Life after a SCT - A Survivor's Guide

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Let's see if we can collect some helpful information and real life experience that we can signpost folks to after they have come home from their Stem Cell Transplant.

A couple of useful things I found were:

My Consultant told me that going through treatments like these was like doing a boxing match and a marathon every day over the months of treatments and this was done without any training.

Think doing the London Marathon without any training and you had to finish it as your life depended on it……. this is the journey you have been on so it most likely will take much longer than you would think to get back to some normality - it took me a good 2 years and I was 60 at the start of my recuperation.

Yes some folks bounce back quickly post treatment but more than often folks take a considerable amount of time to recover.  6 months is the average recovery time…… at 3 months post my second SCT I was just out of my wheelchair and able to do a few steps with my walking sticks…. I was not able to feed myself due to my bad Peripheral Neuropathy and even then I was not eating much……. Your body has been through far more then you imagine so be kind to yourself, give yourself a break as you are doing good and honestly this will pass.

My consultant also gave me this basic scale for classifying where I was on the recover journey.

50% = when in the hospital going through the transplant process.

60% = significant medical/physical issues that do not allow any physical activity apart from a shower and short walk and not able to prepaid food. Reliant of others for preparation of food.

70% = Significant medical/physical issues that do not allow any specific physical activity (not including a shower) but short walks and making a pot of soup. Will nap after the task.

80% = Physical issues that limits you to one activity per day. (not including shower) Able to prepare some food for a couple of people but most likely still taking a nap after activities.

90% = Some physical issues remaining (weak legs etc) but able to do a few tasks and may not be fully fit for permanent work but could do part time work. May have to .take a nap after doing tasks or work.

100% = No physical after effects and able to do multiple tasks including being back to work.

She also said on average the recovery is about 6 months with your recovery improving about 10% per month post SCT

A web page by the Anthony Nolan Trust - The First year post SCT (link)

A web document by Dr Peter Harvey - Life after Treatment (link)

  • Ooooh, Tessa,

    a massage giving service deep in the woods.....the mind boggles, but the peace and quiet of the woods, birdsong around, while having a pleasurable massage would send me right off to sleep! 

    I was listening to Tawny Owls the last few nights and remembering my childhood deep in the countryside. (Did you know there’s a survey about Tawnys on st present?) 

    hugs xxx

    Moomy

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to moomy

    Hi moomy

    Yes I know about the survey but I wouldn't recognise a tawny call from another owl. Oddly I've been hearing them in daylight several times recently. Plenty of other wildlife here lately. Flocks of sparrows and goldfinches. The pigs are out for acorns and I had a heard of cows blocking my gateway yesterday. One just stood and looked at me so mournfully.

    Tessa

  • Hi Tessa, 

    the call you get told as a child (twhit-twhoo’) is actually both sexes of the Tawny, ‘twhit’ is the female, ‘twhooo’ is the male! Yes I know, I found it astonishing too! 

    Hugs xxx

    Moomy

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to moomy

    Think I've only heard the twhoo. Must be a lonely male. So is the tawny the only owl that does that ?  Could it be a different type of owl?

    Tessa

  • No, it’s definitely both genders of the Tawny, I researched and have joined into the survey to list where and when heard, cloud cover, weather etc. It has sound identifying of the two sexes! 

    Hugs xxx

    Moomy

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to moomy

    Thanks, I'll listen out.

    Tessa

  • I doubt I’ll hear them here at home, sadly! It’s too new an area and too urban. But I still will try. 

    The link is 

    https://www.bto.org/volunteer-surveys/project-owl

    thats the British Trust for Ornithology. Hope I haven’t infringed any site guidelines in posting this, but owls generally are in decline and Tawny owls in particular are raising concern. 

    Hugs xxx

    Moomy

  • my therapist at macmillan told me that the japanese, had spent millions on research, and the results were , the more time spent near trees , the less chance of cancer.

    The outside massage sounds lush, but not in northern ireland,you couldn’t book ahead ,,, too cold !

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember in reply to yvonne 54

    Yes it was a Japanese report I was reading. My last CD4 test in July was disappointing, but I wasn't allowed to do gardening then. It will be interesting if next test shows any improvement.

    My latest heart results are interesting. Before my transplant I had fluid around my heart and had atrial fibrillation while I was in hospital. Nine months on the fluid had reduced. Latest test shows it has gone entirely. The doctor says I have the heart function of a 25 year old athlete. Bizarre as I am 66 and pretty inactive, I certainly don't do much aerobic stuff.

    Tessa

  • Moomy,

    Our house backs onto quite a wooded area and some nights you can clearly hear the ‘twit’ coming from one direction and the ‘’twoo’ from another. It’s lovely and relaxing until our dog starts growling!!

    Mark x