This past August really sucked. September did too. I got a routine feeding tube replacement at the end of July and then had weeks of agony every time I ate because the new tube was not placed right. There was too much of it in my stomach, it turns out, and when I ate the balloon at the end of it slipped down to block food from exiting into my intestines. I felt like I was being poked with a sharp stick from the inside. I was hungry all the time, then had intense pain when I dared to eat.
Of course, the cause of my pain went undetermined for all of August and half of September. It took some persistence to get medical personnel to just get that thing out and try a new one, please. And after a replacement fixed everything so that I was immediately pain-free, there was never an acknowledgment that it was the installation that caused the problem. I didn't even press for that because, well, I know the game. And I also know mistakes happen, I'm often a peculiar case to treat, and excellent doctors can do their best and still not have it work out. It may have been gross incompetence or a routine but regrettable error, and I know I won't get an official medical answer on that. I satisfy myself that I know more about who and where the risks are for the procedure and the institution I go to for it.
But that drama isn't what I want to write about.
On the day I got the successful replacement in mid-September, I first consulted with the doctor in the out-patient recovery unit. See, the painful tube was installed by a doctor I'd never met before. The guy who'd always done it before and who successfully fixed it is the one I've noted before seems to be pretty rude. I'll call him Doctor A. Doc A made some sensible comments in that consultation, saying he'd like to fix one thing at a time -- first the pain, but maybe next replacement I could switch to a Mic-Key tube. I have a G-J PEG tube which I describe here. The Mic-Key goes only to the stomach and is just a button on the outside rather than a tube and ports for both the stomach and jejunum.
In our consultation, Doc A suggested the Mic-Key and I explained that the whole reason I got the feeding tube to begin with is because of stomach troubles that made the jejunal port the key part of my anti-starvation strategy two years ago when I entered the hospital weighing 75 pounds. I can still swallow enough that I eat all my food by mouth now (and have for the last year or so since gaining weight and strength because of that tube), and while eliminating the feeding tube entirely might be a legitimate proposal, eliminating just the part of the tube that has been particularly life-saving for me does not seem logical.
Doc A seemed to accept all that in consultation. Our first priority was to change what he (correctly) thought from examining a week-old x-ray was an improperly placed tube. The week-old x-ray was from a consultation with Doc B, the doctor who had installed that painful tube. B didn't see anything wrong, but A had viewed it and immediately called me to tell me to come in and get it replaced since it looked all wrong to him. So, the Mic-Key tube wasn't the immediate issue anyway.
Then I got in the x-ray room and up on the table under the fluoroscope for the procedure. They took a preliminary look and found my wrongly-placed tube had migrated since the week-old x-ray and looked just fine where it was. (Possibly because I was avoiding food at all costs.) Suddenly Doc A wanted to leave it alone, or put in the Mic-Key. He believed the pain issue solved and had ticked it off his mental list.
I was laying prone on the table, unable to speak while horizontal, as is often the case with my trach. He was pushing for the Mic-Key, explaining how simple and attractive, how less-complicated and more comfortable it would be. The x-ray tech and assisting nurse chimed in.
"Just nod yes and we'll put it in," Doc A said. "Just nod yes. Just nod yes."
Fuck that, eh?
My personal nurse stepped in and said I needed to sit up to speak my mind. So they propped me up enough that I could tell them, "No. No no no no no!"
Get this painful thing out, please. Give me what has worked fine for the past year-and-a-half.
Doc A argued that we could put in the Mic-Key now, and I could always come back and reinstall a G-J PEG if I had trouble down the line. No problem. We'll change it when you say.
"I'm tired of being hungry," I said. If I have stomach trouble I want food that same day, in my jejunal tube.
The x-ray team tried to persuade me: "The longer you have a tube, the more trouble it is. We see this all the time. The Mic-Key is just a cute little button. You'll hardly notice it's there. If it doesn't work you can always come back."
"I've been back. I was here last week. I'm still wearing a damn diaper from the diarrhea-causing contrast dye* from that useless visit. I am hungry. I'm tired of being hungry today."
Doc A did change the tube as I wished. Reluctantly but kindly. And it's worked perfectly ever since.
But when they were saying this: "The Mic-Key is just a cute little button. You'll hardly notice it's there."
Here is what I heard: "If you work harder, you won't need a wheelchair at all. Won't that be nice?"
And: "Show me someone who can't walk, and I'll show you someone who's depressed."
And: "Wouldn't it be great to get off the vent and not have to lug that thing around?"
The answer: Appearance and conforming to the social norm is not in the interest of my health or quality of life. Sitting down to move through the world, when I finally did that in 1983, was a huge relief to me. I could engage with the world rather than being exhausted with the effort of just showing up. Ditto for the vent. Having energy is not depressing in the way that feeling like you're so short of breath you might pass out drags you down.
I don't know what mix of good medical advice and pressure to have me meet an able-bodied norm fueled Doc A and his x-ray staff. I know both were present, as well as A's apparent failure to listen to me in that consultation. In addition to Doc A's expertise in righting another doctor's wrong, here's what I take away from that outpatient visit: I am never safe. They may not be listening to me. They will ambush me when I am least able to speak for myself and try to do their own thing. Their actions will be motivated by medical knowledge and able-bodied assumptions about what I want and need. I am never safe.
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*Dye injected into the feeding tube shows up on the fluoroscope to assist proper placement. Until it works its way from my very slow-moving digestive system, it's all liquid poop.
Just when you think you're safe
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