Today's post from runningonchemo.com (see link below) is a short but recognisable personal story from a cancer-treatment related neuropathy patient. It's strange how all neuropathy sufferers can identify with other people's stories irrespective of the cause of their nerve damage and in that sense, neuropathy should have a much higher public profile than it does (considering the millions of sufferers). However, reading this account, you'll undoubtedly sympathise with the author and probably be able to say that you know exactly what the writer's feeling! Neuropathy's a mean disease because it frequently comes on top of, or is caused by, other mean diseases.
Chemo, One Year On Musings
Peripheral Neuropathy Flashbacks
Posted on 1 Day Ago by runningonchemo
Peripheral Neuropathy is a common side effect of the taxane based chemotherapy regimes – numbness and tingling of fingers and toes that usually extends further with each cycle, but in most cases the issue remains mild and transient. In my case it was mainly toes that got affected, it started from the baby toes and luckily didn’t go much further past the middle section, four courses of paclitaxel went and the symptoms started to improve.
Numb fingers meant that my handwriting got worse but it had been bad enough already – the scribbles just got a bit more artistic, let’s say, and just a bit less legible but hey, that silly quill to paper business is so over now with the keyboards and touchscreens. Typing might have been a bit of an issue too, I think, but autocorrect saved the day on few occasions
Swollen Appendage – yikes!
It’s funny how realisations get delayed in the surreal world of chemo. I did not quite realise that my feet were affected until I went to a yoga class, all defiant with my picc line covered by a cut off sock, and nearly wobbled face to floor attempting a warrior pose, it was likely warrior two, but it could have been anything else that needed some basic balance, like a … low lunge LOL. Same with the handwriting, I just got used to guessing what I had written here and there, when suddenly last week I realised that my control over pen somehow got back to normal. 10 month after the last paclitaxel there is a chance that people will now be able to read their birthday cards. Shame about my post it notes that would now lose their awesome Picasso style appeal.
Swollen Appendage – yikes!
It’s totally different with the foot treated to the full on black cab weight. The realisation of not being able to use the foot, transformed into a foreign looking and feeling appendage in seconds, is so instant and the numbness so pronounced that it all puts the super mild chemo peripheral neuropathy in a totally new perspective. The coincidence of my hands getting totally back to normal just as my foot went the other way is just following the basic karma rules, I guess. #silverlinings
https://runningonchemo.com/2016/08/01/peripheral-neuropathy-flashbacks/
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