Monday, October 6, 2008
More from Buffy
Hospital Update
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Broken ribs are a pain (in every sense)...
The respiratory doctor came by to talk about the results from the test. They won't know until the cultures are complete on the pneumonia. So we are waiting for more information about that test.
The doctor did give another possibility that there might be myeloma in his lungs so they are also sending out a sample to ensure it isn't present. (This is just a possibility - this is not certain). They might need a larger sample to check for they may have to do another bronchoscopy to gather more a sample. So that leaves a little more excitement for tomorrow. They don't want a biopsy into the lungs because there is a chance of infection and another collapsed lung with a biopsy. So I am praying that this won't be the case and it is just a matter of pneumonia that can be easily treated.
It is more information but we honestly don't know anything until the results come back on the pneumonia and myeloma. Sorry for not alot of definite information about anything. Dad says hi and isn't enjoying the hospital much.
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Newest Development
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Four Broken Ribs? A Mere Flesh Wound!!!
Hey everyone; It is finally Joe's time to post on Dad's blog. I will do so with the disclaimer that I am not as current on his health as Buffy/Misha/Jacque/Debbie. That quadrumvirate still rules the day, and they have taken him to just about every doctor appointment he has had. If I got something wrong on here, I hope they will set the story straight for everyone. Here is what I know.
I had a the same question from several people via email that I will answer first, then I will post some news updates.
People ask me what the chances are that this cancer can be cured. The chances of that are zero percent. This is an incurable form of cancer. However, we are hoping to get Dad into remission, which just means that the Multiple Myeloma cancer goes dormant, and stops growing for a while. This isn’t like some cancers that can be removed, and then monitored to ensure that it doesn’t return. This type is always there since it is part of his bone marrow now.
Unless something new and worse pops up, this cancer will be terminal for him someday. All this work and treatment by his medical team are focused on making the cancer stop growing, and getting him into remission. If that happens, then we are talking about additional 2-5 years of pain-free life, with the damage to his skeleton healed with medications. That is the positive outcome, and the negative outcome is that he just keeps getting sicker, with no respite from the cancer until it is terminal. We won’t know for a couple of months how that is working, or what are his chances of reaching remission, but the doctors emphasize the positive for us.
If he can get into remission, then he also has a remote chance that he can undergo a bone-marrow transplant. If that happens, the median patient with a bone-marrow transplant is able to remain in remission for up to TEN YEARS. I think you all know which outcome we are praying for here.
The latest health report for Phil Brown is that he is still in a lot of pain, even with all the heavy-duty painkillers. I do mean heavy-duty; there is nothing stronger than what he currently takes every day to try and keep his pain down, other than pure morphine.
And he has already asked me several times to head downtown and see if I can score some of that for him. So I did, but I just used it myself before I got back. I had a hangnail, you see…
Here is what he is taking these days for treatment. Radiation treatments, but he is nearly done with these. In fact, this has made the tumors on his chest and back shrink a lot. They will continue with the treatments on his pelvis and another one on his back though, because those are not shrinking as fast as the others. He should only have 10 more days of those daily treatments, and that is good those are almost finished because they really sap his energy.
He is still taking steroids that are supposed to help him be strong enough to fight through all these health challenges. Those are helping, but they make his blood sugar zoom all over the place. Sky-high one day, way low the next day. I know that has been tough for him to get it regulated, and it makes his appetite lousy because he feels so sick most of the time. But he is being a real trouper, and fighting through these sick feelings.
He also gets a takes a Skele-Grow treatment each week. It is a bone-strengthening mix he gets via IV that makes us all laugh because it seems like the Harry Potter potion from Book 2.
He is also taking a thalidomide-based drug that helps stop the cancer from growing; it is a pre-cursor to the chemo treatments he will start once the radiation treatments are done. He always yells at me when I bring it to him with my arms hidden in my shirt with only my hands showing. “Joseph, that isn’t funny at all!” Sadly, that is a macabre example of why my sense of humor is unacceptable to civilized people everywhere.
That is pretty much the whole set. Dad was feeling pretty good last week, even through all his struggles with the radiation, steroids, Skele-Grow, birth-defect causing agents, and physical therapy sessions. Then he had a new problem. He fell down late Wednesday evening, and if you have been following this blog, you know he has bone cancer, and it has caused holes all over his body in his bone mass. Well, he broke four ribs, so now he has even more body parts to cause him pain. It is especially lousy since he seemed to have a good handle on all the treatments he was getting. Sadly, it will be a few weeks before those start to knit up, so we will need to work even harder to keep him comfortable.
I stayed with Dad over the Labor Day weekend, and it was a lot of work. All you Browns owe your Utah sisters an enormous Obrigado, because they are working like rented mules keeping Dad going to all his appointments, cleaning his house, and helping him out. I was wiped out after I did it for a single weekend, and they have been at it for 6 weeks now. I will say it for everyone;
Nice work, hermanas…
More news; Bart Smithson came up from AZ last week and like a tornado in reverse built Dad a bedroom and bathroom on the main house floor in one week. That means he won’t have to keep struggling with the stairs every day. We have a few more things to finish there (painting, carpet, etc.) and get a new bed delivered, but once that is done it will be much easier for Dad to relax there and heal. It was getting really tough to navigate that stairway to go visit the hospital and stuff.
So we Browns owe a huge Thank You to Bart for spending a week on that marvelous bathroom, and to Angela for being a single mom for all that time. It is all planned to be more accessible for him as he gets better. I will post a few more pictures when I get up there to paint again this weekend.
I don’t mean to make it sound like all tears and frowns up there, though. Dad still has his sense of humor about it all, even when things are really hurting. While I was downstairs in the kitchen, Dad was upstairs watching TV, and I heard a huge crash on the stairs. You can’t see the stairs from Dad’s kitchen, so I had a head-slapping “hot water burn baby” moment of “Holy crap, I killed Dad on the stairs” moment before I charge over to see what had happened. It was just Ethan, my 13 year old going down the stairs four-at-a-time. After I yelled my fear out on him, I went upstairs to see how he was, and told him what a fright I had. His response was “No, you don’t have to worry about me falling down those stairs. I got enough gymnastics when I dove onto the bedroom floor the other night.”
We didn’t get much useful done last weekend, but we did have a chance to watch some good westerns together and talk about how no-one else in the family is quite as cool as he and I are. For those of you on the inside story of his back surgery, I teased John B that he left one of his bags on the floor in Dad’s room, and that caused the current problem as well.
Those are the good things; Dad has a good attitude, tons of kids to help out, loads of insurance, and he is getting the best care possible. His chances are very good that he will be able to improve, and he will feel better once this first set of treatments are complete.
Thank you to everyone who reads this blog, and sends us messages of hope and comfort. We all appreciate the prayers, visits, assistance, meals, and concern expressed by all of us who love Phil Brown, and are trying to help him get better. We will try to keep the blog updated more often to try to keep you all from worrying. Thanks also go out to Dad's Ward and Stake there in Sandy as they are all helping with meals, visits, and encouragement. We all appreciate your help as we try to get Dad feeling better, and back to his normal healthy self.
Joe B and all the Browns
Reuions, Reunions, All Over The Place
Here is one more post from Joe.
From left to right - Uncle Jack, Aunt Elma, Phil B, Aunt Geraldine, and Aunt Louine.
Here is a picture of Dad talking at the meeting:
Notice that cool CJ brand!
Here is a short clip of Dad talking to his missionaries. I don't have enough memory to film his entire talk (it was looong) but look how many of these wonderful missionaries came out to see Pres.Brown when he was so sick.
We had a great showing of missionaries. We had 50+ missionaries and most of their families. It was truly a great event. Everyone was in great form and enjoyed catching up with each other. The missionaries that attended were: Rebecca (Johnson) Akita (Hawaiian), Jeremy Astle and wife Janet (Morrow), John Booth, Margie (Anderson) Boswell, Mike Bradshaw, Kyra (White) Brown, President Phillip Ray Brown, Ariel Bybee, Luis Camara Manuel & wife Angela (Fawson), Scott Chappell, Eurico Costa, Scott Davis, Shawn Durrant, Mark Egnew, Trent Fenton, Mike Hilbig, Jared Holt, Jeff Howes, Brian Hulleberg (Hully), Brandon Johnson, Ryan Johnson (Chinezinho), John Layton, Katrina (Liedke) Leavitt, Paul Martin & wife Laura (Dagley), Kristen (Russell) McQuivey, Michelle (Berry) Mills, Duke Montague, Joseph Murray, Rob Nash, Jeff Rudd, Matt Sager, Greg Spencer, Kim (Garrity) Springer, Doug Swensen, Steve VanWagenen, Mark Vosti, Sister West, Mike White, Ana Xarepe. AND I know there are a few others yet I forgot their name (SORRY – You would think I was 90 - HA). When you see the pictures you will know them.
We had a marvelous time at all these fantastic reunions.
It is great to be part of such a great family. It was a real sacrifice for some of them to get here from all over the country, but it was fantastic to get to see them all in one spot again.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Brown Family Reunion - Aug. 5-8
It was SO MUCH FUN. So much fun that we have all spent the last few weeks recuperating from fun overload.
Here are a few photos to show some of our activities:

