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Hi K: Thanks for the good wishes. Jodi is on eight 1 mg tablets of Prograf

a day, four at 7:00 am and four at 7:00 PM. She is also on 8 mg of Medrol

which is the new dosage since the Hepatologist just decrease it when she saw

him last Tuesday. He also took her off Prilosec and I think the only other

one is Bactrim. She was just here earlier and we were going over piles of

insurance papers and bills where they had sent some to the wrong insurance

company. Lots and lots of fun.

How are you doing? Hope everyone had a good week end.

Take care and God bless, Genny

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  • 11 months later...
Guest guest

Hi ,

I was diagnosed with AIH in January. I had a bowel resection done last year

due to what they said was diverticulitis. Now I'm not so sure!!!! I had

high liver enzymes then but no one looked into it to find out why. Last

summer when I was still sick, and still had problems with my colon did they

finally do some testing. (Finally went to another DR) I also have other

autoimmune related stuff such as hashimotos. Anyway they put me on 30 mg of

prednisone and 50 imuran. I'm now on 100 imuran and still trying to taper

prednisone. I'm at 17 1/2 pred right now and everytime I get to 15 is when

my enzymes go back up. I taper 2 1/2 every two weeks. They haven't tried a

maintenance dose yet, I don't think my enzymes have stayed down long enough.

K in Tahoe

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,

My LFT's did the same thing. They finally kept me at 15 mg's for 6 months

and then slowly began to taper and so far that's worked. Now at 2.5 mg's. I

know how difficult the taper is. Hope things improve. Hang in there.

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  • 4 years later...

Why don't you see how 7 day intervals work for awhile. You may be

fine with that. The level may fluctuate somewhat but you may not

notice any symptoms from it. If there is really a problem at day 6 or

7, I might consider bumping the dose upward a little assuming

polycythemia isn't a problem. If I was going to double the number

injections I take, I would want to know that I'm going to enjoy a

significant benefit. When you first start treatment, you're highly

motivated and you'll do anything. After your treatment has stabilized

and you've been feeling normal while, you'll want a treatment that is

not any more burdensome than necessary. Two shots per week would get

old quickly for me.

Brad

k, I agree with Brad on this. I am older so I don't have the poop

to go to it too often. One shot of T 80mg ever 7 days for me is enough

and I don't get too low by the week's end either. It depends a lot on

how you feel too, each of us are different. I finally got my E2 back in

range and by the way Brad I had a bit of wood again this morning so I

think my E2 is still in range. I have found the shots work best for

me and keeps me feeling good too. Good luck,

Blessings,

Roy

.

__________________________________________________

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  • 1 year later...
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K is the chemical symbol is potassium. Leechrischids <chrischids@...> wrote: In medical terms does anyone know what the letter K stands for?e.g. No K.LuvChris

Never miss a thing. Make your homepage.

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Guest guest

Thanks Lee

> In medical terms does anyone know what the letter K

stands for?

> e.g. No K.

>

> Luv

> Chris

>

>

>

>

>

>

> ---------------------------------

> Never miss a thing. Make your homepage.

>

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Any time, Chris! Leechrischids <chrischids@...> wrote: Thanks Lee> In medical terms does anyone know what the letter K stands for?> e.g. No K.>

> Luv> Chris> > > > > > > ---------------------------------> Never miss a thing. Make your homepage.>

Never miss a thing. Make your homepage.

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Hi

K is potassium

K

In medical terms does anyone know what the letter K stands for?

e.g. No K.

Luv

Chris

------------------------------------

Messages are not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always

consult with a suitably qualified practitioner before changing

medication.

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Hi

Ring the lab and ask?

they might tell you to see your doc for an explanation, but that

could be useful too...

best wishes

Bob

>

> In medical terms does anyone know what the letter K stands for?

> e.g. No K.

>

> Luv

> Chris

>

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Hi Bob

Sused it, No K was noted with clinical observations notes rather

than lab tests. K can be either knee jerk or potassium.

Found this link to medical abbrevations on web might be useful for

everyone:

http://www.rcgp.org.uk/default.aspx?page=4134

Luv

Chris

> >

> > In medical terms does anyone know what the letter K stands for?

> > e.g. No K.

> >

> > Luv

> > Chris

> >

>

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