Guest guest Posted April 27, 2005 Report Share Posted April 27, 2005 Abijian, You seem to be extremely educated in this, is there any P.O. Box, or fax, anything that I could you 's records for you to look over? I too am afraid to give you a phone # online, please e-mail me direct at jolynn.smith@... Thanks, Jo Lynn abijann <no_reply > wrote: We had blood work drawn that said our anti-rejection drug was in the 5 or 6 range. Then, all of a sudden there was one test that said it was 2. The doctor could have put us on more medication but did not. They waited for two more tests results to come through. They showed normal range again. No test is 100% accurate. It can depend on if you ate when you were not suppose to eat, the time they took the test, who took the test, who read the test results, etc. It can depend on alot of things. According to the results of your blood work that you posted... it looks like most was in normal range. The two was just slightly low but nothing to be concerned about. However the one test did seem to be high. That was the GGTP. GGTP stands for Gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase. That is also an enzyme. It is a test to check for liver disease, bile ducts, and kidney problems. It helps the doctor to determine whether you have a liver or bile duct disorders and not a bone disease. Different labs have different levels and I have found that there is differences between what they consider normal. One said 12 to 65 was normal, another said 0 to 51 IU/L. IU/L means international units per liter so I'm thinking that this last one is correct. Higher levels can be caused by congestive heart failure, congestion of bile ducts, cirrhosis, liver blood deficiency, tumor, hepatitis, pancreatitis or renal disease. There are some things that can effect this test though...drinking a moderate amount of alcohol can increase blood levels of this enzyme for up to 60 hours. Also someone who takes phenobarbital. Also if someone did not follow a fast before having the test done. I would look at a number of your other tests and see how they differ from the one you posted here. If the GGTP seems to stay elevated in the high range...then you might ask your doctor about it. If it seems to go down closer to normal, it may be because someone goofed at the lab work. Hope this is of some help. --------------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 11, 2006 Report Share Posted April 11, 2006 You are right, it is difficult to read between the lines sometimes because we cannot see one another face to face. I am just a blunt person, just out with it, lol. i walked around on egg shells for most of my life with my mom, then my ex husband of 19 years and suffered so many types of abuse along the way. used to just keep my mouth shut and was a door mat, basically. saying that, i try hard not to dwell in the past, and am a much different person now at the age of 47. i see that i have a short fuse lately. i am just so angry and worn out having to run to so many different doc apptments, and being a needle cushion everytime i turn around. also dealing with social security is grating on my last nerve, too. i have been quite positive about the health probs in the last few years. needless to say, not feeling that way recently. Jann, i would have never guessed that you are depressed so much, from your messages. I am sorry to hear that you are experiencing so much of that. i have had a life long battle with depression, and i know how debiitating it can be. i pray you feel much lighter today. thank you for the communication, it helps alot. You asked if i would share my story, i thought i had did that a long time ago, but i will try my best to compose some of it very soon. i had the ultra sound yesterday, and have a followup appt next tuesday. upon 1st hearing that the AFP blood test was a tumor marker, i was petrified. but it seems that the causes of it being elevated can be many things. like too much medication, at least thats what the ultrsound lady said. wishing everyone here a comforting and easy day. huggs , J --------------------------------- New Yahoo! Messenger with Voice. Call regular phones from your PC and save big. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2006 Report Share Posted November 26, 2006 Its no problem, abijann, fibro is a strange illness, I can do some light cooking & getting meds set up & some very light cleaning for my sis but the next day my muscles will spasm up & then it hurts badly & I can barely move.( a day or 2 of rest will fix that) I have to watch how much activity I do everyday or I have what s called a Fibro Flare ( OUCH !! it means my pain levels go from a daily 5 to a 15), but they pass. Plus I can be moral support. If I m with Lee Mom can relax for a day, she ll know someones there, just in case. But a house that dirty is beyond what I can do even if I wasnt severly allergic to dust too. With Lee sick for months now +cats+a dusty house in the first place it makes for LOTS of dust. My bf & son do the cleaning I cant do, but my sis doesnt have that option & my guys are working enough ( they both work full time & then help me) Thank you very much for your suggestions, I will be keeping in touch. Best wishes to you, abijann <no_reply > wrote: Please, disregard my last post...I did not realize that you were disabled when I posted the last message. I thought you were just ill since you posted about wanting to go to help with your sister and clean the house. I thought it was just an allergy to the cats. If you belong