September 09, 2005
Hate Voicemail?
Here's how to get to speak with a person when dumped into voicemail for a huge number of companies.
(Thanks to Conrad for the heads-up.)
September 06, 2005
Cronyism=Rank Incompetence and Incompetence in the Ranks
Just in case you don't think there's anything wrong with Bush and his administration being the ones to investigate their own failures, and you don't think there's anything wrong with Michael Brown--whose previous job was overseeing horse shows, and who got fired from that job--being appointed to direct FEMA (which is part of Homeland Security, after all, no minor thing), Think Progress gives you the details of the stellar resumιs of Brown's deputies.
September 05, 2005
Heartless.
You know, just today, I was saying how tacky I thought it was that Bush didn't bother to inform Sandra Day O'Connor before announcing that he was going to renominate Roberts to replace Rehnquist and that she would, therefore, have to stay longer on the bench than she had planned.
Then I read this absolutely shocking statement from Barbara Bush, and I figured it out.
"And so many of the people [refugees from LA] in the arena here, you know, were underprivileged anyway, so this--this (she chuckles slightly) is working very well for them."
I Couldn't Have Said It Better Myself
From the AP:
"I'm not star-struck. I need answers," said Mildred Brown, who has been [at the Baton Rouge shelter Bush visited] since Tuesday with her husband, mother-in-law and cousin. "I'm not interested in hand-shaking. I'm not interested in photo ops. This is going to take a lot of money."
September 01, 2005
Katrina -- How to Help
Remember that donating and volunteering in your area, even if you're far from the Gulf Coast, helps free up time, money and supplies for that area.
Got a few dollars? Oxfam America
Got blood? American Red Cross
Got muscles? Habitat for Humanity
Got room? Hurricane Housing
Got food? America's Second Harvest
Got time? America's Second Harvest
There are other ways to help, also, but those are the ones that come immediately to mind.
Sleep
Yesterday I started my new meds. I also took a two-hour nap in the afternoon. This morning I woke up more easily than I have been lately (at 8am my eyes just popped open), but it's only 12:30 now and I am already ready for another nap. I don't know if this is a side effect of the medication, a change in the stress level I was living with, or something else. Only time will tell!
August 30, 2005
Epilepsy, The Continuing Saga
This morning at 8am, Dr. M-, the neurologist on my unit (the Epilepsy Monitoring Unit) came to talk to me. He said that he had reviewed the readouts from the day before and wanted to talk to me about them.
Several things were apparent on the readout. First, I am a restless sleeper. Lots of tossing and turning, all of which shows up through the electrodes. Second, I was having frequent bursts of seizure activity all the time. Now, "frequent" means different things to different people. So he elaborated: he counted the seizure events I had between 5pm and 6pm. There were 50.
Fifty. In an hour. OK, that's frequent alright. The longest, he said, was eight seconds. EIGHT SECONDS. That's a long time. That's how long a rodeo rider has to stay on a bull. You can lose a lot of information if you zone out of a conversation for eight seconds or if your eyes travel over a page for eight seconds without your brain getting any information.
The other thing that was apparent from the readout was that my seizures are now "primary generalized seizures" rather than the "partial seizures" I had when I was first diagnosed (see my earlier post on types of epilepsy). They cannot make any hypothesis about why such a change would occur, they can only say that it seems evident that is has.
The thing is, Tegretol is exactly the wrong drug for people with primary generalized seizures. These seizures are the type of seizures associated with Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy (JME), the kind of epilepsy my brother has. The doctors tell me now that I have that same kind of epilepsy, and that while Tegretol is still controlling the outwardly visible signs of my seizures, it is not controlling the actual brain activity.
So, the first thing to be done is a medication change. I won't be taking Depakote, like my brother, because it's not the drug of choice for women. Instead, they are putting me on Lamictal (Lamotrigine). Lamictal's first possible side-effect is a rash, so everyone was very clear about not ignoring any skin problems that might crop up. The other two problems that are apt to show up are dizziness and an increase in myoclonic jerks.
