MIDDLE-AGED WOMEN 40-60ish

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  • heartnsoul76
    heartnsoul76 Member Posts: 1,648
    edited July 2011

    Happy Birthday Eph and reesie! How fun it must be to have a birthday around and on the 4th! Hope you haven't worn out VM...

    Just waiting for the fireworks show here - we had a hard rain a few hours ago and thankfully, it cooled it down, so it should be nice weather for the show.

  • marlegal
    marlegal Member Posts: 2,264
    edited July 2011

    Sue, I had all my treatment at Jefferson ... I work at 7th & Walnut so it made it easy to walk back and forth, and still do for follow-up stuff.  I had my first mammo 6 mos after surgery so not very long after rads stopped. I remember being very afraid it would hurt like hell 'cause that breast was still sore/hard from rads. It wasn't bad though.

  • marlegal
    marlegal Member Posts: 2,264
    edited July 2011

    Sue, I had all my treatment at Jefferson ... I work at 7th & Walnut so it made it easy to walk back and forth, and still do for follow-up stuff.  I had my first mammo 6 mos after surgery so not very long after rads stopped. I remember being very afraid it would hurt like hell 'cause that breast was still sore/hard from rads. It wasn't bad though.

    Annette, thanks for hte nice words, but it isn't my birthday!

    Eli, wish my "rock boob" (love that name!) went away ... one area actually got worse and worse for years, stabilized about year 5 actually. That's why they send me for the BSGI every year (breast specific gamma imaging) to make sure nothing is hiding behind that area.

    Eph, I hope you had and are having a wonderful, wonderful birthday :)

  • marlegal
    marlegal Member Posts: 2,264
    edited July 2011

    Reesie, sorry I missed your bday yesterday - sure started out on the right foot!  What was the shot of anyway?  And did you drink it with him?  Don't you just love moments like that?

    Here's what I should have posted yesterday ...

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011

    Had a backyard BBQ.  How many grilled hot dogs today?   How many find this pic disturbing?

                                         

                                         

    Eph, you knew I would wait until evening and get you a sparkler cake.  Probably every person born on the 4th gets a sparkler cake, and maybe it gets old, but the rest of us who get plain old candles year after year think they look awesome!

                                  

  • jo1955
    jo1955 Member Posts: 8,543
    edited July 2011

    Eli - I have seen that pic before of the "hot dog".  I think it is pretty cute.

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011

                     

                                 PRETTY THINGS THAT GO BOOM IN THE NIGHT

  • jo1955
    jo1955 Member Posts: 8,543
    edited July 2011

                                             

                            SOME MORE PRETTY THINGS THAT LIGHT UP THE NIGHT SKY. 

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011
    jo, yeah, that mini-dachshund is cute, but that bun has been handled way too much...yuck!
  • jo1955
    jo1955 Member Posts: 8,543
    edited July 2011
    Yeah!  It looks kinda bad - maybe that is from passing the dog around too much.
  • marlegal
    marlegal Member Posts: 2,264
    edited July 2011

    Eli, love the page topper...set as my background - figure it's good for the month :)

  • reesie
    reesie Member Posts: 2,078
    edited July 2011

    Thanks Marlegal. I have no idea what the shot was. I wasn't drinking ( I take my poison intravenously these days and only on Tuesdays). Gave it to the new 21 yr old. I don't think she cared what it was at that point.



    Best part was my DS met us at my brothers so I had him tell the story. It was great seeing him experience the horror again lol.

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011

    Thanks, mar!  I saw a few huge displays when I was growing up, kind of like that one, because I lived in a city where the ariel ones were illegal (for individuals.)  Now I live in a place where anything goes (like on a scale just under Bagdad) and for about 10 years we made the biggest home display on our street.  Don't ask how much $$$ would go up in smoke...a lot!  My husband was on this third second childhood at the time.

    Took a walk earlier and spotted three families that will be nukin' the neighborhood tonight.  In fact, I hear a few scuds flying past the house now, and this year all I have to do is pop open a lawn chair and a "beverage," sit back and enjoy!

  • sheila888
    sheila888 Member Posts: 25,634
    edited July 2011
  • jo1955
    jo1955 Member Posts: 8,543
    edited July 2011

    Sheila - That is really pretty.

