Anything to help out a fellow weggie
I'm glad the thumb issue is not WG related - I guess having it for so long (the WG not the thumb), you would be able to tell the difference.
But, as you say, we never know with the stupid disease.
Anything to help out a fellow weggie
I'm glad the thumb issue is not WG related - I guess having it for so long (the WG not the thumb), you would be able to tell the difference.
But, as you say, we never know with the stupid disease.
Keep Smiling
Michelle
Live your life in a way that you wouldn't be ashamed to sell the family parrot to the town gossip - WILL ROGERS
Hi Kirk,
I am sorry for your pain maybe an ice can help ?
please share with us your story. maybe we can learn from it some lessons to treat ourselves better.
for example, my story is being almost 4 years without proper treatment. now I know to warn others.
and even if we will not learn something from your story, at least you will not have to be with alone. we can hold you in it.
I hope the pain killers are already working.
Alysia
dx 2008
Here, in this forum, I have found my sweet eternal love, my beautiful Phil.. :
https://www.wegeners-granulomatosis.com/forum/threads/4238-pberggren-memorial-thread
"You are my sunshine", he used to sing to me... "you make me happy, when skies are grey" I still answer him.
Rest in Peace, my brave Batman and take care of your weggies from heaven, until we meet again.
Hi Kirk, Hope the pain pills worked. Hand surgery can be rough but do try the ice and keep it elevated on a pillow. That will help with the throbbing. It helped me when I had hand surgery. I agree with everyone else please share your story.
Back on topic. I didn't have any symptoms when my wegs was diagnosed. They found the lung nodules during a routine chest X Ray and since I was basically symptom free and it was a hundred years ago they chose not to do treatment. That was in 1972. I didn't start having real problems until the early 2000's. Then I basically smoldered until 2013 when I finally got some decent treatment. So I don't know how to classify that mess. It is what it is and I've learned to live with it as has everyone else on here. I've just learned in the past 4 months to take better charge of my health care when it comes to the wegs. Being proactive is soooo important.
Cindy
Earth is just a stopover and whatever you achieve there is only a small part of the deal. The Afterlife Of Billy Fingers
My first flare was about 9 months after completing my Cyclophosphamide infusions. Rheumy thought I was in remission so was reducing the prednisolone. At 9 months the bloods had gone sour, the roaming pain was back and rashes on my lower legs. Five months of Cyclophosphamide infusion followed which did not touch it so switched to RTX which worked a dream. Second flare was 2 years from completing the RTX.
It's been many years since my first flare so exact time spans I can not remember but I'll tell you what I do remember.
I believe I had been on Aza/pred combination for approx 2 years after first being diagnosed when I eventually tapered off both drugs. It was only about 2 weeks after stopping aza and pred when I began to feel I was relapsing/flaring. ANCA results were negative, but my Dr trusted my self assessment and I began treatment again. 2 weeks later all the blood tests (ANCA, inflammation) came back positive. I was obviously very in tune with my body.
Fortunately everytime I've relapsed there has been a longer period between coming off the medication before I flare up again. In fact this latest flare that I'm currently getting treatment for has left my kidneys alone for the first time, so perhaps overtime the relapses are becoming less aggressive??. Having said that, this relapse has taken a long time to respond to treatment. I'm hoping this trend continues so eventually I can go many years without treatment.
Both my and my Dr's aim is to always eventually come off medication and only restart it when I flare. This may not be the route other people and drs choose. Some prefer to be on a low dose for life in the hope that it will be less likely to relapse/flare. I really don't cope well on treatment so my choice is always to be drug free whenever possible.
Diagnosed April 1995
Interesting! Without being a hypochondriac I try to be well aware of my body and symptoms. Tricky for me as I haven't had a flare - only my initial brutal battle. I feel a little more nervous as I near an end to my prednisone journey. Not sure how long I'm to stay on azathioprine after. I've had one cold without any problems, and hopefully I'm not picking up strep throat from my son this week to make a second. Tomorrow will be one year from my initial diagnosis. The day that saved my life...
I am in drug free remission and have been since 2010. I still have the dregs this disease left behind. Just this past week the fatigue has doubled its fun in my body, I am keeping a close eye on it. Don't know what to expect in a flare. I like the last line "the day that saved my life" my wife and I thought I was "five days from dead." Scary times. Good luck.
Dale
Dx Aug, 2009 Remission June 2010 until 8/1/2014
My first flare began 18 months after first diagnosis. First time around was in April 2012 and treatment consisted of Cytoxin and pred. Then moved on to Mychophenolate after. 6 months. Sinuses started flaring in July of 2013, and it took until November to convince my rheumy that it was a flare up. My ANCA kept coming back negative all along. Now, we know that ANCA alone is not a definitive indicator of a flare. In November 2013, I had four Rituxan infusions. Started on pred again at 80 mg, and I am now down to 15. Sinuses haven't looked better in two years according to my ENT. I'll say this; my first flare up sucked. The migraine headaches associated with my flare up were consistently 7-8 of 10 on the pain scale, and occasionally reached 9/10. For me, I think my trigger is going to be sinus related, not my ANCA, not kidneys, not swollen joints.
MikeG-2012
"You never know how strong you are until being strong is the only choice you have"
Drug free remission sounds good Dale - it's what I'm hoping for. What treatment did you have, azathioprine? I'm wondering what the protocol length is. Sounds like your diagnosis day was similar to mine!
Hope I didn't jinx myself asking about flares as a week ago my heel felt like someone hit it with a hammer, couldn't walk for 2/3 days, it got better then today hard to walk again. Fatigue is there but nothing new and my crp was recently 20. ( <5) Could that number reflect a cold infection? I never had severe joint pain with diagnosis, mostly ears, mouth, nose, lungs.... So I'd think possibly like you MikeG my triggers would be similar. As much as you never want to flare you kinda want to get a feel for what to expect. After having a cold I feel more brave to conquer more or at least not be scared when someone's sniffling!
Here is the result of my first try at drug free remission. My docs tried drug free remission in December 2013 after being in remission for 2 years. I started with dropping the preds (was on only 1mg) at then end of Dec 2013, with plans to drop the immuran at the end of January 2014. I didn't even make through January. The blood test on Jan 23 revealed that I had relapsed. So I went back to 5mg preds and stayed on 50mg immuran. It took until last week to find out that this time the WG hit my lungs. So now I'm back to 40mg of preds and replacing the immuran with 2 g (yes grams) of cellcepts. The plans are to take 40mg preds for 10 days, then 30mg for 10 days, then 20mg for 10 days and then to 10 mg until future review. The cellcepts is planned for 4 weeks on 2g, then down to 1g, then down to 500mg and then review it. This will be my first try with cellcepts. I was also told that I would be back on Cytoxan if the cellcepts didn't work within 3 months, so I hope the cellcept will work, I don't want to go back on cytoxan.
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