Saturday, April 22, 2006

Monday of Week 15



Took shot 15 Friday night. I was up and active Saturday and Sunday. Sunday, is usually the toughest day. I was tired, but functional. Today is Monday. Again, I'm tired but reasonably functional.

I'm getting some annoying minor side-effects. One corner of my mouth or the other constantly has a crack. I sometimes get those when I have a cold. Not a cold sore, but similar. Last week it was the left side, this week it's the right. I keep Car-Mex or some similar greasy product on it to keep it from drying out and breaking open. Another thing I'm dealing with seems like constant sinus problems. I seem to be having lots of allergy issues -- something that never bothered me previously. I get a lot of bloody noses, too. Never a lot, just a minor seep. I'm also getting a funny metallic taste in my mouth. It's not terrible, but it seems to distort the taste of some foods. Those are all annoyances. I'll take them compared to other issues I've had or, worse yet, heard of others having.

A friend of a friend who has been through this called me last week. "Bob" is four years out of ending the 48 week course. I commented that he must have been a pioneer. He was. When he did his round, the peg-interferon with Ribivirin wasn't approved in the US. His doctor had him ordering two different medications and he was throwing away half of each. I didn't quite understand it all, but it was an extra hoop. He had Genotype 2, but did the full 48 weeks because that was the protocol then and they hadn't really sorted out the genotypes when he started. I have Genotype 4 and they recommend 48 weeks, but the disease is new enough that they may have some new research. The doc keeps saying he'll find out for me whether there are any new changes. He made the call while I was there last time, so hopefully next month I'll have an answer. If I were to bet, I'd bet I'm in it for the full 48 weeks. Bob's call was really encouraging. The mutual friend was with him on a 100 mile bike race last month. In other words, he has his life back. If anything, he's stronger than ever, according to our mutual friend.

To Sue in Toronto, yes, the weather's nice this time of year, but when it's 115 F/46 C we'll see how envious you are. I've kept my walks up pretty well. My dog nags me, which helps.

She lives for her walk. That's when she gets to chase cats. She doesn't do anything to them, just the chase. One night the cat on the next block mosied out in front of her and paused looking back waiting for her to give chase. All in good fun.

If they don't run, she just kind of sniffs and moves on. Australian Shepherd -- great dog, but they need to be active and stimulated, hence the walks off the leash. She won't cross the street to visit another dog and won't start chasing a cat unless she gets my okay. I wish I could say it's my great training. No, she's just smart enough to know what she needs to do to get to walk without the leash.

1 comment:

Chris said...

Fi, the negative reports are more frequent because people who have their lives back often have other things to do than haunt message boards. But here's an encouraging story: http://hepcassoc.org/messbrd/index.php?showtopic=11662

Best of luck!

Chris