to a church, sometimes people in the church will volunteer to help others in the community. That is the only thing else I could think of besides what you stated in your last post. Best wishes...please let us know how things turn out for you and your sister. love ya Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 10, 2007 Report Share Posted February 10, 2007 Abijan, I read your post, which as always is spot on. You wrote this: They have lost their dreams they had of life in the future. That's when I looked back and tried to find when my wife lost her dream. I saw it one Saturday afternoon in the backyard. I can't explain it. But I know, at that time she came to terms with her illness/reality. She knew the finality of her illness. So when you say that.... " They have lost their dreams they had of life in the future " .... is..... very meaningful. I never thought to recollect this. But looking back I think I understand more of what my wife went through. Kev abijann <no_reply > wrote: Your husband should be seeing a liver specialist, a Hepatologist. If he has been diagnosed with cirrhosis, they usually refer him to them depending on how bad the cirrhosis is. They usually remove the gallbladder, anyhow, when they remove the liver during transplant. Gall stones can move down into the ducts and block the flow of bile going from the liver to the intestines causing the bile to back up into the liver and cause damage to it. As soon as they saw this on the film, he should of been referred to the gastroenterologist for testing to be done and told that certain medication would have to be avoided since they could cause the liver more stress and damage it further. Kidney stones are common with people who have cirrhosis. Urine can turn to an orange to brown color with this disease. It is good to drink more fluids to keep the kidneys flushed out but not to overwhelm them. I find drinking something after each time I urinate, will give my kidneys enough fluid to keep them clear of build up. ................................................... Cirrhosis is the death of the cells of the liver. This cirrhosis may be only in one part of the liver, or it could be in many areas, or it also could include the whole liver. Depending on where the cirrhosis is, will depend on how fast it will progress. If it was just Hepatitis B, which is an inflammation in the liver, then they could control it with medication and possibly clear him of it and he would have a chance to heal. Once it progresses to definite cirrhosis, it becomes harder for the healing to take place. Let me explain: Cells are like little bodies inside our bodies. They have functions and needs just like are whole body does. They also reproduce themselves to take the place of those who die so the human body, as a whole, can still function. When these cells die naturally, the cells don't form scarring. The problem is that when the cells die from cirrhosis taking place it leaves scarring. Instead of the replacement cells connecting to other cells like them and the liver remaining smooth like it once was, the new cells (through reproduction) hit the scarred walls left from the other cells death and are pushed against the scars causing the new cells to push against the wall of the liver that will now appear like little clumps or nodules forming. This also causes a decrease in the function of the liver to perform what it once did. As the disease progresses, more of its function will deteriate until it goes into complete failure. Medication can control how fast this will occur. If they have caught it early enough, the liver may heal itself...the later it becomes, the less chance it will happen. ............................................. My husband had cirrhosis. He also had kidney stones. He went into liver failure. He was evaluated for transplant and placed on the list. He was within a few hours of dying when a liver became available that matched. He was transplanted and is now 3 years out from that time. " There is always hope. " This journey is not an easy one. I wish I could say that it wasn't like living with a nightmare you wish you could wake up from but you cannot. We had to find a way to come to " terms " with what was happening. We tried everything we could and even looked for a miracle cure. This all brought us closer together. There were times that I knew he was trying to push me away but I would not accept that. I was there for the long haul of it all and his words did not have any effect on me. Patient feel like they have lost everything and that others are being pulled down with them. They feel like they become a burden to those around them. They feel like a great injustice has been done and it makes them angry. They lash out at those around them even when they don't mean to harm others. They have lost their dreams they had of life in the future. The best thing I can say here is to stay as close as you can to him...he needs your support and love. Block out anything that he may say or do to push you away. Being there for them is one of the " greatest blessing " he could have right now. Hold on tight and don't let go. Don't forget your own care, you need to take care of yourself now more than ever cause he needs you there to take care of him. Take things one day or one moment at a time. Follow all his doctors instructions and see if you cannot be right with him during all his appointments. Write down what the doctor says and refer back to it when necessary. Try to set up with a lawyer for power of attorney. Advance