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I don't consider this off topic at all. Anything like this that affects our

lives affects our feelings and our coping mechanisms and in turn our conditions

of depression and anxiety.

I'm stunned to hear this news Colleen. And for you too . I hope (and of

course I pray in my own fashion) that everything comes out well for both of you.

One question that came to my mind is taking Lex:Any of the AD's can be hard on

the liver. Some are worse than others. Did your doc, Colleen, say anything about

that? Yet, part of the treatment seems to require an AD to counter sides of the

treament for your liver. Confusing dilemma. Scary too.

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have

found that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron <beatch38@...> wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I

wondered why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I

have gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to

diet too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I

hear, the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the

tx is rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found

it on . I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to

talk to please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also

need someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a

group you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may

save me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or

diminish, and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my

weight down and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance

of clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one ,

I have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

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Share on other sites

Yes, very scary. I was shocked to hear the news. I'm going in to talk to my

regular primary care physician in October, a couple of weeks before I start the

treatment. I'll talk to her about the Lexapro and the liver.

Colleen

Barbara <bjarrett@...> wrote:

I don't consider this off topic at all. Anything like this that affects our

lives affects our feelings and our coping mechanisms and in turn our conditions

of depression and anxiety.

I'm stunned to hear this news Colleen. And for you too . I hope (and of

course I pray in my own fashion) that everything comes out well for both of you.

One question that came to my mind is taking Lex:Any of the AD's can be hard on

the liver. Some are worse than others. Did your doc, Colleen, say anything about

that? Yet, part of the treatment seems to require an AD to counter sides of the

treament for your liver. Confusing dilemma. Scary too.

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have found

that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I wondered

why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I have

gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to diet

too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I hear,

the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the tx is

rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found it on

. I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to talk to

please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also need

someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a group

you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may save

me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or diminish,

and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my weight down

and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance of

clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one , I

have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'll bet you're still in shock. I know I would be. Hard to wrap your brain

around something like that.

Please, keep me updated on what's going on?

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have

found that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I

wondered why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I

have gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to

diet too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I

hear, the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the

tx is rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found

it on . I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to

talk to please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also

need someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a

group you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may

save me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or

diminish, and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my

weight down and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance

of clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one ,

I have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, I'll keep you updated. For these next two months my job is to lose weight

and exercise. The treatment for hepatitis C doesn't work as well in overweight

people.

Colleen

Barbara <bjarrett@...> wrote:

I'll bet you're still in shock. I know I would be. Hard to wrap your brain

around something like that.

Please, keep me updated on what's going on?

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have found

that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I wondered

why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I have

gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to diet

too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I hear,

the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the tx is

rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found it on

. I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to talk to

please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also need

someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a group

you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may save

me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or diminish,

and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my weight down

and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance of

clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one , I

have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've lost 20 pounds so far in a bit less than two months. Low fat, high fiber

and cut out much of the refined sugar like what I was using in my coffee. I went

to Splenda instead. Lottsa fresh fruits and veggies too. I've not had to do

anything extraordinary as far as exercise and no starving myself. This is how I

knew this time and last time that it was the SSRI that was causing the weight

gain. With a bit more effort towards walking I'll bet I could have doubled my

loss. And remember, you can carry more muscle than fat. ;-)

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have

found that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I

wondered why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I

have gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to

diet too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I

hear, the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the

tx is rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found

it on . I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to

talk to please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also

need someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a

group you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may

save me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or

diminish, and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my

weight down and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance

of clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one ,

I have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've given up the sugar. Today at work I even turned down a piece of cake that

really looked yummy. Although it was nice to look at, I wasn't really tempted.

After not having refined sugar for three days, you don't crave it anymore.

Colleen

Barbara <bjarrett@...> wrote:

I've lost 20 pounds so far in a bit less than two months. Low fat, high fiber

and cut out much of the refined sugar like what I was using in my coffee. I went

to Splenda instead. Lottsa fresh fruits and veggies too. I've not had to do

anything extraordinary as far as exercise and no starving myself. This is how I

knew this time and last time that it was the SSRI that was causing the weight

gain. With a bit more effort towards walking I'll bet I could have doubled my

loss. And remember, you can carry more muscle than fat. ;-)

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have found

that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I wondered

why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I have

gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to diet

too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I hear,

the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the tx is

rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found it on

. I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to talk to

please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also need

someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a group

you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may save

me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or diminish,

and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my weight down

and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance of

clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one , I

have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am at least 50 pounds overweight. I have started walking but I finished off a

half gallon of ice cream in two days but thats all I ate. I really have to stop

these binges because I want to be treated also before I get more damage. Sounds

like you are doing good. Keep posting as you are a great encouragement for me.

Let us know when you are going to begin treatment. Good luck with the weight

loss, you can do it.

MsTigerHawk <tigerhawksoars@...> wrote: I've given up the sugar.

Today at work I even turned down a piece of cake that really looked yummy.

Although it was nice to look at, I wasn't really tempted. After not having

refined sugar for three days, you don't crave it anymore.

