Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Unicorns

 

Unicorns are said to be "uncatchable" but nothing is impossible.  I feel that way about adrenal insufficiency sometimes.  After fifteen plus years of adrenal insufficiency, I still have to adjust and readjust hydrocortisone.Sometimes adrenal insufficiency seems impossible.  Sometimes, I feel like I've caught it by the tail.


For  couple of years, my blood pressure has been high.  Every time I'd go ANY doctor or medical professional (orthopedic guy, PAs, DO, dermatologist, ob/gyn), I'd bring up the high bp to no avail.  No one cared.  I told them that high BP was not normal for me, not normal for someone with adrenal insufficiency and not normal for someone who gets as much exercise I do.  I told them all that something was wrong.  I eliminated all supplements for a while, adjusted my thyroid meds, exercised more and less, adjusted florinef and sodium.  All the while, I was losing my hair in handfuls.  I didn't put the high BP and hair loss together.  AK did that for me. None of the things I tried for the hair loss and BP worked.

The only thing left to change was HC.  Those of you who know me know that I think we should err on the side of more HC so we don't die or feel like crap unnecessarily.  I SLOWLY titrated my daily base dose down by 2.5 mg.  I held the 2.5 mg decrease for TWO WEEKS before I decreased by 2.5 mg again. 

How could I not know that my HC was too high?  I was swollen, had headaches, impaired sleep, hair falling out but I wasn't gaining weight.  Everyone blames weight gain on too much HC.  I was waiting to gain weight before I could believe that my HC was too high.  We are all so different.  I don't gain weight from too much HC.  I didn't have insomnia.  I just wasn't sleeping great.  I thought you had to have "insomnia" and be awake all night long.  Sigh, you'd think I'd know better by now.


On less HC, my BP came wayyyyyy down and my heart rate went wayyyyyyy up.  I started getting really tired at about two pm.  For me, this is a sign that my base dose of HC is too low.  As per a suggestion by AK, I upped by about 5 mg/day.


 For the moment, I've caught the unicorn by the tail!







Monday, March 12, 2018

Live your life, learn your lessons



This isn't really about adrenal insufficiency.  I guess indirectly it is.

I came home from Arrowhead and got a bad case of bronchitis.  I'm relatively sure it was brought on by the cold temps, big effort and an hydrocortisone taper (bad timing on my part).  I was unable to teach my classes or do much of anything for a couple of weeks except run a mile, cough and sleep.

When I got back to teaching while still coughing one of my students said, "Did you learn your lesson?  You might not want to do things like that."  I smiled and nodded.

My real answer is that, yes, I learned my lesson.  My lesson was that putting myself out there was worth being sick or risking injury.  She doesn't know about the adrenal insufficiency and how being out in Northern Minnesota entailed more potential dangers to my health than she could imagine.  For all the times I've taken risks while having AI, I've suffered very few times as a result.

Every time I've had a negative outcome by doing something dumb or beyond my capabilities, I've learned far more than when I sat home on the couch watching TV.  I also came out of the experience with great stories.  Ask Paul about the time we bikepacked through the LaSals in snow without enough food.  What did I learn?  Check the weather conditions.  Bring enough food.  Listen to old ranchers when they impart wisdom.  Don't cry like a baby when someone rescues you.  Strangers are generally far kinder than we give them credit for.  Take more hydrocortisone than you think you need.

We all have different definitions of "putting ourselves out there".  That's OK.  Despite adrenal insufficiency, get out of your comfort zone.  Often the risks don't materialize and the worry prepares us to avoid the potential pitfalls.  Sometimes, the worry and anxiety wasn't even worth the energy.

Make sure you're prepared by having your injection kit with you.  Know how to use it.  Be prepared for your circumstances.

Live your life, learn your lessons!