The Anonymous Widower

Is My Right Hand Getting Worse?

I’ve had a couple of very small accidents with my right hand in the last couple of weeks. Nothing serious, but I did drop a can of Coke.

On the other hand, I had no trouble carrying the parcel to day to Canary Wharf. And for most of the journey I used my right hand to hold the prcel.

So is it a comparative thing in that my left hand is actually getting better? I’m certainly making fewer typing mistakes with it.

I don’t know, but the left hand isn’t so useless as it was.  As an example, I had a pork chop today and it wielded a fork with a degree of alacrity, that wasn’t there a few months ago.

May 31, 2011 Posted by | Food, Health | | 1 Comment

A Hay-Fever Diary

Last year I put together a Pain Diary to see if I could find a better strategy to feeling better.

So now, as I’m suffering badly from hay fever or something like that, I’ll see if I can find any link. Note the two factors after the date are the pollen level according to the BBC and how I have felt on the day out of ten.

Monday, May 23rd – Moderate – 3/10

It started as a good day.

But after washing my hair at about three, it went swiftly downhill.  It was almost as if I’d got soap in my eyes.

I had dinner at Arbutus and felt a bit better as I was very cruel to a rabbit.  But I suspect the restaurant was air-conditioned.

Tuesday, 24th May – Moderate – 3/10

I got up and after breakfast went back to bed only getting up at about 10:00.  I didn’t eat much all day, as I was so tired.  I think it was just a Beanz thing for lunch and strawberries for supper.

Wednesday, 25th May – 4/10

Again I got up late and went to IKEA in Croydon.  Lunch was a plate of IKEA gravadlax and a bottle of ginger beer. Did the air-conditioning help?

Thursday 26th May – Moderate – 6/10

Lunch was an egg dish in Carluccio’s and then getting wet in the rain.

Supper was a Marks and Spencer beef stroganoff after a drink down the pub.

Friday 27th May – Low – 5/10

I had a lot of pain this morning, in my face, left arm and left leg. I was sneezing a lot as I walked around the city.

After lunch of a salad nicoise, I slept for two hours.

Supper was another Marks and Spencer salmon after a drink down the pub.

Saturday 28th May – Low – 5/10

Less pain than yesterday, but like yesterday I did have a two hour sleep after lunch.

Sunday 29th May – Low – 6/10

The pain has been back in my arm today.  And I had a good two hours sleep in the afternoon.

I didn’t have much lunch, but supper was Moroccan Chicken from the freezer with rice and strawberries to follow.

Monday 30th May – Low – 6/10

The pain was still in my arm today.  And again I had a good two hours sleep in the afternoon.

I cooked the Beef and Bean Casserole, but supper was very much a snack.

Tuesday 31st May – Low – 7/10

The arm pain wasn’t so bad today and I didn’t have the sleep in the afternoon.

Lunch was eggs in Carluccio’s and supper was a couple grilled pork chops with some beans.

Wednesday 1st June – Moderate – 5/10

I didn’t have much pain, but I did need a couple of hours sleep in the afternoon.

I was also lazy and had supper in the Northgate Arms

Thurday 2nd June – High- 6/10

I went to the physio this morning and after some asparagus for lunch, I slept for a couple of hours.

Supper was fish and beans.

Friday 3rd June – High – 7/10

Perhaps the physio helped, but my arm was much better today.

Lunch was in Carluccio’s in Hampstead and supper was a Waitrose Indian meal for one after my long walk in Bow.

It was the first day in a long time, when I didn’t have a long sleep in the daytime.

Saturday 4th June – High – 7/10

As the blog shows, I went to the Derby, where it was very hot.  I came back tired and went to bed at 21:30, which is early for me. I slept until 07:20, which is a long sleep for me.

Sunday 5th June – Moderate – 6/10

Not too bad a day and the pain hasn’t been too bad.  It’s now 22:00 and I’ll be going to bed soon.

May 26, 2011 Posted by | Food, Health | , | 3 Comments

Oven Gloves for the Microwave

A friend brought these back from Hawaii.