directives are fine, but if you have power of attorney, you will avoid all the privacy laws and be able to handle everything that is needed, not just his medical and rights to speak for him, but to act on his behalf with insurance and bills, etc. It will save you big headaches later on if you do this when he is well enough to know what he is signing. Cirrhosis causes toxins that go to the brain and cause confusion as it advances...this will make him less able to sign documents knowing what it says and understanding it. Take time to go outside and look at the stars, take a little time to breathe and think of other things besides his illness. Ask for help whenever you feel like you are becoming overwhelmed by it all. Don't ever give up on hope. It will be there. See if he can be started for a evaluation and go through the testing to be placed on the list. Even if he is placed at the bottom of the list, being on their early still gives him a one up on others that are not on there. He may be removed and still have a greater chance of being put back on faster than those who haven't tried. If he is with the right doctors now that can do him the most good, like a hepatologist...he will or should have the best care possible to help him with any ailments or symptoms that occur. He will be with the right people to ask questions of and receive the best answers. I will tell you, that when you are with doctors that know the most about your disease...they will be alot more bold in telling you what your condition is and be more demanding that you follow what they say to do. They do this because you are being evaluated for transplant and they want to be sure you want to live and will do what is necessary not only before but after you receive the transplant. If you think of this as a journey and an experience you will go through together, than the outcome whether good or bad... you will know you did the best you could. If one of you decides not to take it together, then the road will be very difficult for the one who has to face it alone and " giving up " will be much easier. The road is easier to travel if someone is there to support or help you along the way. Take time to relax...talk about the disease, don't ignore it....learn as much as you can so the unknowns start to disappear and not be as frightening....don't let death and illness take away your life by thinking only about it, live each day as if it was your last..in love, prayer, and togetherness with good memories and more memories to make together. Do the best you can to eat properly and now is the time to take the very best care you can of yourself. I wish you both the best. --------------------------------- 8:00? 8:25? 8:40? Find a flick in no time with theYahoo! 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Guest guest Posted February 16, 2007 Report Share Posted February 16, 2007 Thanks for the post on E-Coli. I liked the first link and saved it. The others I have read. When I step back and look at the liver I am amazed at what it does. Hundreds of functions going on all at once. And, any one of them can break down and cause problems. FYI, I am also trying to learn about acidosis, especially in the liver and kidneys. If there was a way to prevent that.... MaC --------------------------------- TV dinner still cooling? Check out " Tonight's Picks " on Yahoo! TV. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2007 Report Share Posted February 18, 2007 Thanks, You are a wealth of knowledge! I wish I had been this interested in human physiology when I was younger. Maybe I would have become a doctor. Maybe we could discuss pain management? When do doctors stop treating the disease and start focusing on pain management? When is it time to tell the patient there is no hope? Or better yet, how do you tell them? MaC abijann <no_reply > wrote: Cirrhosis and gall bladder pain is " usually " located in the front near the rib cage on the patient right side. Back pain could come from the Ascites and the pooling of the fluid in front of the body causing pain in the back. Imagine carrying liters upon liters of liquid in front, it would pull on the skeletal muscles and frame. If pregnant women have back pain, I'm sure anyone with a large amount of ascites could also have it. Back pain can also come from a kidney stone or problems with your kidneys. Kidney stones are known to be so painful that women have said to me that they would rather have all three children again than one of them. (I can attest to that) I do not know how painful pancreatitis is, but pancreatic cancer is considered tops in the pain field. Please remember that pain can be in one area and a problem in a totally different area. This is known as referred pain. Take for example when someone has a heart attack. The pain isn't aways located over the heart area, it is felt in the back, jaw, and arm area. So, this makes me believe that people with cirrhosis, could very well have back pain also. Another example is appendicitis pain...it is felt sometimes in the umbilical area. There are others also. Chiropractor seem to know alot more about this since they try to straighten the spinal column when nerves are being pressed on. These are just a few things to think about. Maybe others here can fill us in on some of the pain they have had and it's location. --------------------------------- Sucker-punch spam with award-winning protection. Try the free Yahoo! Mail Beta. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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