Interviews

Not SueI went out on a limb one day a while back and asked my totally awesome coordinator if she would be willing to answer some interview questions so we, as CF patients could get her perspective on what she does and what we do/do not do as patients. I was threatened with life and limb or something about never getting another Rx again if the photo we took at Great Strides ended up on the Internet, so this post is sans-Sue photo. Instead, I’ve used a photo of a person pretending to be Sue. Just so we’re clear – this is not Sue (of course, she knows that!), so I can continue to receive treatment at my CF center.

She warned me of her rambling answers, but after reading through them, I have editorially decided to leave them be, and de-labeled them as rambling. It’s rather a stream of consciousness that makes perfect sense. I think they tell an interesting story that I’d never heard, and I’m sure most of you haven’t either.

Fatboy: Ok, so I know you’re an RN, but how did you get so darn good at being a coordinator with all of the administrative things that you do? You’re undoubtedly one of the reasons I’ve been able to get and remain compliant because of easy e-mail access to the doctors through you. Before it was like jumping through hoops to get meds or an appointment. Did you set out to change that or was that why you were selected as the new coordinator. Mad props to your administrative abilities. I couldn’t do your job.

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This entry is part 1 of 3 in the series Meet My Little Friend...

@NanosmakemepukeIn recent months, I’ve made a new CF friend on Twitter, @nanosmakemepuke, who just so happens to be a chemist with a Tumblr blog with a name that immediately gave me a source to go to for an expert answer to my ongoing query. I got the bright idea this week, “Who better to ask for an explanation of why cystic fibrosis patients need more salt than normal people than Amanda? She’s got a PhD in chemistry!” So I did, and she obliged with a pretty detailed reason in layman’s terms that I think you’ll find as fantastic as I did. Many, many thanks for such a great piece that will live on for a very long time to help educate others looking for the answer to the same question that has been bugging me for years.

Amanda: Salt is the combination of sodium and chloride. The biochemical processes that go on in our bodies are such that only a very narrow range of salinity (concentration of salt in our body’s fluids) is acceptable. Too little or too much is literally a matter of life and death. Fortunately, our bodies are really good at ensuring that it contains the ideal concentration of salt by adjusting the volume of fluid in our blood and tissue so that the salinity is always in the ideal range. If you have too much salt you become thirsty, causing you to drink water, which dilutes the too-high concentration of salt in your body. If you have too little, you usually crave and eat something salty.

In cystic fibrosis, improper transport of chloride (a component of salt) causes all the horrible symptoms and manifestations of this disease. CF bodies don’t fully regulate the concentration of salt within the cells that line our airways, digestive tract, and skin, causing the concentrations to be a bit out of whack—either too low or too high, depending on which side of the cell you’re looking at. In the case of the cells that create sweat in a CF patient’s sweat glands, they leave too much chloride inside the “sweat reservoir,” which must in turn be balanced with an equivalent amount of sodium (wherever chloride goes, sodium follows), making the super-salty sweat characteristic of cystic fibrosis.

Every time a CF person sweats, their body loses up to 10 times the amount of salt a normal healthy person would in the same amount of sweat. That means excessive sweating (as might happen in the summer or when exercising) puts people with CF at a much higher risk of dehydration than other people. Because of this salt loss, people with CF must be very diligent to replace lost salt whenever they sweat, otherwise there is a risk of suffering from dehydration.

Generally speaking, people with CF need to include salt as a regular part of their diet to compensate for abnormal amounts of salt lost through sweat. The usual reason doctors recommend a low-salt diet for non-CF people is so that they don’t develop high blood pressure, which causes your body to retain more fluid in your blood to compensate for the excessively high concentration. If you have CF and have high blood pressure, obviously the amount of salt in your diet is something you need to discuss with your doctor.

Bottom line: it’s important for people with CF to add a little extra salt into their diet in order to avoid dehydration in warm weather and when exercising. Also, always make sure you consume something salty with plenty of fluids so your body can process it properly.

Beautiful, simply beautiful

Beautiful, simply beautiful

It’s the time you’ve all been waiting for: Beautiful speaks! Sure, she leaves comments, which was a HUGE deal for her. This is the first site she’s ever been compelled enough by my writing to leave a comment for all to see, and now she has her own site over at kris·tin·ol·o·gy where she tends to talk about me some, too.

Here’s the format that this took place with: I wrote down a ton of questions in this as a draft and let her take her time to answer as many of them as she wanted to, and then we deleted the ones that didn’t make the cut or didn’t get answered for one reason or another. Basically, it’s a 60 Minutes interview after the producers get their hands on it, except all of her answers are in her words and in complete context. Ready?

Fatboy: Hey, Beautiful! Whatever made you want to go out with me that first time, be it that freezing Memorial Day at the beach or our first date?

Beautiful: You were interesting. We could spend forever talking about nothing. You always had such a different perspective on things than I did. I couldn’t wait to see what you thought.

Fatboy: When or how did you find out that I have cystic fibrosis?

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