Once again, this David writing for Eva.
A week on from the last post, we have some clarity on where we are going, but none on what’s going on. I’ll start with the news, and then get to the philosophical ramblings alluded to in the title.
As you may recall, Eva is/was down to 3.5 or 5.0 ml/hr on her feed (which is about 10% of what it should be). We had two plans for improving that, and two hypotheses about what was going on.
Plan 1 was to supplement her feed with Prostat, a protein concentrate, through her tube. This was not successful. It traveled through her system very quickly. And unpleasantly.
Plan 2 was to switch to an elemental formula (one which contains the nutrients in a pre-digested form). This wasn’t a failure, but doesn’t seem to have fixed anything either.
Hypothesis one: Eva had stopped tolerating her formula. Test: Switch formula. If the hypothesis is true, symptoms should ease with new formula. As seen above, in Plan 2, symptoms did not ease. This suggests that Hypothesis one is false, which is to say, the problem isn’t Eva’s formula. This is both good and bad news. Good in that we really don’t want Eva to develop intolerances to her formula every couple of years because there just aren’t that many appropriate options for her. Bad News in that it doesn’t move us any closer to a solution.
Hypothesis two: Eva had c. diff. Test: a stool sample test. Which came back negative for c. diff. and everything else. Also, her bloodwork looks good, no inflammatory markers or elevated white blood cells. This all suggests that there is no infection present.
This leaves us where we are now: we have no idea what is going on. More on that later in this post.
We do know what we are doing: Eva is going on TPN. We are hoping to start that this evening. It will be a slow ramp-up, which allows us to do this without an inpatient hospital stay. That means that Eva will not see an immediate increase in calories, but that should build steadily over a few weeks.
Now back to the title.
A little while ago, Eva and I looked at each other and agreed that we finally had a bit of a handle on her health. Not that things couldn’t and wouldn’t go wrong, but that we would recognize what was going wrong and know what to look at. For instance, if she suddenly ceased to be able to feed at her normal rate, it was either some infection (c.diff. or SIBO, for instance), or an intolerance to her formula. Obviously, in hindsight, this is hubris, the belief by mortals that they are the equals of the gods.
We are now in a place without any idea of what is going wrong with Eva, but with clear indications that something is. At this point, we do not know whether there are any tests that we should/could be running that will point us towards answers (we are communicating with Eva’s GI to try to figure that out). There is a sense of not-knowing even what questions to ask which is unfamiliar and disturbing.
Which brings us to Humility (anavah in Hebrew). As we are in the middle of the Ten Day of Repentance, humility is a featured virtue. And in knowing that one does not know, there is a deep humility. We are required to acknowledge that our knowledge is not as vast as we imagined. To admit that there are problems whose causes we lack even the language to imagine.
We are trying to treat this mystery as just another step in learning to manage Eva’s disease. But from the inside it is frustrating and scary. And Eva is doing this on around 250 calories a day.