  • Sherryc
    Sherryc Member Posts: 5,938
    edited July 2011

    Reesie and Eph happy Birthday!!!!!

  • lynniea
    lynniea Member Posts: 611
    edited July 2011

    Hi Ladies Good Morning remember me I have many test this week and want everything to turn out great.  I see my surgeon next week for the next plan.

  • NativeMainer
    NativeMainer Member Posts: 10,462
    edited July 2011

    lylnniea--praying for your tests an appointment.  Praying you'll find the perfect plan for you quickly. 

  • blondiex46
    blondiex46 Member Posts: 5,712
    edited July 2011

    Happy birthday to the birthday girls!!!

    Lylnniea good luck with your tests!!

  • jenn3
    jenn3 Member Posts: 3,316
    edited July 2011

    BarbaraA& Jo - Thank you for the wonderful cyber cakes, they were beautiful.

    Elimar-  Loved the pineapple and ginger cupcakes for my upset belly - thank you!

    Thank you to everyone for my birthday wishes.

    Reesie/Eph - HAPPY (BELATED) BIRTHDAY!!!!!

    Valjean - I love what she says at the end of the show In Plain Sight - very moving, thanks for sharing.

    lynnie - fingers, toes, arms and legs are crossed in addition to many prayers for your upcoming tests.......((hugs))

    Tomorrow is the blood drive that my friend put together for me.  She surprised me with it and it looks like we're going to have a great showing.  It not only helps replace the blood I've used and will more than likely need again, it helps so many others in need of blood.  She's been getting her place of business ready for guests and I think will even have food and drinks inside (away from the blood donor bus).  I think we'll end up having a party / blood drive.......

    I still can't figure out the picture.  Do we know what it is yet?

  • lynniea
    lynniea Member Posts: 611
    edited July 2011
  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011

    My SAM-e experiment is over.  Even tho' my stomach got used to it (once I started taking it with food) it did nothing for my FM pain, made no difference in my hot flashes either.  It might have elevated my mood a tiny bit.  I do know coming off of it gave me a migraine and a crying fit in a supermarket.  That's always fun.

    Anyway, I'll try some Effexor and report any effect that has on my hot flashes.  Hopefully it will do the trick on my FM pain.

    BTW, I read that there is "moderate" interaction between amitriptyline (Elavil) and Tamox.  Not sure if it makes the Tamox. less effective or what?  I know a couple of you are taking that & if you are interested in finding out for yourself, check out my fave source:

    Drugs.com

  • jo1955
    jo1955 Member Posts: 8,543
    edited July 2011

    elimar - That is my favorite site to check drug interactions.  My MO is aware that I am on amitriptyline and does not have a problem with it.  He feels it is a good medication for me to be on for my nerve damage.  I feel I have to trust him - he has not steered me wrong so far.

    Also, I asked specifically about drug interactions with Tamox BEFORE I started it.  I addressed my concern with the pain specialist and he also said there isn't a problem.  

    Thanks for your concern - we have to look out for each other. 

  • Sherryc
    Sherryc Member Posts: 5,938
    edited July 2011

    elimar I asked my MO about the Elavil as well and he is Ok with me taking it.  I am also on Celebrex and drugs.com says it intereacts but when I asked the MO he said it is OK.  He has a couple of databases that he uses and that is what they check all my intereactions on.  Never have asked what the names of their databases are.  If I ever remember I may just ask what they use.

  • barbe1958
    barbe1958 Member Posts: 19,757
    edited July 2011

    GREAT website!! BUT, every drug I entered had a warning!!!! I take about 10 prescriptions a day....sigh. Some of them twice a day! A total of 17 pills a day. Hard to keep track off even with my spage age Binford 3000 plastic pill day divider thingy.

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011

    I first heard the term "balancing act" in an ICU, where they generally flood all kinds of life-saving drugs into patients, drugs with duelling side effects, yet somehow making it work.  Of course, the monitoring there is constant 24/7 hooked up to machines.  So I guess the key to taking many meds is a) how they make you feel, in combination; and b) regular monitoring by a doctor.

    jo, it seems like most docs are not too bothered when the interaction is only "moderate."

