anxieties

Options

Does anyone out there take anything for anxiety to help get though this.

 triple neg, no nodes 

Comments

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2009

    Oh yeah.  Its not unusal at all to ask the doctor for something to help if you need it.

  • brendafromflorida
    brendafromflorida Member Posts: 90
    edited January 2009

    Absolutely.   Take whatever you can get.   If you can get through treatment without it, you are in a small minority in my opinion. 

    Good luck.   There are so many wonderful people on this site with a lot of helpful information.    

  • jancie
    jancie Member Posts: 2,631
    edited January 2009

    I got a prescription for Valium 10mg - total amount with refills is 180 Valium.

    Believe me, I take them as needed because I am going through major anxiety issues right now. 

    I also got a prescription for Ambien to help me sleep at night.

    Don't feel that you are being weak for having to take drugs to get you through this.  Drugs are there for a reason - use them if it helps. 

  • rumoret
    rumoret Member Posts: 685
    edited January 2009

    I take Ativan........began after 4th and final chemo treatment which put me in the hospital. So yeah........Ativan is still my friend.......and I make no apologies for it.Kiss

    Hugs,

    Terry 

  • Estepp
    Estepp Member Posts: 6,416
    edited January 2009

    I got 5 mg of Valium for my expansion. 5mg does nothing for me. I did not know I could take 10mg. I bet this would work better. hmmm I am glad you mentioned it jancie. I might try taking two of my 5mg  before I go to PS.

    Also, I have a script for ativan also. Before all this BC crap, I had never in my life taken a pill. I am not using the ativan now, but I bet my anxiety will return after I am done with treatment. I will take it then if needed. Do  not feel bad if your need help getting through all this. It is so hard for all of us!

    Laura

  • wishiwere
    wishiwere Member Posts: 3,793
    edited January 2009

    Not one pill I was on before all this:)  Then IT hit. I fought it and made it through, till we were broken into. Went to the doc b/c the heart palps were out of control as a result of the B&E, and broke down in sobs for the first time.  this was 10 months out of chemo, but I just lost it.  Couldn't control my tachys anymore and not sleeping b/c of thigh/hip pain due to arimidex, just added insult to injury.  As a result, the doc said it was about time i let it go!  Made a comment if it all didn't bother me at some point he'd have been surprised.  So, with 3 scripts in hand I left his office.  One for a muscle relaxer for the pain (worked well till this last week), one for the tachy control-vistaril (anxiety)up to 3X a day, and another xanax for breakthrough anxiety.  As yet, I've not had to use the xanax, but surely do the first one... the vistaril I take once, but occasionally twice and it's working very well.  My heart rate was running 110-130 at rest most of the day/night.

    Try to get something to get through this. I'm hoping in another 3 months to be off all but the arimidex and the thyroid meds (dx hypothy same times as B/C)

  • leaf
    leaf Member Posts: 8,188
    edited January 2009

    Hi, wishiwere!  I have anxiety too (PTSD).

    If Vistaril doesn't work well for you to control the tachy, there are other medications in other families that can also be used for tachycardia.

    Another option, if meds don't work, is biofeedback.  Its more expensive (at least if you pay out of pocket.)  I went to a cognitive psychologist.  I'm not saying it works 100% of the time, nor am I very good about it, but for me it is a useful tool.

    I thought it would never work at all for me because I'm terrible at meditation.

    I'm glad there are options out there - we are all different.

  • LauraCA
    LauraCA Member Posts: 20
    edited January 2009

    I take antidepressants and the tiniest dose available of Ativan to help me stay asleep at night.  I am two years out of finishing treatment, but I need more sleep than I ever did and Ativan/Trazadone help me achieve that. The hot flashes thanks to chemopause were waking me up a lot, as well as the worried thoughts that go with the whole diagnosis/treatment/will it recur/how will I ever pay these bills thing. 

    I am also a fan of yoga and meditation, they are definitely worth a try!

  • mzmiller99
    mzmiller99 Member Posts: 894
    edited January 2009

    Leaf - Funny you should mention the biofeedback...my daughter just talked me into seeing a therapist who specializes in cancer patients.  Guess I need a bit of assistance with anger issues and stress management, etc. 

    I told him I have the attention span of a flea and have never had much luck w/ meditation.

      My daughter wants me to try biofeedback.  Hmmm.  Is it like Lamaze?  Do I breathe my way through the stress and anger?  And does it make it all go away?

  • scarp
    scarp Member Posts: 104
    edited January 2009

    Xanax is my best friend at 2 a.m.  Take a 1/2 of a 5mg pill.  Works like a charm every time!

  • Alicia70598
    Alicia70598 Member Posts: 191
    edited January 2009

    I take Lexapro, which also helps with anxiety. When I got my first few treatments of AC, the red color of the adriamycin - and its caustic quality - freaked me out a bit, so the nurse gave me some Ativan. It made the first few treatments less scary. Then I didn't need it.  

  • stacey2930
    stacey2930 Member Posts: 210
    edited January 2009

    xanax has been a life saver for me. I develped panic attacks when I was diagnosed 3 years ago. I'm better but still need a little xanax when I have to go see my oncologist!

  • leaf
    leaf Member Posts: 8,188
    edited January 2009

    Hi Susan!  I've never had Lamaze, so I don't know what that is like.  (I take sertraline for my PTSD.)

    In my biofeedback training, he used two types : electrodes, and finger warming.

    In the electrode training, he attached 2 electrodes to my body, where ever I chose.  (I picked my neck and my hands.)  The electrodes do not produce electricity, they merely detect muscle tension.  (I'm terrible at physics so I'm not sure how but maybe its impedence or something.)  You lie down on a comfortable chair, and get into the most comfortable position you can, and try to relax. The electrodes are connected to a laptop, which turns the impulses into sound.  You have a different sound for each electrode (one was horns and the other bells.)  You are trying to silence the noise.  

    The other way was of finger temperature.  He put a sensor on my finger (like the ones they use after surgery to follow the oxygenation of your blood).  It measured the temperature very sensitively.  The nervous system in your hand, like many other places in your body, can contract the blood vessels, making your fingers cold.  However, unlike in other places of your body, your fingers don't have the nervous system that will let your blood vessels expand.  So when you make the temperature in your fingers rise, you are shutting off your sympathetic (fight-or-flight) response.  He didn't tell you how to make the temperature go up.

    He also gave me a series of CDs to listen to at night to learn how to relax. Breathing is a big factor, but not the only one.

    I started out with a value of 15-17 on the 'bells and whistles' routine, but got it down to 2-4  (normal) in about 4 months.  I saw him for about 15 sessions.  He says most people get it by 8-12 sessions.

    I found it most helpful for insomnia.  For me, it worked better than earlier tries (after different surgeries) with pain meds, or Valium 5mg, or Benadryl.  You have to do it a lot to get better at doing it, like most things in life. Smile

  • MicheleS
    MicheleS Member Posts: 937
    edited January 2009

    ddb:

    I tend to be very "anti-meds" for myself (for a number of personal reasons... mainly family members with alcoholism).  HOWEVER, this is different.  This BC diagnosis is a big deal and isn't like the *usual* streses of everyday life.  So... I will occasionally take 1/2 (or even 1) 0.5mg xanax when the bad thoughts start (esp in the middle of the night).

    I'm thinking of asking for anti-depressants because I feel so hopeless sometimes.  And, with most anti-depressants, the risk for addiction is not an issue.

    Michele

    PS.  For me, the "second-hit" of being triple neg was esp hard to take. I see that you are in the same boat so I understand what you are feeling (or at least can relate).  {{hugs}}

Categories