Home from the hospital. Thanks for all your good wishes. I was only sort of sick for a couple of weeks, then after the eardrum problem the pneumonia went from zero to sixty in about four hours. I couldn’t breathe, my heart was racing, blood pressure going crazy, my fever was way up – I couldn’t even walk. Crazy! Also, the clue (that I should remember from my previous, less serious pneumonia cases) – coughing up blood. If you are coughing up anything striped with blood, go to the doctor immediately. Do not pass go. That seems like a no-brainer, but when it first happened to me as a college student, I didn’t think anything about it. Also, if you are asthmatic, um, don’t catch pneumonia.
PS – People with autoimmune problems often have reactions to their IVs. I did! Yeah, you don’t want that.
In an attempt to be educational about my health excitements, here is a bit about the class of antibiotics they gave me via IV at the hospital for the last couple of days. Mine was called Rocephin, which sounds like “rose-fin.” Anyway, a little about the mysterious origins of today’s antibiotic-of-the-week, courtesty of Wikipedia:
“Cephalosporin compounds were first isolated from cultures of Cephalosporium acremonium from a sewer in Sardinia in 1948 by Italian scientist Giuseppe Brotzu [2]. He noticed that these cultures produced substances that were effective against Salmonella typhi, the cause of typhoid fever…”
Thank you, sewage! Another strong antibiotic, called Vancomycin, was discovered, I believe, in a kind of rainforest mud.
Interestingly, the doctors told me they were almost sure I had viral pneumonia; but gave me IV antibiotics anyway, and, again interestingly, they did seem to help.
Thanks again ya’ll for your encouraging words…Too sick to talk on the phone, still – I just start coughing when I walk across the room or have a fine-minute conversation. Not sure how long this phase lasts, but I hope not long. I want to try to get back to teaching work and regular life asap. Meanwhile, looking forward to catching up on sleep and trying to avoid hurting myself coughing – ow, my ribs, ow, my lower back, ow, ow ow! (Please leave any helpful tips for painful coughs in the comments š – I’m allergic to the ingredients in most cough syrups, including guafinisin and codeine, so all advice about how to control a cough without them welcome!)
I hope to soon be blogging about poetry (and more healthy circumstances) soon.
Karen J. Weyant
So happy to see you are back home! I’m afraid I don’t know much about treating painful coughs — a heating pad where it hurts? Feel better soon!
Lana Hechtman Ayers
Jeannine,
Wishing you good health from Alaska where I touched my very first glacier today.
Love, Lana
Suzanne
I’m so glad you’re OK and home at last! If I were Glenn I would keep you in a bubble. š
xo
Carol Lynn
I’m very relieved that you are home and doing better. I’m not an expert on coughs. I would only suggest lots of hot tea with honey and plenty of rest for you~
xo
Carol Lynn
Collin Kelley
Glad to hear your back home. Get well soon!
Wendy Wisner
So glad you’re on the mend. Just rest, rest, rest!
Joannie
Good to hear from you, and glad that you’re well enough to type (it’s a sign).
I should have good advice from the year of whooping cough. All I remember is rest and cough drops (anything to ease the symptoms), in addition to the meds.