Colleen

Barbara <bjarrett@...> wrote:

I've lost 20 pounds so far in a bit less than two months. Low fat, high fiber

and cut out much of the refined sugar like what I was using in my coffee. I went

to Splenda instead. Lottsa fresh fruits and veggies too. I've not had to do

anything extraordinary as far as exercise and no starving myself. This is how I

knew this time and last time that it was the SSRI that was causing the weight

gain. With a bit more effort towards walking I'll bet I could have doubled my

loss. And remember, you can carry more muscle than fat. ;-)

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have found

that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I wondered

why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I have

gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to diet

too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I hear,

the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the tx is

rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found it on

. I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to talk to

please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also need

someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a group

you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may save

me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or diminish,

and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my weight down

and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance of

clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one , I

have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My appointment with the clinic is October 29. I'm assuming that's when I'll get

my first shot of interferon and my ribavirin capsules. Of course I'm not looking

forward to it, but the alternative isn't so hot, either.

Colleen

Catron <beatch38@...> wrote:

I am at least 50 pounds overweight. I have started walking but I finished off

a half gallon of ice cream in two days but thats all I ate. I really have to

stop these binges because I want to be treated also before I get more damage.

Sounds like you are doing good. Keep posting as you are a great encouragement

for me. Let us know when you are going to begin treatment. Good luck with the

weight loss, you can do it.

MsTigerHawk wrote: I've given up the sugar. Today at work I even turned down a

piece of cake that really looked yummy. Although it was nice to look at, I

wasn't really tempted. After not having refined sugar for three days, you don't

crave it anymore.

Colleen

Barbara wrote:

I've lost 20 pounds so far in a bit less than two months. Low fat, high fiber

and cut out much of the refined sugar like what I was using in my coffee. I went

to Splenda instead. Lottsa fresh fruits and veggies too. I've not had to do

anything extraordinary as far as exercise and no starving myself. This is how I

knew this time and last time that it was the SSRI that was causing the weight

gain. With a bit more effort towards walking I'll bet I could have doubled my

loss. And remember, you can carry more muscle than fat. ;-)

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have found

that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I wondered

why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I have

gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to diet

too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I hear,

the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the tx is

rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found it on

. I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to talk to

please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also need

someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a group

you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may save

me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or diminish,

and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my weight down

and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance of

clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one , I

have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's very true. The more sugar you eat the more you crave. Was it chocolate

cake? I'd have a very hard time turning that down. ;-)

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have

found that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I

wondered why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I

have gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to

diet too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I

hear, the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the

tx is rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found

it on . I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to

talk to please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also

need someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a

group you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may

save me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or

diminish, and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my

weight down and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance

of clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one ,

I have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

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Share on other sites

I'm at least 100 pounds overweight and do the same thing if I buy a half gallon

of ice cream. From now on I'm just going to get a pint when I go to the store.

I'm trying to lose weight but sometimes it just seems like " what the hell

difference does it make? "

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have

found that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I

wondered why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I

have gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to

diet too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I

hear, the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the

tx is rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found

it on . I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to

talk to please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also

need someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a

group you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may

save me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or

diminish, and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my

weight down and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance

of clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one ,

I have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No, it was yellow cake with yummy looking frosting. I can't eat dark chocolate.

I get an almost immediate headache.

Colleen

Barbara <bjarrett@...> wrote:

That's very true. The more sugar you eat the more you crave. Was it chocolate

cake? I'd have a very hard time turning that down. ;-)

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have found

that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I wondered

why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I have

gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to diet

too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I hear,

the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the tx is

rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found it on

. I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to talk to

please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also need

someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a group

you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may save

me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or diminish,

and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my weight down

and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance of

clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one , I

have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, it does make a great big difference in the way you feel physically, the

way you feel about yourself, and how long you live. Obesity causes many serious

health problems, including stroke, heart attack, gall bladder problems, fatty

liver - which can lead to cirhossis, and lots of other not-fun diseases. We who

are overweight need to lose the excess pounds for ourselves. It's one way of

showing that we care about our own health. If we don't care about ourselves, no

one else will care about us, either.

Colleen

M L Baldwin <txcookie@...> wrote:

I'm at least 100 pounds overweight and do the same thing if I buy a half

gallon of ice cream. From now on I'm just going to get a pint when I go to the

store.

I'm trying to lose weight but sometimes it just seems like " what the hell

difference does it make? "

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have found

that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I wondered

why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I have

gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to diet

too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I hear,

the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the tx is

rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found it on

. I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to talk to

please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also need

someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a group

you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may save

me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or diminish,

and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my weight down

and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance of

clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one , I

have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh! I'm sorry! I couldn't live without my dark chocolate! ;-) I'm a

self-admitted chocoholic.

Barbara

Re: OT: Colleen's News

You're right, we who have hep C must never drink alcohol at all. They have

found that smoking pot almost makes your liver disease progress.

I need to talk to my primary care physician to see if I should up my Lexapro

dosage to 20 mg in preparation for the treatment.