Oven Gloves for the Microwave

They do actually help, and as there are two and they are small, they could fit anywhere on my work surface to move things that are either hot or in my case cold.  Cold things like a pie from the freezer are just as painful. 

Here’s one on my left hand.

A Glove on My Left Hand

Hopefully, they will help me use my left hand better, as often I use the right, as that works well with any normal temperature.

The fingers work as you can see, but the temperature sensors aren’t that reliable. Luckily, I haven’t burned the hand yet!

May 23, 2011 Posted by | Food, Health, World | , | 1 Comment

A Year On

It is now over a year since I had the stroke in Hong Kong and as you know I’ve now moved to London, just round the corner from where my grandmother was born in the Balls Pond Road. In fact, I drink in the pub, where my great-grandfather might have wetted her head.

So how am I feeling?

Bodily, I have few issues.

My nails used to be firm and hard, but now they are soft and brittle.  My toenails are actually worse than my fingers. My nails were always soft before I went gluten-free and I used to bite them badly and my skin too. I’m not biting them now at all.

Q 1. Could it be that as my body is repairing itself from the stroke, it’s using up what I need for healthy nails?

I have an almost cramp-like pain in my left lower leg, which is very like the pain I got, when I trod on a razor shell on the beach in Norfolk in the summer of 2009. It tends to get worse at night.

My left humerus is also painful a lot of the time at the same place where it was broken by a bully at school.  I think as the nerves for my arm and hand pass close to the bone, it affects them at times.

I did have pain at the end of my spine, but now that has virtually gone unless I sit on the wrong sort of chair. This again was an old injury, which was very much aggravated by the hospital bed in Hong Kong.  I should say that I always sleep face down because of the end of my spine, which curls outwards and I get less cramp in my lower leg, which I’ve always had since a child.  I can still feel the cold lino, which I used to put my foot on to cure it.

It’s almost as if my old physical problems have come back!

Q. 2 Does your brain develop new pathways to get round the pain from injuries?

Q.3 When you have a stroke are these pathways knocked out? So if so, it would seem you need to develop them again.  One psychologist at Cambridge, who worked with stroke patients thought this could be the case.

Facially, I haven’t too much pain, but my scalp and left hand side are rather tender.  My skin actually feels like it did at times before I went on a gluten-free diet before I was diagnosed as a coeliac. One of my main symptoms of coeliac disease was chronic dandruff.  It went immediately, I changed to a totally gluten-free diet.

In fact, at some times, I feel like I’ve been glutened.  Not seriously, but my motions are rather loose nearly all the time.  Full tests at Addenbrooke’s have shown that there is nothing serious there, although I haven’t had another endoscopy to see what my gut is like.

Q.4 Is this connected with any of the drugs I’m taking?

On advice from my previous GP, I do take calcium tablets with added vitamin D, as it was slightly low.  But a Dexascan showed everything was fine.

I have just re-read a post on this blog, which was a pain diary, describing how I was trying to control the terrible pain I was having last summer, with codeine and paracetamol.  It wasn’t that successful and a few days later or so, I collapsed and ended up in Addenbrooke’s.  Nothing was done and I just struggled on.  And then a few weeks later, I ended up having a fit like symptom, when I was putting on my coat.  I can remember feeling a bolt of pain in my humerus and then I went into oscillation. It’s funny, but I may remember something similar happening, just after I broke the bone, as I walked home from school. Addenbrooke’s put me on Keppra to stop it happening again. It hasn’t.

Q.5 Should I keep taking the Keppra?

I incidentally take it with vitamin B6 to avoid any side effects, but also as I’ve been advised by a Dutch doctor to take B6 anyway, as he feels that coeliacs should take it to reduce the risk of strokes.

Because of the pain and because it felt like someone was pouring awful muck down my throat, I went to see an ENT specialist to see if my sinuses were bad.

He found everything clear, but thought that I was suffering from a serious pollen allergy.  Now as a child, I was very sickly and was always off school. In my first year at Grammar School I virtually missed all the second term. Gradually it got better and it really improved when first we went to live on the 11th floor in the Barbican and later when I started flying aircraft for pleasure.

