Kerry – Interview 04
Kerry was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia after finding a mass in her chest, losing weight and feeling breathless. Treatment included intensive chemotherapy, radiotherapy to her brain, and oral chemotherapy. She is in remission.
Kerry could feel something under her chest bone that felt like a grain of sugar. She felt generally unwell and was losing weight. A GP suggested she had indigestion but she felt increasingly ill and became breathless so returned to the GP. She was sent for a chest x-ray, which showed a mass in her chest. During a 4 week period in which she went to the hospital repeatedly for tests the mass in her chest grew and swallowing became difficult. A lymph node biopsy was arranged but cancelled because they couldn’t find any swollen lymph nodes so she was sent home again. She felt progressively worse, developed a cough and had to sleep sitting up because of the mass in her chest. One night her husband decided to take her to casualty where they said that her left lung had filled with fluid, which they drained and analysed the fluid and told her she had acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. She felt relieved to finally have a diagnosis.
She was sent to another hospital for treatment, where she would stay for six months. This meant leaving her children with her mother, which was very hard for her. She had a Hickman line fitted and was started on intensive chemotherapy. Her blood cells recovered well after each treatment so she was able to spend many nights at home. Her treatment caused a blood clot on her brain for which she was given daily injections of Clexane to thin her blood. She also became jaundiced and refused to continue with the treatment that was damaging her liver.
In addition to intravenous chemotherapy via her Hickman line she had some intrathecally (in her spine) as well as oral chemotherapy for two years. After leaving hospital she had radiotherapy to her brain over a 4 week period, which caused her to lose what hair she had left after the chemotherapy. She is in remission.