. Dwight tried to get me to eat and drink something every little bit throughout the day as I was so weak. I’d get dizzy if I tried to sit up or lay down too quickly.  That night sitting up, talking and laughing with my pain under control, the monitor suddenly went off. The nurse raced in, checked me, and raced out to call a doctor.  My blood pressure had spiked at 127/100 for no reason. She injected me with something and said if it didn’t come down within fifteen minutes, she’d call the dr again. Thankfully, it came down but the dr ordered another brain MRI and then a spinal MRI was added too. I didn’t get back to the room until midnight quite stressed out as they had changed the sedation, and I wasn’t completely under.

We had dozed off for only a couple of hrs when the neurologist and then the surgeon came by to tell us that everything was clear again on the MRI’s. Another hour and a girl came to get blood. About six am, after being interrupted all night, the door opened, the bright lights were turned on, and four people appeared in my room telling me that they were taking me for x-rays! Thankfully, my face was back to normal, and I was able to go to the bathroom using a walker. Since all the tests came back OK- none of the specialists could figure out what was causing my intense pain- I was discharged. I had to have two pillows and sedated to make the trip back home.

Tues, the home health came to set me up. I had lost seven pounds from being so dehydrated. Early Wed morning, I woke up, needed to use the bathroom, didn’t realize my sugar had dropped, and using my walker fell in-between the toilet and tub. I had to crawl on my stomach to the bedroom where Dwight could hear me calling. It gave him quite the scare. The nurse came later that day to check my BP. Thurs morning, Dwight called the nurse again as my nose had started bleeding the night before, I was having severe bouts of diarrhea, and was so nauseous I could hardly keep anything down. Here I was having a bad reaction to the antibiotic I had been put on for a UTI. Nothing like going from bad to worse! 

All of Jan, I was propped up in bed with pillows too weak to go up and down the couple of steps to the recliner. The first week, Dwight had to help me just get from the bed to the bathroom with the walker. I have slowly gained my strength and weight back and am now able to go to the bathroom by myself.  The home health nurse comes once a week. My hip flares up easier than before- I’m sure from all the trauma of tests done and doctors poking around on me.

Dwight hauled the recliner up to my bedroom, so I can sit in it which is easiest on my hip & spine, which has helped. The most frustrating thing about going through all those tests is that I’m still trying to find an answer to what is causing the horrible hip pain. My rheumatologist at Vanderbilt read all the MRI’s and said that my pain has to be coming from the deteriorated part of my hip that joins the spine as it is markedly worse than before. He referred me to an orthopedist with whom I’ve made an appointment.

Whew! I shall close this lengthy epistle.

Dorcas 

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