T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
108.1 | Condolences | FRAGLE::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Wed Aug 10 1988 23:38 | 4 |
| I've never been through this Linda, but I wanted to say how sorry
I am...
Lee
|
108.2 | Make sure they keep a close watch on this situation... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Aug 11 1988 09:04 | 11 |
| Linda, you have my sympathies, too.
Be sure that the doctors keep checking on your progress (and
are not making any assumptions about why this is happening
to you.) Make sure that they keep looking for something new
that could be contributing to the situation.
Take care and please let us know how you are doing.
Suzanne
|
108.3 | | COUNT::STHILAIRE | I was born a rebel | Thu Aug 11 1988 09:45 | 12 |
| Re .0, I've never been through anything like this either, but that
feeling about your body being out of control reminds me of how I
felt back when I was 24 and had to have a C-section when I was
pregnant. I felt, gee, if I have a body that can get pregnant,
why can't I have a body that can get the baby out the normal way????
(If there's a God, She/He/It screwed up there!!! and I suffered
for it!)
Good Luck,
Lorna
|
108.4 | scary | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Aug 11 1988 10:45 | 22 |
| For most of my life I've suffered from long (usually 8-9 days)
heavy periods with serious cramping -- and because of a family
history of high blood pressure and other complications, I can't
take the pill.
Out of control? You bet. Not an iota, no matter what the
mind-body people say. The best I can do is hope for peaceful
co-existence.
This monthly evidence that I am not in charge of even my body has
made me a bit fatalistic about the ideas of really controlling
anything to do with nature -- it's stronger than I am and laughs
at puny scientific efforts to put reins on it.
It also strengthened my religious feelings, not in the sense of
organized religion or theological answers but in an awareness that
there *is* a power beyond me and beyond my understanding. Even
worse, that it doesn't behave the way I think a god ought to
behave. This awesome power [awesome in the old sense, not the
new] is as much frightening as comforting -- but I digress.
--bonnie
|
108.5 | my prayers go with you | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Aug 11 1988 10:54 | 43 |
| Golly, Linda, I feel sorry for you too. I have the same problem,
but so long as I stay on the Pill, I don't have mid-cycle bleeding.
I was at my gynecologist last week, and he would like to take me
off the pill again soon because of my age (I turned 35 a few months
ago - not that I feel any older :-), and I *really* dread it. I am
still sufficiently anemic that I usually cannot donate blood, and
I still have heavy periods compared to most people, but on the Pill
(I am on lo-ovral) I can use tampons, and my period lasts a little
more than a week. When I am not on it, my periods vary from 17
days apart to more than 50, and I bleed for more than half the cycle,
and so heavily that I used to use two napkins at once - it really
ruined my life when I was a high-school kid, since I couldn't do
any normal activities, or go anywhere where I would be more than
a half hour's walk from a bathroom, such as hiking, etc. I love
the outdoors and travelling to places that are off the beaten path
to do wildlife photography and underwater photography, and I will
have a really major life-style crisis when I have to give up having
a halfway normal menstrual cycle. I also hated having to set the
alarm clock to get me in the middle of the night to change the d**ned
napkins to avoid making a mess in my bed (I hate alarm clocks...).
And I hated never being able to plan to do any of the activities
I enjoy because I never knew when my period was going to be, stranding
me indoors near a bathroom, away from the hiking trail, beach, wildlife
preserve, or whatever. Ycch! I suppose it is inevitable that I
will eventually have to go off the medication (the doctor talks
about incread risk of heart attacks, which I am not in the least
bit worried about), but I hate the way it will ruin my life when
I do - I wish I could stay on it until I finally go through menopause,
which, if my mother (who had the same hormone imbalance problem when
she was younger) is any indication, is twenty or more years out.
Apart from this stuff and my hay fever (which is finally under control
thanks to the new medecine I'm on for it - YEAH!!), I am an extremely
healthy person; I heardly ever get colds or the latest "bug" that
fells my friends and my husband (he has the "headache and body ache"
one that is going around now: he gets everything that goes through
his office, the poor guy).
I realize that this isn't much help! But you are not alone, and
you have our sympathy, and our prayers. Or mine, anyhow!
