Tag: "Adrienne Lallo"

Adrienne's Breast Cancer Surgery Day

Adrienne’s Breast Cancer Surgery Day

Adrienne with Michael Garcia, chief of surgery at Seton Hospital in Austin.

Adrienne with Michael Garcia, director of surgery at Seton Hospital in Austin.

My wife Adrienne was up all night, not worried about the surgery for breast cancer she was receiving  today, but instead on how she was going to manage her hunger pains till  her scheduled 11:30 surgery.

At 5:30 this morning I found her up and working at her desk, trying to finish up some last minute detail for her job at Seton Hospital.  Even without much sleep she was in a good mood, and ready to face the day.  Food however was still on her mind.

Checking into Seton hospital we were given a pager and some last minute forms that needed to be signed.  Adrienne had to run around to visitors in the lobby to get two witnesses for her signature. What they must have thought is anyone’s guess.

A Wisked

Adrienne before being taken to x-ray.

It was then off to the day surgery prep room for her traditional gown fitting, equipped of course with an open back, and cute little slipper socks to keep the feet warm.  Good news was they also provided pants equipped with a fly.

Before being whisked off to x ray, Michael Garcia, director of surgery, dropped in to wish her well, then she was taken to x-ray where she had a harrowing experience.

The dense breast my wife has did posed a little problem for the placement of a metal wire to mark the cancerous spot, but the real problem came as she was leaving. Adrienne was trapped in radiology when the door handle on the inside broke off.   After a call to maintenance Adrienne and the radiology staff were freed.

Coming back to the pre-op room, A was still in good spirits.  She was visited by her anesthesiologist and her surgeon, John Abikhaled.  They both took extreme pains in explaining what would happen, and what she would be experiencing.   She also got a call from her dad wishing her well.

A is Wheeled Away to Surgery.

A is Wheeled Away to Surgery.

She has just been wheeled out to the operating room where she will have an hour long procedure, followed by about an hour to an hour and one half recovery.

As I sat in the waiting room, time seemed to stand still.  I busied myself editing photos for Imperial Sugar’s newsroom, and making a few calls.  Time however did not march fast enough.

Michael Garza came over and handed me a voucher for the lunch room, but despite the hunger in my belly, the hunger that was driving me was A’s successful surgery.

A little more than one hour after watching Adrienne be wheeled away, the pager we were given earlier begin to sing.   I hurriedly gathered A’s and my bags, and headed to meet the surgeon.

Grogy A

Adrienne in the recovery room chair

John Abikhaled met me with good news.   He said the surgery went smoothly and Adrienne was a marvelous patient.   He explained how he removed a lump approximately the size of a golf ball from her left breast (thank god that was the correct one).  He had sent samples to the lab, and we would know in approximately two days whether he had managed to remove all the cancerous growth.

After a few questions on her treatment for the next few days,  I hurried off to meet my wife in recovery room C4.

Adrienne was awake in her bed, if you can really call only being aware of your surroundings awake.   Despite the circumstance she remained in good spirits.   I was given the task of getting a prescription filled for pain, so I left here sipping on water and eating graham crackers.

Leaving Hospital

Adrienne being wheeled out of Seton Hospital.

By the time I had returned, the bed was gone and Adrienne was sitting in a chair.  She was wide awake and her feistiness was rapidly returning.   She was ready to go home.

After a short explanation of do’s and dont’s by the recovery room nurse,  Adrienne was dressed and in a wheel chair headed  to the front door.   I am not sure that is because the are really good there, or because they really wanted to get rid of her.  None the less, despite having to be there for a very serious condition, the professional staff made the experience very pleasurable.

Upon her arrival home, Adrienne quickly hit the bed to be greeted by her favorite cat, Sammy.  The two of them fell fast asleep only to be woken by the doorbell and our two furious dogs barking their fool heads off.

A and Sammy

Adrienne and her cat Sammy at home.

The wakening was a pleasant surprise.  The staff at her office at Seton had sent over dinner for the family.  Yum, yum it is pizza and salad and best of all, I don’t have to cook.

Adrienne will be fine I am sure. Our family wants to thank all of you for your prayers and good wishes.

On Finding My Wife Has Breast Cancer

On Finding My Wife Has Breast Cancer

A2

Adrienne at her recent birthday dinner. A good looking 53.

The phone call hit me hard!.

The call from my wife Adrienne hit me so hard that I had to excuse myself from the table of a very important business breakfast I was having with my partners in The News Group Net.

My wife Adrienne, had been told two weeks earlier that a biopsy was needed to further define a suspicious spot on her mammogram.  Four days earlier, I had taken her to Seton Hospital Northwest for the biopsy.  We were waiting for the results.  Results that in my own mind would come back negative, I was wrong.

Since being told of the suspicious spot on her left breast, and that the breasts were unusually dense, Adrienne had been researching online medical explanations for dense breasts.

At 53 years of age, and uncountable mammograms and doctor visits later, no-one during her lifetime had mentioned that dense breast tissue is more susceptible to breast cancer.   To be honest, even if she and I knew that, I am not sure what could have been done different.

Adrienne has always been a person that does all the right things when it comes to exercising and eating properly.  In all fairness, the medical community at some point during one of those exams should have mentioned that the denseness of her breast was something that should be carefully monitored.A1

Bad news is often followed by more bad news, and that is how it was in this case.

The following week Adrienne had an MRI, and more spots were found on her left breast.   After more biopsies, good news finally came from Adrienne’s oncologist, the second set of spots biopsied were benign.

Treatment for the cancer would consist of a lumpectomy followed by intense radiation treatments for a number of weeks.  She would also have to take a prescribed medication for up to five years.

For those of you that know Adrienne, and that is easily more than half the corporate communication professionals in the United States, she is a very headstrong and self-confident woman.   The breast cancer was discovered early and I’m confident that she will have no problem overcoming this obstacle.  Adrienne has a wonderful support group of family and friends that love her dearly, and  when all is said and done, this will only make her stronger when she joins the ranks of other breast cancer survivors.