ANNOUNCER: The cancer that was left behind, coupled with the surgery to the bowel, meant Mrs. Ashbey continued to experience diarrhea, although not as severe as before.
LOWELL ANTHONY: Mrs. Ashbey, post-operatively, has continued to experience some degree of diarrhea which could be contributed to the carcinoid tumor that's left in her body or the shortened gut that has occurred with her operation.
LINDA ASHBEY: It was very, you know, very aggravating because I felt like I had been through a lot, and I didn't anticipate that, you know, I thought I was just going to wipe it all away.
ANNOUNCER: Doctors first tried to treat the ongoing diarrhea with common anti-diarrhea drugs: Lomotil and Imodium.
When Mrs. Ashbey's diarrhea continued, Dr. Anthony tried another type of medicine called a somatostatin analogue.
LOWELL ANTHONY, MD: Somatostatin analogues are administered either underneath the skin or in the muscle, either in an immediate form or a slow form, and they're transported to the actual tumor cell through the blood, where they bind to a very special substance that we call the somatostatin receptor. When this occurs, then there's a whole, set of events that happen within the cell, one of which is to decrease the amount of hormones that are secreted.
ANNOUNCER: With the reduction of those hormones, fewer fluids are released into the intestines, and the passage of stool through the intestines is slowed, allowing for more absorption of fluid.
LOWELL ANTHONY, MD: With the somatostatin analogues, we are attacking the specific underlying cause of the disease.
ANNOUNCER: Mrs. Ashbey's cancer is being monitored, and the disease is under good control. She still experiences diarrhea. But it is much less frequent and severe than before, when it significantly impacted on her life.
LINDA ASHBEY: I'm able to make plans and go on trips. I've been on several cruises, and we can go out of town in a car and travel on the highway. I can go to weddings and out to dinner and to a movie, and basically, you know, and enjoy all the things that life has to offer now.