In sisterhood,
/Charlotte
|
108.6 | Efforts you could make | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Aug 11 1988 11:23 | 34 |
| Linda, I have never had your basic problem, and in gratitude for
this I have always tried to pay attention to the problems and
the solutions that other women have.
1. I've had breakthrough bleeding for two reasons. The first
time it was because I had just started taking the pill, and I was
just `settling in'. The other set of times (within the past year)
has been because the pill I am taking does not have *quite* as
strong a dosage as my body would like.
2. Your doctor is happy with your dosage -- except that your
doctor is suggesting that you *double* it for a month! I think
that two things are indicated for you here: Get a second opinion.
Escalate to the next highest dosage pill in that pharmaceutical
series. (First get the second opinion, explaining that that is
what it is, then listen to what that doctor says, then maybe
consider the escalation.)
3. Since you'll be on vacation with this problem, have your doctor
recommend a gynecologist/hospital in the area(s) you're visiting.
4. Some years ago when a friend of mine had a *bad* case of
breakthrough bleeding (rush trip to the hospital, met there by
her doctor), it was cured by cauterization of her cervix. This,
while a medical procedure, just barely rates as minor surgery,
since it can be done in an office and (I think) without even local
anaesthetic. Thinking back, cauterization makes sense, since that
is one thing my brother had done for his nosebleeds. Thinking
back more, however, reminds me that the final cure for his nosebleeds
was an increase in vitamin C.
5. So, why not increase your vitamin C intake? It can't hurt.
Ann B.
|
108.7 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Thu Aug 11 1988 11:36 | 13 |
| A friend of mine had this happen recently. They had her taking
*4* pills a day. She got headaches and other side effects, but
it got her back into a regular cycle. Now I think she's down to
1 pill a day. Maybe you should try several pills a day, as the doctor
may suggest, in order to "shock" your body back into order. At
the point when she went to the doctor, my friend had been menstruating
for *6* weeks straight (nothing too heavy, just a steadily annoying
flow).
You have my sympathies also...
-Jody
|
108.8 | THINK POSITIVE!!! | FDCV03::GASTON | | Thu Aug 11 1988 11:47 | 10 |
| Hang in there Linda and think positive!
My sister and I have had some crazy flows, anemia, low blood count
and etc. The pills, vitamin C, and increase of iron has really
improved things. Try to keep your attitude up when you can and
keep talking to your doctor.
Think positive, when possible and good luck!!!!
Sheryl
|
108.10 | SYMPATHY... | UBOHUB::DAVIES_A | REBEL YELL | Thu Aug 11 1988 12:08 | 34 |
|
TO: Linda and Charlotte
My heart goes out to both of you.
I've been relatively lucky - whilst at school my periods were very
painful and used to lay me out two days a month but, thank god(?),
I seem to have grown out of it......
Re: Vitamin C. This might be a bit "fringe" but in the book "Raw
Energy" by Leslie Kenton they talk about the specific effects of
a raw diet on women (amongst other things). It says there that it
has been established that eating lots of citrus fruit can reduce
bleeding - apparently there's an enzyme in the pith that strengthens
the capillary walls and counteracts the "period-hormone" effect
which weakens them.
So it could be the Vit. C or it could be the enzymes - but maybe
worth a try........
Re: Doctors and women's concerns
I have recently had a needless appendectomy - basically because
the doctors ignored my input. I like to think I'm assertive and
I can express myself, but they walked all over me and abused my
body with a usless operation. So *be strong* Linda - get a second
opinion, believe in your knowledge of your body. There must be
something the healers can do - don't let one (or many) narrow attitudes
keep you suffering.
Let us all know how you get on.
Best Wishes
Abigail
a
|
108.11 | my mother's experience | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Aug 11 1988 12:49 | 27 |
| This reminds me of something I had forgotten.
My mother had a hysterectomy when I was about 15. She suffered
from long, heavy periods due to fibroid tumors for several years
because she didn't want surgery, either. We got used to planning
family outings around her schedule -- "Mom's due on the day before
Labor Day, so maybe we'd better just have a picnic instead of
going out in the hills for a hike." A D&C helped for a while, but
in two years she was worse than ever, always tired and cross.
Finally she got so anemic the doctor insisted that she have
surgery, that she was approaching the point where she was
endangering her life -- a minor infection could cause serious
illness because she wouldn't have the strength to fight it off.