I’ve also had some bad winters and springs before, but not as bad as this one, when for much of the time, I just couldn’t breathe. Although in the last twenty years or so, I’ve lived on top of a hill with a strong westerly wind and my late wife and I could afford to take holidays in the sun in January. Funnily, my cardiologist,said that everybody should take two weeks in the sun every winter.  I did try to do this in April by going to Greece and backpacking around the islands, but was irritated by everyone smoking all the time. 

I know from travelling around the UK in the last year, that when I get out of the pollen I feel better.  For instance, I went to Barnsley in March on a breezy day to see the football and felt a lot better that day. On the other hand, I walked past a tree-shredding machine at Euston a couple of weeks ago and it set me off coughing for half-an-hour.

Q.6 So why should all of this reaction to allergens get so much worse after the stroke?

On the other hand, in 2009, I was travelling to Holland a lot in the spring and suffered worse than I had done for years.  I put it down to different pollens at different times.  It was almost as if I got used to the English ones and then when I went to Holland, a load of different ones set me off.

Some days it’s so bad that all I can do is lie down indoors and listen to the radio. On the other hand, when I went down the London sewers, it helped my breathing immensely.

So how am I managing otherwise.

I have no problem getting around on buses and trains and of course by walking.  I did fall over on a bad pavement in Upper Street in March, but haven’t hardly stumbled since, especially since I was fitted properly for a pair of trainers. I have no problems using the top decks of buses and climbing up and down ladders.

I like cooking and do quite a bit, although, as there are now so many Carluccio’s with a gluten-free menu, I am lazy quite a bit of the time.

I do eat a lot of soft comfort food, like bananas and ginger cake between meals. But my weight is still the same as it was five or six years ago.

My only problem with cooking is that my left hand diesn’t seem to like hot or cold, although the finger movement is now almost back to normal.  I notice this most with my typing, where although I type mainly one-handed, I now use the left properly for the shift.  Incidentally, I’ve always typed with my right hand, because of my bad left arm.

My eyesight to the left isn’t good, but in the last month or so, I’ve been able to play table tennis again, something that I couldn’t do a year ago. On the other hand, it does seem to be worst, when my eyes are streaming from the allergies.

On a mental state, what more is there to say, other than that I’m here. I made a good fist of a lecture at Liverpool University, so my brain can’t be that awry.  Although, I do forget things on a short-term basis.  But then I always have to a certain extent.  But the long term memory is intact!

May 23, 2011 Posted by | Health, Transport/Travel | , | 1 Comment

The Joy Of Sox

I always read Melanie Reid in the Saturday Times.

Today she talked about her awful socks and proposed a satirical book called The Joy of Sox.

I sympathise with her.

I do my own washing and find sorting it difficult after the stroke, as it is an action that needs two good hands and I’ve only got about 1.6.  But until recently, I found putting them on difficult and spent a great deal of time finding ones that were easier than others.

But in the last couple of weeks, my hands seem to have cracked the problem and now they go on like they used to before I had the stroke.

Here’s wishing Melanie the same sort of progress.

May 21, 2011 Posted by | Health, World | , , | Leave a comment

Noticing the Little Things

I’ve just put my washing away.  I am now noticing that simple actions like matching pairs of socks are so much easier, as my hands are getting better.

I know it will all take time to get fully better.  But, hey! I can wait!

May 18, 2011 Posted by | Health | | 2 Comments

Ups and Downs

I had a good morning in that I put some more IKEA furniture together and then took the bus up to Upper Street for the physio.  I then had a quick lunch in Carluccio’s whilst I did the Suduko in my copy of The Times. I finished off the Fiendish one and then I did the Killer one that was supposed to take 65 minutes in about 30. After Waitrose for my weekend shopping, I came home and slept for three hours.

I felt good after the mental work, but now I’m tired again. Sometimes, I almost feel like I did before I was diagnosed as a coeliac, when I used to sleep a lot.

At least though my face seems a bit better as I write!

Life seems to be a series of ups and downs.

