In UCLH awaiting diagnosis after blood went haywire over the past three-four weeks or so and I nearly collapsed yesterday lunchtime. So far, two blood transfusions and a bone marrow extraction. Should have confirmed diagnosis in the very near future. I will overcome the problems.
A really strange night last night.
I woke up just before midnight drenched with perspiration and my right foot felt a bit better.
I am now awake, again covered with perspiration and the right foot seems to be much better.
The platelets transfusion was a problem and I had an adverse reaction!
My foot injury was re-dressed; very painful indeed.
Discharged at about 5 am to get home.
I’m still optimistic about the fight against this condition 🥊🤓.
A truly awful afternoon/evening yesterday😢. After I posted my update I had heart problems (atrial fibrillation) ‘diagnosed’ by my iWatch. A 999 call later and I was in a blue light ambulance to UCLH where I had intravenous antibiotics and a transfusion of platelets. 1/2
The blood transfusion worked and my platelets level is much higher than last week.
However, my right foot is still bruised and swollen despite Panadol and antibiotics.
The next step is further tests on Monday with a new ‘agenda’ for treatment/chemotherapy injections 💪🏻🥊👍🏻.
@JeffSamuels16 “I don't know what they have to say
It makes no difference anyway
Whatever it is, I'm against it
No matter what it is or who commenced it
I'm against it.”
From a real Marxist - Groucho in Horse Feathers.
When The Times exposed world Jewish conspiracy was a hoax.
@DAaronovitch: ‘belief in the Protocols in the Anglophone world came to a total halt after August 1921….All over the world people of goodwill were armed with the real story.’
https://t.co/dWDkBFeidw
@shitbarrister Why not deliberately under claim by £1.00 and see how frequently the LAA picks up your errors? It isn’t very often as I discovered years ago when I tried that to prove a point (which I won).
@mcribbHistory But a safe picquet guard. The Duke of Wellington apparently disapproved of picquets being killed before a battle; their deaths would not influence the outcome.