Bottle 'o Tamoxifen

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  • Pamela23
    Pamela23 Member Posts: 510
    edited January 2018

    I appreciate having all of you on here. As a newbie (I've been on this forum since May when I was prescribed but will start at the end of the month), I WANT to hear success stories. But I also appreciate the discussions of those who struggle and what they have found to help them through their journey. There are so many negatives that get reported, it's nice to find a spot where those ahead of us are saying they're doing OK, that it IS possible to not be miserable for the next 10 years. It gives me hope. I'm on too many Facebook Pages full of negativity regarding tamoxifen. I'm looking for some silver linings and have found some for now.

  • Scrafgal
    Scrafgal Member Posts: 631
    edited January 2018

    Yes, Runor, Peace! Sounds like a deal!

    Michelle, I know that neighborhood well.  I used to go through there to dream of the day when I would be successful and have a nice house in a nice neighborhood!  I spent my high school days around 61st and Wolcott (just east of Damon)--the heart of the 'hood--Englewood, to be exact!  So, I guess by the time that breast cancer hit me I was already a survivor of sorts:) I do still have plenty of family in Chicago and visit often.  My sister lives on North Marine Drive (around 4200 North).  That's on a different planet from Englewood, and I tease her about "moving on up" all of time!

    Pamela, thanks for joining the conversation.  If you've been here since May, then you've heard a lot of our discussions already.  I don't think I joined this thread until much later.  Back in May, I was still doing chemo and had my Taxol training wheels on---hadn't even started the hell of FAC by then!  

    Hope works for me, but it is not without full knowledge of what it means to suffer.  I just try very hard to control my thoughts, because we all know how our thoughts can spiral downward into dark places if we allow it to happen. I've been afraid of the dark ever since I was a child. So, I just can't live there!

    Best to you, Pamela, as you hop on board the T-train! I stared at the bottle for a little while after I picked up the prescription and then, one day, just started!



  • Blownaway
    Blownaway Member Posts: 760
    edited January 2018

    I'm staying right here even though I quit Tamo after only 3 years. Last pill was on Thanksgiving. Bone pain has already subsided. Still having hot flashes but had those long before b/c. I'll keep you all informed..

  • willa216
    willa216 Member Posts: 165
    edited January 2018

    Hello and Happy New Year to All -

    I haven't been here in quite some time. I have a quick question about tamoxifen and hair.

    I've been on it for about a year with limited side effects - the usual hot flashes, joint pain and some leg swelling. Nothing horrendous and all certainly manageable given the alternative.

    In the last couple of months I'm noticing a lot of hair loss at my temples. Not cool. Like the beginning of a receding hairline. Has anyone else had this experience? I did chemo and used cold caps - I finished about a year ago. I kept about 50% of my hair with the loss being mostly around my hairline. I thought it was growing back normally and was pretty pleased, until recently. My hair has come back really thick. Of course I've read that hair thinning is a side effect of tamoxifen but I don't see anything much about receding hairlines, per se. This is not going to work :) My imagination is getting the best of me over what may happen during the course of another 9-10 years. Oh my.

    Thanks - so much love to all. May 2018 bring us all peace, joy and health.


  • Cpeachymom
    Cpeachymom Member Posts: 518
    edited January 2018

    Willa- I was just commenting to my husband last night how I think it’s having the Opposite effect for me. I have hair growing on my forehead! Not to mention sideburns starting...plucking has become a regular pastime. Silver lining is I suddenly have lashes like never before.It’s only been 4 months, so I too am wondering what the next 5 Years will do, I may end up a wolf woman!

  • Rhyfelwr
    Rhyfelwr Member Posts: 88
    edited January 2018

    Well, time to hop into this thread, I guess. I have an appt with my MO in a couple of weeks, and she says T is the next step on my journey. I am only beginning to process what that means. The eyelashes are growing back in, and the radiation burns are healing. Each new step seems to be loaded with a basket of new anxieties. I don't really even know what to be afraid of yet.

    Well, one thing -- my MO switched me from Paxil to Effexor about 6 weeks ago. I am still trying to figure out how I feel about that. I just haven't felt quite right ever since, which is frustrating. About the time everyone is expecting me to feel better, I am simply not. My PCP and I are starting to tinker with dosages to see if that could make a difference. So that is my current struggle. And then, in a couple weeks, we'll be adding something new to the little chemistry set in my bathroom drawer. Yeah, the one where I used to keep my hairbrushes and clips and pretties....

  • Trvler
    Trvler Member Posts: 3,159
    edited January 2018

    Please, NO ONE leave!! This is a great discussion.

    Can someone remind me what the benefits of a split dose are again?

  • TaRenee
    TaRenee Member Posts: 464
    edited January 2018

    Rhyfelwr, my MO just put me on Effexor last week. I know it takes time to notice a difference, but I haven’t noticed anything. And I still can’t sleep. Ugh.

  • Trvler
    Trvler Member Posts: 3,159
    edited January 2018

    TaRenee: PLEASE keep us posted.