May 13, 2011 Posted by | Health | , | Leave a comment

Be Nice To Nanny and You’ll Get Your Warfarin!

As I’ve said before Warfarin testing in this country and I suspect most of the world is complicated and it may be prone to error.  Two respected doctors have told me that.

Today, I took a prescription to Boots to get some more Warfarin tablets.  They wanted to see my yellow book, which I hadn’t got with me.  So I got the third degree! I wasn’t rude, but as a scientist who understands the way Warfarin works well, I resent being treated like an idiot. It’s not the pharmacist’s fault, but the person, who made up the new rules.

Now, my INR has been spot on for months and the dosage has only changed marginally since December last year.  That change was when I changed surgeries and the new one now does the tests themselves on a small monitor, whereas the previous surgery did it by blood tests that were  analysed by the hospital.  The change is that previously, I was on 5 mg. a day and 4 mg. at weekends, and now it’s 5 mg. a day and 4 mg. on Saturdays and Mondays. Or as the computer printout says, one 3 mg. and one 1 mg. on Saturdays and Mondays.  I don’t like the inference that I can’t  work out how I can give myself a 4 mg. dose, with 3 mg. and 1 mg. tablets.

Thev pharmacist indicated that next time if I didn’t bring the book, I wouldn’t get the Warfarin.

I actually think the next time I go, I  might not take it, as I prefer to keep it safe at home.  After all suppose I dropped it, I would then have to go back to the doctor for another book. But I would take a photocopy of my last INR test result. To me that is much more important as it carries the date of my next test.

One thing that is worth noting is that testing method one using blood tests and analysis at the local hospital, said I should be on 4.8 mg. per day. On the other hand testing method two using an electronic monitor in the surgery, said the dose should 4.8 mg per day.

In other words, both methods carried out in a correct professional manner gave exactly the same result.

May 9, 2011 Posted by | Health | , , | 2 Comments

Do We Have Too Many Heart Transplant Centres?

Doctors at Newcastle’s Freeman Hospital have questioned whether we have too many heart tranplant centres in the UK.

Apparently, the number of transplants is down, but the number of potential donors is up.

My cardiologist performs transplants and other radical heart surgery. We have chatted about technology in appointments, so could it be that the reason the number of transplants is down, is bcause surgeons are learning more tricks to keep us alive and in many cases we are doing our bit with less smoking and drinking and taking the right exercise and eating better.

Closing a heart transplant centre will be a difficult political decision, but as in many things these days, technology  may be a better alternative, that takes good care nearer to the many.

I suffer from atrial fbrulation, caused in part by a dodgy heart valve.  My mother-in-law had the same problem and had a valve replacement, which wasn’t a trivial operation in the 1970s.

My cardiologist’s prognosis to me was that if I keep getting the Warfarin right, I won’t have another stroke and pehaps in te years he might do something to fix the valve.

The way things are going with technology, I might suspect that when that valve is fixed, it might well be a trivial procedure.

So perhaps there’s a bit more life in this London mongrel yet? Here’s hoping!

May 6, 2011 Posted by | Health, News | , | 1 Comment

An Uplifting Moment

There is an old Chinese proverb that says that a long journey starts with a single step.  This is actually a mistranslation of Lao-Tzu. A better form is “Even the longest journey must begin where you stand.”

What it doesn’t say is that there are a lot of steps in a long journey.

I was walking down Upper Street this lunchtime and I saw an aircraft crossing over the Angel. Even at that distance, I saw it was a biplane and despite my supposedly bad eyesight, I thought it was a de Havilland Dragon Rapide.

de Havilland Dragon Rapide Over Islington

This picture was taken when it crossed in front of me, as I stood by Barclays Bank at the start of Essex Road.

So why is this an uplifting moment?  I seemed to be the only person who spotted this iconic aircraft from the 1930s  and despite my dodgy eyesight, I was able to identify it and then take several photographs.

My only regret was that I only had my little Nikon CoolPix.

So perhaps I’ve taken another step along that long road!

May 4, 2011 Posted by | Health, Transport/Travel | , , | 1 Comment