Colleen

Catron wrote:

No I don't know how long I have had it, and the doctor supposedly sent

instructions to the lab to get my genotype but he never got it back. I will be

making an appt. with a different doctor, I spoke to one who thinks I should be

treated, the other said it was up to me, But they are partners so I don't get

it. They are the only two in the area I live.

I was diagnosed at least 5 yrs ago in a blood test. I am guessing about when I

got it maybe 8 yrs ago, because I would get deathly ill when I drank and my

liver hurt, so I think I may have got it then. But it could have been 15 to 20

yrs I don't know. I don't drink any longer because it makes me ill and I don't

enjoy it any more, plus I know its bad for my liver.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Do you know how long you've had Hep C or what your genotype is?

Colleen

Catron wrote:

Colleen,

I heard treatment doesn't work as well on people that are overweight, I

wondered why, I guess you have explained that to me, (the liver gets fatty?) I

have gained a large amount of weight in the last year in a half, So I need to

diet too, lose weight, my hep Doc. told me to come back in 6 months, the more I

hear, the more I think I should go for treatment sooner than later, I heard the

tx is rough, but the people in hep. c group help each other get thru it. I found

it on . I hope and pray for the best for you and if you need someone to

talk to please talk to me, though I will be learning from you, maybe you also

need someone who has been thru treatment already, but I guess since you ran a

group you already know someone. Thank you for sharing your experience, As it may

save me from learning the hard way.

I have been afraid of treatment because I already have depression and

psychriatric issues, I know the treatment probably will make these worse, but if

it will lengthen the life of me and my liver I am willing to go thru it. I have

to try anyway. Hearing your story just reaffirms it for me that I need to be

treated.

Thank you

God Bless,

MsTigerHawk wrote:

Hi ,

I wish I had done the treatment right after the second biopsy, but my doctor

said I had time to wait for a better treatment. Now I don't have time anymore.

My hepatologist didn't expect my condition to worsen so quickly and so severely.

Apparently it's rare, but it does happen. I used to go to a local Hepatitis C

support group and there were a couple of people there that happened to. I asked

my doctor why and he said it can happen for one of three reasons. If one is a

drinker, if one smokes marijuana, and if you have fatty liver. I don't smoke pot

or drink and haven't in over 35 years, but I do have fatty liver. Well they knew

that after the first and second biopsy, so I think they should have recommended

treatment.

I asked whether if I lost weight, if the fatty liver would go away or

diminish, and I was told that yes, it would. So I have two months to get my

weight down and then October 29 I start treatment.

By the way, they want you to be on antidepressants before you start treatment,

as serious depression and even suicide can be a side effect for many people of

this treatment. And a few even become homicidal. Some people breeze right

through it, although almost everyone gets the flu like symptoms the body aches

and joint pain, fatigue and headaches.

Well, good luck to both of us. I'm a genotype 1b so I have a 35 - 40% chance

of clearing the virus after 48 weeks of treatment.

I used to run a Hepatitis C support group. I thought I didn't have to

worry much about the Hep C anymore because after the second biopsy the doctor

said I'll die with the hepatitis C virus, not of it.

That might not be true anymore...

Colleen

Catron wrote:

HI Colleen,

I " m sorry to hear about your biopsy, I just had one done and I am stage one ,

I have hep. C, and am thinking of getting treatment anyway as my viral load is

high. I hear the treatment is very hard on you. Causes severe depression, ,

Colleen have you ever checked out hep C group, there are alot of

caring people there who have alot of information. I was in the group but found

myself to emotional to interact with people so I left the group, I learned alot

from those in the group though and appreciated the time I belonged there.

I am shocked that your liver jumped from one to three in four years, As I just

had a biopsy I am wondering if the same will happen to me, thats why I'm

thinking of the possibility of treatment before liver damage.

Good Luck and God Bless.

MsTigerHawk wrote:

I got all moved into my new apartment. It sure was hard getting my oversized

couch up the stairs, and it wouldn't fit in the elevator or around the stairs

landing. My sons tried for two days and finally got it in here but put a dent in

the stairway wall. I'll have to pay for that, but it was worth it to get my

couch in. It's only 1 1/2 years old.

I got very bad news from my hepatitis doctor. I went in to get the results of

the biopsy I had a couple of weeks ago. The condition of my liver has greatly

progressed. It's far worse than I or the doctor anticipated. It was stage one,

grade one four years ago, and so was the biopsy I had four years before that.

This time, though, it jumped all the way up to stage 3 1/2, grade two, with mild

cirhossis. I was so shocked to hear that. I felt like crying. Oh well, ya gotta

die from somethin.'

At the end of October I have to go on treatment, which is a combination of

interferon and ribavirin. They both have really bad side effects. I'm not

looking forward to it. If treatment doesn't clear the virus, and the cirhossis

gets a lot worse, I'll have to be on a waiting list for a liver transplant. How

ironic for someone who has never been a drinker.

Colleen

*************************************************

I cannot live without books.

--- Jefferson

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