    Sherryc, Celebrex is listed as having "major" interaction.  That was the same as for the Cymbalta I was taking last year and it worried me enough to get off the Cymbalta.  However, in the next post I am going to link to an article that basically says the jury is still out on the efficacy of Tamox. with the anti-depressant drugs.

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011

    This article is from the Susan Love website, based on recent discussions at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium in Dec. 2010.  It not only has some commentary about co-administration of Tamox. with an anti-depressant that depends on the CYP 2D6 enzyme to metabolize, but also has the current state of findings on the CYP 2D6 testing (the Tamox. utilization test) and what it means as far as recurrence odds.  Have a read:

    http://www.dslrf.org/breastcancer/content.asp?CATID=0&L2=4&L3=5&L4=0&PID=&sid=130&cid=416

    Whenever I read inconclusive findings/conflicting information, I feel like I just renewed my membership in The Guinea Pig Club, don't you?

  • jo1955
    jo1955 Member Posts: 8,543
    edited July 2011
    elimar - I clicked on the link but did not see an article pop up.  Is there someplace else I have to go to once I am in the site?
  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011
    Crap. I closed the article page.  Let me see if I can find it again and I'll just post the whole thing.  It's not that long.
  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2011

    Here is the entire article:

    Paxil and Tamoxifen: A Bad Mix?
    January 9, 2011


    All too many women on tamoxifen are familiar with hot flashes—they are the most common side effect associated with this type of hormonal therapy.

    Hope for treating these hot flashes appeared to be at hand when studies found that antidepressants, like paroxetine (brand name Paxil), reduced hot flashes by about 60 percent in women on tamoxifen (as well as in women going through menopause naturally or due to chemotherapy). But then, in December 2003, researchers reported in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute that the antidepressant Paxil might interfere with how the body metabolizes tamoxifen, reducing its effectiveness.

    After it is taken, tamoxifen is converted into 4-hydroxy-tamoxifen by an enzyme called CYP2D6. (Enzymes are proteins that speed up chemical reactions in the body.) A series of studies suggested that certain antidepressants could inhibit this enzyme. The problem appeared to be due to a metabolite, that the researchers named endoxifen, which decreased when both Paxil and tamoxifen were taken. This decrease in endoxifen also appeared to relate to whether the women taking the medications had a certain CYP2D6 gene variation.

    Because not all antidepressants affect the CYP2D6 enzyme in the same way, the findings from this research led doctors to begin suggesting to patients on tamoxifen to take Effexor instead of Paxil for hot flashes. Meanwhile, women who were on Paxil for depression were encouraged to talk to their psychiatrist about the possibility of switching to Effexor or another antidepressant that might not interfere as much or at all with tamoxifen.

    This is why over the past seven years many women on tamoxifen have switched from Paxil to another antidepressant and why women have been encouraged to take Effexor and not Paxil to treat tamoxifen-related hot flashes.

    Then at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium in December 2010, new questions were raised about whether this problem was indeed occurring.

    At the Symposium, researchers presented data from two studies on the CYP2D6 enzyme that brought some of their beliefs about the enzyme, tamoxifen and Paxil into question. These studies used data from two large clinical trials that had compared the effectiveness and safety of tamoxifen and an aromatase inhibitor. (Aromatase inhibitors are metabolized differently than tamoxifen, and are not affected by CYP2D6). These findings showed that women who had mutations in the genes that control the enzymes that metabolize tamoxifen were NOT more likely to have a recurrence, and that the scoring system that differentiates women into poor, intermediate, and extensive metabolizers did NOT predict recurrence. The studies also showed that women on tamoxifen who used antidepressants that were thought to inhibit CYP2D6 were NOT more likely to have a recurrence.

    So, where does this leave us? Clearly, more studies need to be done. An overview of the data presented at the Symposium noted that, since 2003, 178 articles have been published on tamoxifen resistance. Fourteen of these studies showed that CYPD2D6 was associated with breast cancer recurrence in women on tamoxifen, and 15 found that it was not. This suggests that, right now, there appears to be little reason to have CYP2D6 testing, since it is now not clear what the findings of this test really mean. It also means that you should not be concerned if you were on Paxil while you were on tamoxifen.

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