What If I Had More Time?

Don’t read too much into the title, especially if you are a regular follower of my blog. Though I am in congestive heart failure, my demise is not expected imminently. No, the question came across my feed as a conversation piece, both from the perspective of a cancer survivor and as a cardiac survivor.
Much like the “why” question, as in “what do you think caused it?”, this question, what if I “had more time to consider” the path I took, I have never really thought about either. I am more of a Budhist “here and now” kind of person, not spending much if any time wondering why, what, and if.
But I thought I would take the prompt, and see what I could come up with, if I really thought about it. I have two different extreme situations where I was faced with a rushed time constraint to make a decision, literal life and death, that would bring either reward, consequence, or both.
When it came to my cancer, Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, “what if I had more time to think about my options, if I would go through it again, or if I would even do anything about it?” First, the obvious, Hodgkin’s is one of the more treatable cancers versus almost always being fatal without treatment. That alone is the most powerful incentive. At the age of 22 years old, engaged, the last thing I wanted to do, was die.
But as for my time to think, as I wrote in my book, “Paul’s Heart – Life As A Dad And A 35-Year Cancer Survivor,” I had already wasted so much time, months, when time is critical for treating cancer, in denial and fighting doctors opinions that I needed to start treatment. Nearly four months had gone by. How much more time should I have wasted?
What I should have been doing with my time at that point, was finding out more about the treatments the doctors wanted to do, instead of just picking a treatment, radiation (which I knew nothing about) and chemotherapy, based on stereotypes. It turns out, that it might have had a benefit, well, at least it would today. Back in 1988, any answers to questions I would have had about my treatments, likely would have been answered with a shoulder shrug, and an “I don’t know,” or “we don’t know.”
Given a binary option, get treatment and live, or don’t take treatment and die, there wasn’t really much to think about without details.
But here is what happened over the decades, giving reason to today’s patients to ask questions, take time, to be informed, before they make decisions. Back in 1988, medicine did not know, or at least kept quiet about the potential for late side effects from chemotherapy and radiation therapies. With studies only referring up to “5 year” survival rates, nothing really came up as far as late side effects because we were not expected to live this long. It wasn’t until decades later, that this became more of a concern. But even now, the needs of long term survivors to find care that knows how to diagnose and treat these late side effects, such as I have documented many over the years, it is still difficult to find the care needed.
If time was taken to tell me that I was likely to need heart surgery, have thyroid problems, develop immunity issues, have an increased risk in lung cancer and esophageal cancer, and more, would I have still opted to go through treatments? I believe that I still would have said, “yes.”
There was one thing that was missing from that opportunity however, were these risks being kept from us as patients? I would get an opportunity to see my oncology nurse and radiation tech decades later, both who acknowledged surprise to see me stand in front of them, followed up with “we just didn’t know,” and I believe them. But there are those that did know. Case in point, the Chernobyl disaster, the worst nuclear accident in the history of the world.
While I do not know anything about what medicine might have known about all of the risks with the chemo drugs I was given, I knew they were toxic, but they also were successful in treating Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, which without, was fatal. But the exposure to extreme high dose radiation was way different. And I am not talking about the radiation emitted sitting in front of a television that would have gotten you scolded by a grandparent. That was not the only place we could be exposed. The dentist? Getting x-rays of your teeth to find cavities, the dentist placed a lead blanket over you, because they knew the risks, no matter how minimal of that radiation exposure.

And then who could forget this? The China Syndrome (1979) starring Jack Lemon, Jane Fonda, and Michael Douglas, about a “fictional” meltdown at a nuclear facility and the coverup that followed (just as happened with Chernobyl). The spooky thing is, the movie was released just twelve days before an actual crisis, at Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania. I was thirteen at the time, lived about 45 minutes away from TMI. I remember the fear when the warnings of radiation exposure came out. But the movie, TMI cannot compare to what happened with Chernobyl. Do you know what can? The amount of radiation exposure used to treat Hodgkin’s Lymphoma back in the late 1900’s.
I am going to try to not get too sciency, so hopefully you will understand this. I was treated with 4000 rads of ionized radiation, what was considered “upper mantle, scattered field,” which meant my entire upper torso, including my jaw, both shoulders, and just below my rib cage, that entire area was treated. So as I said, to keep from being too sciency, let me explain 4000 rads this way.
100-200 rads, the risks are minimal. At 600-1000 rads (6-10 Gy), the risks are much higher, side effects are more serious, and mortality increases. But at 4000 rads (40Gy), massive destruction of the organs and body’s systems are possible, including late side effects, but survival of this exposure is unlikely. I was totally unaware of this back in 1989 when I agreed to go through my radiation therapy. The Hodgkin’s untreated would definitely kill me, but there was a chance, so would the treatment. However, this how the treatment risks were put to me, and I can prove it, in the picture below.

I realize it is hard to read, after all it was 37 years ago, but basically they noted the risks to be a secondary cancer (like skin), and a condition called “pericarditis”, and inflamation of the sac around the heart. If you have followed Paul’s Heart, you know they missed my risks by a mile. But only recently, I learned that there was the chance I would not survive the treatment. And medicine knew this.
I want to be clear, and I am going to switch to bold capitalized print so you see the difference, RADIATION THERAPY DONE TODAY IS MUCH DIFFERENT, MORE FINE TUNED AND PINPOINT, AND A LOWER AMOUNT giving the same success (the theory of less is better). It still carries risks, but not as high as my situation and others like me.
So there was the dilemma, don’t treat the Hodgkin’s, die. Treat the Hodgkin’s with toxic chemo or high dose radiation, the chance of dying is still there. But if I survived the treatments, I had a 96% shot at long term remission.
What if I had more time to think about it?
Then you take what happened with my heart at the beginning of my body falling apart from my cancer treatments. I was diagnosed with a “widowmaker” blockage at the age of 42, caused from progressive damage from the radiation damage eighteen years earlier. But the doctors were not aware of that fact until they went in. From the time I got on the treadmill for my stress test to thirty-six hours later on the operating table for an emergency double bypass, I was told I had no time.
Normally, I am all about getting second opinions, especially when it comes to such a traumatic surgery as this was. But I had no time. I was barely conscious with all the information thrown at me. I often wonder the torment that other cardiac patients faced with open heart surgery go through, when they have to wait weeks or even months to go through their surgery. On one hand, I was definitely glad that everything happened so quick.
But what if I had more time to think about having open heart surgery? What exactly would be the purpose of that? Are you hoping to make a lifestyle change to make it unneccesary? If you are at the point of needing open heart surgery, lifestyle change is too late, but necessary for recovery. Perhaps to find a better option? Again, good idea as long as you have the time. But if the end result is, without it you die, and with it, likely save your life, the answer is obvious.
Sure heart surgery is scary. I have been through three, and will likely have more in my future as my repairs will need to be redone at some point, and I have other things wrong with my heart that may require attention at some point.
My point is, it is okay to want to take all things into consideration, and that takes some time. But it is not good, if you are going to use that time to talk yourself out of what is in your best interest and recommended by the doctors.