The difference in her behavior was almost instanteneous. Even
though she was recovering from major surgery, she had more energy
from the day she got home. She was interested in things again, we
could make plans without worrying about staying near a bathroom,
and family life got better because she had the energy to put into
the emotional side again.
She often says she wishes she had had the surgery when the doctor
first recommended it, that she feels like she wasted several years
of her life suffering so she could prove she was tough and strong.
--bonnie
|
108.12 | my 2c | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Thu Aug 11 1988 13:16 | 17 |
| I've never had the problem, nor do I know anyone who *has*,
however, since I am a vertiable font of advice..... [:-)]
First, (I know this isn't easy) work on not being fearful or
depressed about this. I don't mean "stuff your feelings", but if
you can meditate, or use religious faith, or whatever, to get to
a state of "Everything is being done that *can* be. Everything
will work out." it won't add anxiety to the problem.
Second, consider consulting a holistic-type doctor as well as your
regular MD - there may indeed be some type of imbalance, vitamin-wise
or whatever, that doesn't require surgery.
Hang in there.
--DE
|
108.13 | FWIW | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Thu Aug 11 1988 15:29 | 9 |
| This friend of mine I spoke of told me she once looked at a chart
of probable causes for "female" conditions. The heavy bleeding
she was experiencing had 3 possibilities: pituitary problems, blood
diseases, and stress. In her case, she surmised it was stress,
and focused on trying to de-stress her life. That, in addition
to the hormones, helped a great deal.
-Jody
|
108.14 | Warm hugs for everyone! :) | CEMENT::HUXTABLE | Dancing Light | Thu Aug 11 1988 15:56 | 15 |
| First off, thanks so much to everyone who has replied in
Notes and sent me mail messages. I really hit a low point
last night, and your concern and advice has given me a big
lift.
You've all given me a lot to think about. Until I sort it
all out, all I can say is: I feel like I've got choices
again! I'd sort of talked myself into believing that the
next step was surgery. But you've all reminded me that there
are other options I can and should explore first--and that if
it does come to surgery, it is not always a fearsome thing.
I'll keep you posted. And I'm feeling *much* more positive!
-- Linda
|
108.15 | | CASEE::CLARK | Jessica Clark | Mon Aug 15 1988 13:05 | 20 |
|
Linda,
I have been reading Womennotes for a while and have not yet written
anything, preferring to just read. But I felt that I had to reply to
your note because I have an idea that might help.
You mentioned in your base note that when the bleeding started you also
had cramps. Have you been taking any painkillers for them? I recently
changed doctors and my new one has informed me that certain painkillers
can make your period last longer than it normally would. While I do
not know what caused your condition, if you are taking painkillers they
could be affecting it and you may want to consult your doctor about it.
I hope I have been of some help.
Jessica
|
108.16 | | CLAY::HUXTABLE | Dancing Light | Tue Aug 16 1988 16:02 | 15 |
| I've gotten a recommendation for a good gyn, whom I will
see for a second opinion before my next appointment with my
regular gyn. I also have emergency contacts in Wichita,
Kansas, where I'll be for the next 10 days installing
software (groan), and New Orleans, for a looong leisurely
Labor Day weekend after that! :) :)
Jessica, thanks for your advice. I'm not taking a
painkiller, per se, but I am taking ibuprofen. I just
recently heard that, like aspirin, it reduces blood clotting.
So it could be aggravating things--I'll check on that.
Thanks to all for your help. I'll tune in again when I can!
-- Linda
|
108.17 | | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Tue Aug 16 1988 16:15 | 6 |
| Ibuprofen, and other anti-inflammatories bear much looking
into before and when taking them. There are many negative
side-effects, so if they can be avoided, do it.
--DE
|
108.18 | Good grief! | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Aug 16 1988 16:18 | 6 |
| One of those "side effects" is to reduce the efficacy of oral
contraceptives.
See you at Worldcon, Linda?
Ann B.
|
108.19 | | CLAY::HUXTABLE | Dancing Light | Fri Aug 19 1988 19:46 | 13 |
| Fortunately, I haven't needed the contraceptive effects of
the Pill since well before I married my SO. 'Nuff said.
