Friday, 13 May 2011

Biopsy done

We arrived in London yesterday evening in an ambulance. Ellen had her biopsy this afternoon which went as planned and without complications. We will stay here in King's overnight and then hope to go back to Addenbrookes tomorrow afternoon. We should get the results of the biopsy on Tuesday/Wednesday but are still waiting for Ellen's bone marrow to start working again. We hope that will happen soon as we are unable to go on to the bone marrow transplant until it does. The long anxious wait continues...

Wednesday, 11 May 2011

Pre-biopsy nerves

Ellen has managed to not have a temperature for five days and is starting to get a bit of strength back. We are finally set to go by ambulance to Kings Hospital tomorrow for a liver biopsy on Friday (subject to her not getting a temperature in the meantime). We should get the biopsy results by early next week. Please keep your fingers crossed as the outcome of the biopsy may be critical in determining Ellen's treatment options.

Friday, 6 May 2011

Some progress

Ellen has slowly improved over the past week. She is managing to eat a little bit and has only been sick a few times. Her temperature is starting to settle and her blood results show that the infection is improving. Unfortunately, her bone marrow is still fairly empty and we think it will be about a week until we see any significant change. It was decided on Wednesday that Ellen would not be fit enough for a liver biopsy this week. We hope she will be able to have it at the end of next week. The long wait continues....

Friday, 29 April 2011

Slow Progress

Ellen is still very poorly and into her fourth week of this infection; she has been in hospital for three months now (with only one week at home) which is understandably taking its toll. She is starting to show some signs of progress (less vomiting and tolerating more nutritional feed) but still having high temperatures. We are trapped in a vicious circle as the infection is suppressing her bone marrow recovery but she can't fight the infection effectively without an active bone marrow. A combination of this slow recovery and the logistical impact of all the public holidays has delayed the liver biopsy in Kings Hospital which we now hope will be towards the end of next week. Thanks for all messages of support.

Friday, 22 April 2011

Getting complicated ...


Ellen is off the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit. She is still having temperatures and vomiting but no longer needs oxygen. We are still waiting for her bone marrow to start working and her blood counts to improve. This is likely to take another week to ten days. Only then do we think that her temperatures will improve. She is also at risk of picking up further infections during this period so we are really hoping that things remain stable.

Two days ago Ellen vomited fresh blood so yesterday she had a general anaesthetic and an endoscopy to try and indentify the source of bleeding. The bleed had come from her small bowel due to the damage done by her recent courses of chemotherapy. This is good news as things should heal on their own. However, the endoscopy also confirmed that Ellen has some damage to her liver. We are unsure what has caused this, it is most likely due to all the chemotherapy she has previously had. As a bone marrow transplant will involve treatment that may further damage her liver we now need to determine the cause and extent of the damage. This will involve taking a sample of Ellen's liver tissue and looking at it under a microscope. As Ellen is at such risk of bleeding this procedure will have to been done by passing instruments down her jugular vein. They are unable to do this at Addenbrookes so this will be done at King's Hospital in London. This will hopefully be done next week and will involve a trip in an ambulance and an over night stay. We are all terribly anxious that the liver is damaged to such an extent that Ellen will no longer be fit enough to have a bone marrow transplant and will thus have incurable disease and no chance of long term survival. After all she has been through this will be a very difficult reality to face. So please please keep your fingers crossed for our brave little girl.


Sunday, 17 April 2011

Update

Ellen is still on the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit. She remains unwell. She is still having regular fevers despite a multitude of antibiotics and is still requiring oxygen and morphine. She is also struggling to keep any fluids down without vomiting. We are waiting for her blood counts to come up as this should help fight the infection. Things could be a lot worse, but it is taking a painfully long time for us to see any improvement.

Thursday, 14 April 2011

Intensive Care

Ellen has had a bad 24 hours. We were transferred to Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) yesterday afternoon as she was becoming progressively unwell with fevers and difficulty breathing. It became apparent that her Hickman line may be infected, causing severe sepsis. The line was removed this morning. This involved a general anaesthetic and was carried out on PICU as Ellen was too unwell to wait for a theatre slot. Her condition has improved slightly since the Hickman line came out but she is still very poorly. She will be kept on PICU for at least a few days whilst they continue to monitor her closely.

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