No, myoclonic jerks are not the coke-bottle-glassed guys who try to pick you up in bars; those are myopic jerks. Myoclonic jerks are little muscle spasms. Lots of people have myoclonic jerks. They're those little jerks you feel when you're just on the edge of sleep and your whole body spasms.
In people with JME, myoclonic jerks are common, and Lamictal can make them worse. Usually, the doctor explained, that only happens when you increase the dosage too suddenly. So the plan for me--since I have a lot of myoclonic jerks already--is to start very slowly. I will stay on the Tegretol, since it does seem to be at least keeping me able to function in everyday life, until I can work up to a therapeutic dose. Then they will begin to taper off the Tegretol.
I will have to be very careful driving during this period, and there are times when it is not recommended at all. I am trying not to worry about that, though, and concentrate on the positive aspects of this change.
And there are lots of positive aspects. First and foremost, there's the tremendous relief of knowing that I am not imagining the memory and cognition problems. They have a cause, and they can be treated. I don't know that I can really explain how great a weight that lifts from me.
The second positive aspect of this diagnosis is that I am writing this from home. I got all my electrodes removed because the cause of the problems was so obvious that they didn't have to keep me the full five days! Woohoo!
In four weeks I will go back to see Dr. Pack, who will talk to me about how the Lamictal is working for me (I will be almost at full dose by then) and, at the same time, I will talk to the neuropsychologists about the results of all their testing and what it means.
I also have to find a psychiatrist and straighten out my anti-depressants, but I cannot help but think that will be easier as soon as I don't just kind of fade out in the middle of doing stuff!
And now, for your entertainment, here's a picture of what I look like "all wired up":

Travels with Laura: The Epilepsy Monitoring Unit
I seem to be growing into my mother's travel karma (car-ma?). At 6am Monday I called Kisco Cab and asked them to pick me up to take me down to the Epilepsy Monitoring Unit (EMU) at 7am. The driver was a little early but--being me--I was ready to go. We set off down the Saw Mill and everything was looking great when *poof...thud, thud thud*, a blowout.
If you've ever driven the Saw Mill Parkway, you'll know there are no shoulders, nowhere to pull off, and the whole thing is composed of blind curve after blind curve. We staggered along until we came to a spot where the driver could pull off into the grass. The driver called dispatch and they promised to send another car right away. In the meantime, the driver decided to attempt to change the tire himself.
Mind you, this was at the height of rush hour and the flat was on the back left of the car. I suggested that the driver might want to call the police, just for safety's sake. He deferred, saying he could change it himself. (Did he think I was implying that the police would actually help him change the tire? Clearly, he thinks I don't know much about the police around here.) Luckily, a passing motorist must have called in about our predicament because just as the second Kisco Cab pulled up, so did a police car.
On the way down to the city I was fully entertained by the second driver, who proceded to lecture me on what was wrong with American politics. (The electoral college is an outdated idea, the blue states spend all their money supporting the red states, traitors are allowed to run our government and the people have no recourse.)
I arrived at the hospital and, after wandering a maze of corridors that would confuse even a person without cognition problems, found the EMU. An absolutely gorgeous woman named Barbara checked me in and told me that Tracy would be the nurse on my unit and that Steven would be the technician who would hook up my head. I also met Dr. M- the neurologist on the unit. He was nice and exceedingly calm. I imagine that he's very good with some of the more wound up patients.
Then Steven came in and explained how the whole monitoring thing worked. He proceeded to attach 41 electrodes to my head with a product that smelled like Duco Cement and felt like E6000 jeweler's glue. He then wrapped my head in gauze to keep all the wires from catching on anything. The wires were gathered together, along with my hair, and sheathed in a "stockingette" down to where they connected to the recording box, which was put in a little "purse". The recording box had a little "event button" attached to it which allowed me to call the nurses when and if I thought I was about to have a seizure or was in the process of having a seizure. This would make a mark on the EEG, as well as on the video monitor, so that the doctors could study those particular pieces later on.