  • Blownaway
    Blownaway Member Posts: 760
    edited January 2018

    I tried a split dose for a while and didn't notice any difference in the s/e's from just 20 mg all at once. I tried morning, night, midday. My bone pain never let up. I tried Effexor, Gabapebtin, Cymbalta. Nothing stopped the headaches (which could have been caused by gab) bone pain down neck, spine, arms, legs until very recently.

    Hotflashes, joint pain, lack of libido, dry skin and thin hair continues. I fear that both elbows and right shoulder may be permanently damaged. I keep having steroid injections in them. Although, I'm taking a rest from Tamo right now, I am due ro see a new onco in March (insurance change) and hope I can try a different h/t drug that I can tolerate better. I'm the gal who never finished all the prescribed chemo or herceptin due to my body giving up on both. Guess I'm just a weak link.

  • Michelle_in_cornland
    Michelle_in_cornland Member Posts: 1,689
    edited January 2018

    Split dosing, for me, makes the side effects more tolerable. Even if I just take them 5 hours apart, towards evening, no daytime issues. I have to walk, or I will get joint and bone pain. Also, I take Vitamin D, 50,000 per week, and if I get too much bone/joint pain, I take a magnesia tablet and put a bar of soap on my leg. Right now, wink, wink, I am wearing Peter Thomas Roth's face soap on the back of my right lower leg. Thoughts are that the magnesium in soap is absorbed through the skin, like taking an epson salts bath. If you travel, and can get freebie tiny soaps, they come in handy later.

    I just hopped on to Amazon, and found/ordered Grandpa's Epsom Salt Soap. I will cut it up, and see how much relief I get. I will keep everyone posted.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2018

    Well, I've just started sleeping with soap, but it's a new lavender soap that I keep nearby for its scent. And it's pretty.

    I've been taking Tamoxifen for over a year and have no side effects that I can attribute to it.

    I've always had insomnia and somewhat dry skin. My hair isn't as thick as it was before chemo, so I'm not certain Tamoxifen has affected my hair. I had a bit of joint pain a month after I started Tamoxifen, but that lasted less than a month. I have no joint pain and never had bone pain. Neuropathy from chemo only lasted a few weeks.

    After years of taking various pain meds, I'm happy to now only take Tamoxifen (20 mg) and supplements. After a mastectomy and chemo, Tamoxifen has been a cakewalk. I wish it could be as easy for everyone.

  • Ghionik
    Ghionik Member Posts: 101
    edited January 2018

    I’m joining this page since I’ll be starting this dreaded medicine in a few days. Worried about side effects already, but you all seem to have that info covered on here.

  • Trvler
    Trvler Member Posts: 3,159
    edited January 2018

    Ghionik: Try not to worry yet. Some people have absolutely zero side effects.

  • Michelle_in_cornland
    Michelle_in_cornland Member Posts: 1,689
    edited January 2018

    Please don't think of it as dread, it is different for everyone. There are alot of complainers, but those that are doing well, are busy living their lives. I am doing terrific and I have one year down...yipppeeee.

  • runor
    runor Member Posts: 1,798
    edited January 2018

    COMPLAINERS !?!?! Holy shit! Re-think the name calling! Posting here to say you have a problem sure as hell does not make you a complainer! No one should EVER feel that they can't speak their piece because someone else is going to run in, point a finger and chant complainer!, complainer! That ranks right up there with going to your boss to say you have a problem at work and he asks you if you are having your period and dismisses you as hysterical and female.

    I do believe the title of this thread is Bottle O' Tamoxifen, not, We Worship At The Altar Of Tamoxifen.

    All voices are equal and allowed or NONE are. Leave the labelling, tagging, name calling and passive aggressive coercion at home. People's experience with this drug is all over the map and having a bad time with it DOES NOT MAKE ANYONE A COMPLAINER!

  • lala1
    lala1 Member Posts: 1,147
    edited January 2018

    I confess. I complain all the time. Especially about these stupid Tamoxifen SEs. But that's ok. I don't take offense if someone calls me a complainer. I don't think it was meant in a condescending way. Sometimes a word just is taken differently by different people. I've been on Tamoxifen for almost 5 years and have literally 20 days left. I'm just happy there are people on here that are doing well and letting others know that this experience is doable. It has been for me. And personally, complaining about the stupid crazy crap we go through in our treatment of BC has been the just about the ONLY fun part!! The only thing I'll miss about Tamoxifen is being able to blame it for my CRS (Can't Remember S**T!)

  • runor
    runor Member Posts: 1,798
    edited January 2018

    You SHOULD take offense if someone calls you a complainer! Who here has any right, any authority, any power to name, categorize, minimize or belittle your experience? No one! Women don't come to this site for a sugar coated, sparkly, FAKE story. They come for YOUR story. And mine. And Michelle's-in Cornland. No one's voice, no one's story has ANY more validity than anyone else's!

    Michelle is absolutely correct when she says some women sail right through tamoxifen without a second thought.

    You are correct when you say you did pretty well and will have to find something else to blame forgetfulness on.

    And I am correct when I say I am growing an impressive beard, have a weird bald spot on the front of my head and produce enough heat, in waves, day and night, to power a greenhouse.

