18380. alistairconnor - 2/1/2006 2:29:10 PM 3 for me:
So the United States of America supports democratic reform across the broader Middle East
[...]
Democracies in the Middle East will not look like our own
...[no kidding!]
the nations of the world must not permit the Iranian regime to gain nuclear weapons. 18381. Magoseph - 2/1/2006 3:01:43 PM I won, didn't I?
18382. thoughtful - 2/1/2006 3:23:04 PM No mags, I won as I picked the single word repeated most frequently. Yeah!!!
Now you all can go ahead and crown me!
18384. PsychProf - 2/1/2006 5:38:36 PM Good news Judith...very good 18385. anomie - 2/2/2006 12:15:00 AM Ever notice how when Bush uses the word "bipartisan", he really just means the dems should shut-up and color? I'm not sure he knows what the word means. 18386. judithathome - 2/2/2006 12:31:54 AM Thanks to all of you who expressed happiness at my good news...I was really stressed over this the past week. 18387. anomie - 2/2/2006 12:40:01 AM I'm happy for you Judith.
Makes my small ordeal today very minor. I've stressed for two weeks waiting to have a tooth pulled. It's over. No pain. And I think the valium is reducing my anxiety right now to the point where I can post a few comments here. I feel like an idiot being anxious about the dentist.
Good to see you all doing well.
18388. judithathome - 2/2/2006 1:26:51 AM Oh, Anomie, I undersatnd completely! I'm a dentaphobe, myself! 18389. anomie - 2/2/2006 2:18:29 AM It might help to tell you that I really didn't feel any pain. Not even that brief acute zinger from the needle. I don't know how they do it. And then of course it's just the pressure after that, and that wasn't bad either.
It's the anticipation that's hell. 18390. Magoseph - 2/2/2006 3:26:01 PM Good morning, everyone--I deleted the cartoon I posted #13383 because it is inappropriate. 18391. wonkers2 - 2/2/2006 4:50:46 PM Good morning, ma cherie. Why not re-post it for a couple of days so we can see what you thought was inappropriate? 18392. Magoseph - 2/2/2006 5:51:12 PM Well, mon chéri, if I had your e-amil address, I could send it to you. 18393. Magoseph - 2/2/2006 5:51:30 PM e-mail 18394. ronski - 2/2/2006 6:58:31 PM judith,
Good to hear the good news. 18395. judithathome - 2/2/2006 7:25:20 PM Thanks, Ronski...it turned out just like you wished for me. ;-) 18396. thoughtful - 2/2/2006 11:07:01 PM Not good, not good.
Hubby went for his cat scan today and got a call back right away.
His PSA is up (test for prostate cancer) and they found a nodule on his prostate.
He'll see the urologist on Tuesday, and I suspect they'll want to do a biopsy. He had a psa done less than 6 mos ago and it was fine. Hopefully, it'll just be high because of his infection and hopefully the nodule will be nothing, as it is in 50% of the cases. But still....
Man, I hate the waiting. 18397. judithathome - 2/2/2006 11:16:15 PM Oh, Thoughtful, I'm so sorry to hear that...we went through that about 15 years ago with Keoni and it turned out to be benign. I know that's no comfort but hopefully, it will be as you suspect and just due to the infection.
Keeping my fingers crossed for a good outcome! 18398. thoughtful - 2/2/2006 11:31:33 PM Thanks judithah...worse part is i'll be travelling on business the day he's going to the docs. Though I doubt we'll find anything definitive that day.
Then on top of it, the decision about what to do if it is cancer is up in the air, depending on how aggressive it is. The cost/benefit of surgery isn't good in terms of injured nerves.
My old secy went through it...lost her father to it and her husband had the same thing and with poor doc and bad effects, ended up losing his bladder and now uses a bag.
But another fellow i know ended up having some elevated psa's and a biopsy and it was benign.
I hate waiting.
I hate not knowing.
I hate not being able to do anything to fix it right away.
Argh. 18399. wonkers2 - 2/2/2006 11:47:30 PM A couple of suggestions. Men who are diagnosed with prostate cancer can usually afford to take their time before deciding on a treatment modality. There is plenty of time for a second or third opinion. And many recommend a second pathology report on the biopsy because a small difference in the pathologist's report which assigns a grade to the cancer. The most common method of grading is called a Gleason Score which is an indication of the size of the cancer and an indication (not certainty) of whether or not it has spread beyond the prostate.
There are basically three types of treatment: watchful waiting, surgery, and radiation therapy. Urologists nearly always recommend surgery. Why? Because that's what they do and how they make their money. However, depending on the diagnosis, radiation can be an equally curative treatment, usually with fewer side effects. Few urologists will tell you that, however. Moreover, there is a wide range of skill among prostate cancer surgeons. The best surgeons (Johns Hopkins, eg)have a significantly better batting average for avoiding surgical side effects due to nerve damage. (Many believe that their higher batting average is due, in part, to patient selection, i.e., cherry picking the easiest cases.)
If your husband's biopsy indicates cancer, I would strongly urge him to go to a comprehensive cancer center (there are five or ten in the country, as I recall)and thoroughly explore all his options before starting treatment. (I went through this process two years ago and spent nearly a year before deciding on radiation therapy. I'm very happy with my decision--I've experienced only minimal side effects, and my PSA has returned almost to zero. I was treated by Dr. Jeffrey Forman at the Karmanos Cancer center's branch in Farmington Hills, Michigan. Dr. Forman is one of the most impressive physicians I've ever encountered.) I would be happy to discuss my experience with your husband should he want to do so. And you will find a wealth of information on the Internet. 18400. arkymalarky - 2/3/2006 12:52:07 AM I'll be thinking about y'all, Thoughtful, and Wonk that's a very helpful post that every man (including my husband) ought to know.
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