The box, in the purse, was attached by a single long cable to a computer on the wall, to which the recording box was sending information. While they were setting it up, the computer's monitor was active and it was fascinating to watch all the stuff happening on the screen. Each group of electrodes had a separate line of information going into the box. I'd say there were about 15 lines of information showing on the screen. Every time I blinked, about 1/2 of the lines showed an enormous spike. And all the lines were scribbling all the time...I just don't know how anyone makes sense of all that!
My "event button" appeared to be hypersensitive. Every time I shifted position, it would go off and a nurse would appear and ask me if I were all right. Steven came back a bunch of times trying to fix it, but to no avail. His supervisor told him that the technical problem was that the machine was "haunted." On par for machines around me!
At about 1pm, lunch was served. Salisbury steak. Now, I have an issue with Salisbury Steak. Not only do I not eat a lot of meat, but I have never seen Salisbury Steak on any menu that is not institutional. The apple was very tasty, though.
Shortly after lunch, the neuropsychologist, Dr. P- arrived. Dr. P- was very, very nice, as was everyone there. She gave me lots of tests. Tests with numbers. Tests with pictures. Tests with stories. And then, the dreaded tests with blocks. You know the one...they show you a picture, give you some red and white blocks and you are supposed to make the picture with the blocks.
During this fiasco, my sister arrived. So we stopped the testing, with the promise of more to come later. Anna had brought a fabulous drawing made by my artistic (3-year-old) niece, Leyla. Leyla had made me a picture of the sea, with the legend "And will you not be bored" written under it. My mother also arrived, with a 5-pound tin of nuts which was almost as fabulous as Leyla's drawing.
Eventually Anna and Mom left, just as my dinner was being brought in. "Chicken Dijonnaise". I ate nuts.
At around 8, the simultaneously stretched and compressed feeling on my skin and head from the electrodes and the gauze wrap had given me such a bad headache that Tracy kindly arranged for me to get some Tylenol.
Eventually, I went to sleep.
At 5:15am, Mike sent me a text message from Turkey, so I called him back. "It's awfully early where you are, isn't it?" he asked. "Well, yes," I replied, "but I am in the hospital." If you've ever been in the hospital, you'll know what I mean. It's impossible to sleep, even without the periodic interruptions of people wanting to take your vitals and do the "do you know where you are?" kind of checks. At 6am, it was time for morning vitals check, and the day began.
At about 8, Dr. M- came in to discuss what he had seen on my monitor so far. I will put that in the next post because that is where the meat of the diagnosis will be.
August 27, 2005
So Now You're a Blog Addict
Before you happened onto this site, you really didn't know much about blogs. You thought "those things are NOT for me." But now you're realizing that you can get your news and gossip via blog, and that even your far-flung family members have blogs. But who has time to check all those darn sites every day? No one.
That's why there are RSS Feeds attached to most blogs. You'll see ours down at the left where it says "Syndicate this site (XML)." What does that mean? Essentially, what it means is that a you get a "feed reader" program that checks all the blogs you subscribe to the same way your email program checks all your email accounts. In fact, most feed readers look exactly like email programs.
You "subscribe" to a feed, and your program checks that page every 5 minutes (or hour, or however often you ask it to check) to see whether there are any new posts. (It won't check for comments, just posts.) Then it consolidates all the new posts into a single page.
The picture above is of the News Reader I use -- it's called NetNewsWire. As I recall, it cost about $25, but there are definitely free ones out there. Here are links to some of the most popular feed reading programs:
Windows -- SharpReader
Win/Mac (this is a feedreader that runs through your browser so that you don't need to get more software) -- Bloglines
Win/Mac (slightly more complicated browser feed reader) -- AmphetaDesk
Mac -- NetNewsWire
MRI
Small tube + big noise + long enclosure=panic attack.
I need to get some kind of metal inserted into me--like a pin in my shoulder or something--so they can never do one of these to me again.
And hey, all that stuff about magnets making you feel better? Hogwash!
August 25, 2005
Insurance
OK, for those of you who know that I received a bill for the appointment with the epileptologist, I spoke to the insurance company today. I don't know why it's taken them so long to process the bill, but they apparently *are* paying it. So that means they *will* pay for both the MRI on Saturday and the hospital stay next week.