    Not a single one of us is a 'complainer' and that word has no room at a table where all are invited and welcomed, equally, to speak their truth.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2018

    Eeesh - I read this thread because I had been told that Tamoxifen might be a next choice though I have been on Aromasin for two weeks now instead. Reading my fav topics this evening and here this is. I cannot ignore this one. Man oh man.

    The descriptive word 'complainers' is offensive to me, Michelle in Illinois. Perhaps that was a quick oversight?

    This statement would be offensive if written on any thread about any treatment choice. Yes, this is name calling..... and leaves a very bad vibe.

    Any person who is having some comfort issues of whatever treatment they are on, fear of using treatment issues, even acceptance issues,with their treatment choice needs to always be welcomed to express those concerns and problems. Without !!! being !!! considered !!! a !!! complainer !!!

    And to say the non-complainers are doing fine and out living their lives is questionable. What about those on these threads helping others for hours a day whether they are doing well or pulled through treatment and stuck around to support us. What about those doing research for hours and days. Those who are too sick to eat or walk and who come to the threads to cry and laugh on these threads because this is a sisterhood / brotherhood where their tears and anguish and even appreciation of the 'sick cancer jokes' can be appreciated and where they can be loved regardless of what they bring to the table on any given day.

    I try to never look back and argue stuff like this, and I like to let it go once saying what I feel I just have to say. With respect to all, I offer this as my opinion.

    Dropping microphone. Bam.

  • Scrafgal
    Scrafgal Member Posts: 631
    edited January 2018

    Ladies

    I am still around. I've been battling the flu this week and just didn't feel up to posting gmtoday...until now... Runor and Bluebird, when I read Michelle's post I knew where this conversation was headed...and to be fair, I felt that the term "complainer" marginalizes the legitimacy of real side effects reported by many women here.

    Bottom line: to our newcomers, there's no need to worry in advance. I did that, and it turns out that I am doing well on Tamoxifen. You just never know. So enjoy today and deal with tomorrow when it arrives!


  • shelabela
    shelabela Member Posts: 584
    edited January 2018

    ghionik,

    Welcome. I've been on tamoxifen for 3 months and have a few SE but they are manageable. 1 thing to remember every body reacts different. And to keep a long of when you take the pill and how you feel. I've found i have to take it I the AM.

    Hang in there

  • Ghionik
    Ghionik Member Posts: 101
    edited January 2018

    Thank you ladies! This will be mynew home on this site. ❤️

    As far as the word “complaining” doesn’t scare me one bit. I’m clearly good at it. Lol

    Thanks for the welcome! Xo

  • EastcoastTS
    EastcoastTS Member Posts: 864
    edited January 2018

    I've been on Tamox since May with minor drop-off for Exchange surgery. Minor side effects. Hope it's working!

    ;)

  • Chiarara
    Chiarara Member Posts: 44
    edited January 2018

    Am up to my 2nd week of Tamoxifen- and insomnia has kicked in

    Only other side effect is positive- less oily skin- but the insomnia is a doozy, up from 3am this morning. Please don't ask me to make any complicated decisions... Where I live it's currently summer, so I am going to blame any sweating on the weather.

  • Trvler
    Trvler Member Posts: 3,159
    edited January 2018

    The one and only side effect of any of this is that I no longer get any oil in my hair at all and I could go a month without showering without getting the heebie jeebies.

  • gigibee
    gigibee Member Posts: 192
    edited January 2018

    Trvler that sounds like one side effect I might enjoy.

  • Ghionik
    Ghionik Member Posts: 101
    edited January 2018

    I picked the tamoxifen up at Walgreens a few minutes ago. Starting it tomorrow. Hoping for no bad SE’s.

  • runor
    runor Member Posts: 1,798
    edited January 2018

    I found that some of the side effects tapered off after a while. Like the leg cramps. At first they were very bad (in bed at night), but now it's way better. At first I was quite constipated but that got better too. So there is hope on the horizon. Keep notes. It will help you notice when effects fade away or when new ones come up. Over time this will help you develop an overall picture of how you are doing on the drug. So give it a little time.....

  • molliefish
    molliefish Member Posts: 723
    edited January 2018

    this week marks two years complete. I still have the occasional hot flash but was 2 years into menopause when I started tam. I have a camera guided biopsy of the uterus on March 7. Hoping for and expecting the best. I have no other side effects other than the thickened lining and feeling of fullness. My hair is thin but I blame chemo. I'm happy to have it so I'll not complain. My skin is ultra dry, my eyes too. I suspect all of these taper my new normal. I am not uncomfortable or unhappy. I am not angry or railing against what happened. I just am.
    Happy
    Living
    Loving
    Just be. Feel the world around you. Appreciate the moments, leave the anger behind. Be gentle not abrupt, just be you.
  • Trvler
    Trvler Member Posts: 3,159
    edited January 2018

    The leg cramps and constipation were the easiest things to fix for me. Magnesium for constipation and the second you feel a leg cramp, turn your toes towards your body and it stops them dead. I am sorry if I am being annoying to keep posting these tips but I do it in case someone hasn't read them and it can help. Hi Mollie!

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