The boats are off. We use the term boat loosely. It is a decorated piece of wood.


Our winner, Hudson. Note the water bottle attached with some duct tape. Maybe he is more like Grandpa Brown than we thought.

Thursday, August 21, 2008
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Dad Update
This past week every member of the Phil Brown family gathered together. We had our own reunion of sorts. The purpose was two-fold. 1) Have a family picture. 2) Get all of the siblings away with Dad to go over matters of family business. It was the first time the siblings were alone in almost a decade (without kids and spouses). Buffy had a wonderful friend who let us use their beautiful cabin for 2 days.
We accomplished both nicely. It was so fun to see all of the family. It was a little bit harder to see Dad. Although he has improved somewhat because of the initial treatment, he is still in a great deal of pain. He has a nurse that checks on him weekly. When she asked him about his pain level - he said his chest and leg feel better but his back was still at about a 9. This is with him taking Oxycotin and Valium every 4 hours. WHAT?????
He is needing a lot more help everyday. It is hard for him to climb the stairs and he needs a walker or cane. Dad is grateful for the help but I think it is hard on him to physically deteriorate. If you think about it, he has been pretty independent for 72 years of his life - this would definitely be a change.
Sorry to end this post on a sad note. I will post some pictures of the family and events at our mini-reunion. And if you are lucky - you can see some pictures of our sibling retreat.
Monday, August 4, 2008
Grandpa and Arden
When Misha took Dad for his biopsy, Arden came with them. Misha took Dad to the receptionist who asked him, "What are you here for?" At this point, Arden felt like it was her duty to inform the receptionist what the problem was and declared loudly, "He has OWIES. He has CANCER."
The response from everyone was laughter. Could they get any cuter than that?