I started with ibuprofen when it came on the market and I
didn't need the prescription for Motrin anymore (same thing,
yes?). But that is interesting--seems like I keep hearing
about more and more things that interfere with the
effectivity of the Pill--no wonder I hear about so many women
who got pregnant while faithfully taking the Pill!
WorldCon it is, Ann. See you there!
-- Linda
|
108.20 | The sailing's getting smoother | CLAY::HUXTABLE | Dancing Light | Thu Sep 08 1988 12:42 | 81 |
| To more-or-less finish up this conversation, I've now had a
consultation/second opinion (Dr. S.), as well as an
appointment with my regular gyn (Dr. M.). After I described
the last 12 years of problems, patterns of irregularities,
and treatments I had received, Dr. S. said it looked like the
course of treatment she would have followed, and recommended
several things as being appropriate to try next. Fortunately
for my peace of mind, Dr. M. also recommended the same
things. The next several things are
o Check with my mother on whether she took anything
suspect during her pregnancy with me. (I suspect
not--she knows my troubles, and the topic would have
come up before, but it won't hurt to check.) Some
drugs could have caused a mild genital abnormality in
me, such as a weakness in the uterine lining, that
we would not otherwise be likely to suspect.
o Drop back to my regular dosage of the Pill I've been
taking for 2-3 months. Last month might have been
just a fluke...
o If I break through again, start doing some stuff
we've been stalling on, like sonograms, D&C, etc,
mostly in case I've developed a polyp or something
during the course of treatment which could be
simulating or obscuring a hormone imbalance.
o Try a different pharmaceutical line of Pill (although
my current one seems widely regarded as being
generally the most effective variety for controlling
menstrual problems) or try supplementing it with more
estrogen. (I'm already at the highest dose in this
line, which I hadn't realized.)
Both agreed, to my immense relief, that a hysterectomy is
almost certainly not in my future for several years, if ever.
My hemoglobin count and blood pressure are back up to my
normal levels, probably due to the double-dose Pill (and no
bleeding) for the last several weeks. I adapted surprisingly
well to the doubled Pill, although I wouldn't want to
continue using it for an extended time.
By the way, for the curious, I discovered a couple new things
during these conversations that have no direct bearing on my
troubles, but which I nonetheless found interesting.
o Dr. M. had started me out on a different Pill way
back when, which I thought was a higher dosage than
I'm taking now, primarily because the side effects
were noticeably stronger. Turns out it was actually
a *lower* dosage than what I'm taking now: every
Pill has both an estrogen and a progestin in it
(which I knew) in differing quantities, but not
necessarily the same ones. Apparently the other
Pill, although a lower dosage, contained an estrogen
that my body took less kindly to than the one I'm
using now. So this is another vote for going back to
your doctor when you don't like the side effects of
your particular Pill!
o Dr. S. mentioned that a woman's weight sometimes has
an effect on her cycles, and they're not entirely
sure why. (Not like runners and ballet dancers
undergoing intensive training.) She says she's seen
women in for fertility counseling, for example, who
sometimes say something like "my periods used to be
really regular, but they're not anymore." In some
cases these women had a different weight when they
were regular, maybe as little as 20-30 pounds
different, sometimes much more--and they often
experience a return to previous cyclic patterns if
they return to that weight. It's as if the metabolic
"set-points" for the body may affect "set-points" for
the menstrual cycle also. But noone's quite figured
out a causal mechanism yet.
Thanks again to everyone for their level-headed support,
advice, and sympathy.
-- Linda
|
108.21 | glad it's better | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Sep 15 1988 11:58 | 20 |
| Thanks, Linda. I'm glad you put in that aside about weight and
menstrual cycles.
I gained quite a bit of weight this summer -- for the first
time in my life I'm 30+ pounds overweight. After gaining that
five pounds or so, my weight stabilized, but it's still higher
than I feel comfortable at.
But for the first time in my adult life, my cycles have been
coming 26-28 days apart, the flow has been only average -- no
changing the heaviest tampon I can buy every 30 minutes -- and
I've had only minor cramping. This has happened for four
consecutive months, so I don't think it's a fluke.
I don't know what to do now. I feel like a blimp. But it's
soooooo nice not to have to schedule trips around bathroom stops .
. . and to get a good night's sleep without cramps and dashes to
the bathroom . . . and it *doesn't hurt* . . .
--bonnie
|