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My wife Kari: Good news and bad



My thoughts are with you and your family.

-Dick-


-----Original Message-----
From: Camron D. Crouse [mailto:camron@worldaccessnet.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 25, 2006 3:27 PM
Cc: Scirocco list
Subject: OT: My wife Kari: Good news and bad


Scirocco content: Slim to none... have neglected my Scirocco for obvious
reasons.  Thanks for
reading anyway, I've been quite scarce around here lately...

(Original posting to too many recipients; reposted here for .org list)

As few of you know, my wife Kari Norick was diagnosed with a tiny
non-malignant tumor in her
midbrain just over a year ago. On April 1, 2005, she had a shunt placed in
her head to drain spinal
fluid which had been collecting in her ventricles due to blockage. She spent
most of the year
healthy and happy, and we were married on July 2. This shunt functioned for
several months, but
required a "revision" late in the summer due to clogging.  The shunt clogged
again late in the year,
was replaced, clogged again, replaced, etc.  She had a total of 9
shunt-related surgeries between
April and the following January, mostly in December.

Finally she was out of the hospital in mid-January after a 3-week stay,
gaining her strength back
through physical therapy.  A couple weeks later, however, her strength
plateaued and started to
decline. A New MRI scan showed that the tumor was becoming malignant; it is
likely a grade 3 or
grade 4 glioma. (Because of its location in the midbrain, a biopsy was
deemed impossible, let alone
surgery to remove the growth.) Kari was put on medication to help cope with
brain swelling, and her
strength improved just enough for us to complete a 6-week course of
radiation therapy on "Good
Friday", April 14, 2006, as well as chemotherapy with a new type of
cancer-fighting drug with low
side effects.

That should bring everyone up to date. So this is where we are right now:
A recent MRI proved that the radiation and chemo were effective at killing
the malignancy - this is
very good news. However, this does not mean that the tumor has just
disappeared, but rather the
cancer-detecting dyes used in the MRI scan no longer light up.  In other
words, there is still a
mass in her midbrain, which may (will) become cancerous again sometime in
the future.

Right now Kari is profoundly weakened; She was admitted to Southwest
Washington Medical Center in
Vancouver (where she works as a pharmacist, and where her mother Sharon also
works as a nurse) on
Wednesday April 19 after a follow-up with her Medical Oncologist. What was
supposed to be an
overnight observation has so far turned into a week-long stay and counting.
She can no longer stand
or walk, she can barely speak or sit upright on her own, she cannot swallow
food or liquid of any
kind (a feeding tube was placed just before noon today), she is confused,
suffers from headaches,
and is very jittery and sleepless due to steroid medication used in hopes of
reducing swelling
around the tumor in the very sensitive midbrain. She can, however, usually
answer yes-or-no
questions accurately with a nod or shake.

There are a few scenarios we are facing at this point.

1. The high-dose IV steroid medication could finally kick in within a week
or so and help to
stabilize the swelling from radiation, so that she can do physical therapy
and get strong enough to
go home.  She had been on the medication, called Decadron, on relatively low
doses since January,
and she may be becoming tolerant of it even now that she's on very high
doses.

2. The steroid dosage that she is now on could be too high (my opinion, not
necessarily the
Doctors'), and that is the source of most of her symptoms right now -
jitteryness, inability to
swallow, etc. - due to side-effects (though weak, Kari could eat with little
problem, and walk
around the house with assistance, even the day she was admitted to SWMC).

3. Her weakened condition could improve if the radiation and chemo are able
to make the tumor shrink
down somewhat, relieving pressure on her vital midbrain.  No one has given
us an exact timeline on
how long this would take, but it would be a couple months before shrinkage
would be complete.

4. This is very difficult for me to write this, but we may very well be near
the end.  It is very
hard for me to accept this scenario, but the high doses of medication to
combat weakness from brain
swelling should have helped by now, and they clearly have not (yet).... she
has only gotten worse.
The tumor may not shrink, and may even be continuing to grow, despite all of
our hard work.  It is
extremely painful to think of going on without this wonderful, vibrant,
beautiful girl, as it is to
see her suffering so much right now.


I might not have another chance to ask for thoughts and prayers of healing
from everyone, so I am
doing it now.  This is my call out.  To those that know and love Kari as
much as her family and I,
as well as to those that I dearly hope get to meet her in the future when
things get better, lets
all put our hearts together for her.  We love our Kari!


Sincerely,
Camron Crouse (husband), Sharon and Randy Norick (parents), Stephanie and
Amanda (sisters)
Edie and Bill Crouse (mother- and father-in-law)



Thank you so much, Everyone!


















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