CLL
Comments
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CLL and my history
Hi,
Hi,
I was diagnosed back in 1996 (age 46) at Stage 0. I have been watch and wait every since. My (bad) counts at their highest have been 40,000+ and they go up and down. My counts at last check were 18,000. It is the % of lymphocytes you want to watch along with if you’re other critical counts staying good. CLL is very individualistic to the person who has it. If you don’t become severely symptomatic and or have symptoms that impact your quality of health, then it is a wait and sees disease and you would not want to force treatment. They are learning new things every day. (Be sure if you are getting vaccinated for anything that you ask if it is a live virus - CLL’ers should not have a live virus vaccination)
I remember being shocked at finding out I had CLL and I did tons of research. Also the first thing I did was get a very good oncologist. (I am now on my 4th one) I am pretty much symptom free but at times have fatigue. I do take very good care of my health and immune system. My career for awhile had me traveling international to countries where you want to be sure you prepare for taking care of your health. At the time I was diagnosed, I remember a nurse saying it was a 20 year wait and see; well I am at 17 years. I also remember them saying that it opens the door for other cancers to take hold. In 2009 I was diagnosed with breast cancer and did a round of radiation. I am going on 4 years cancer free of that type of cancer. I watch my skin closely and listen to my body signals. If I hadn’t listened to my body signals, I wouldn’t have caught the breast cancer when I did. Docs could not find it until I insisted on more testing. I am aware I have CLL but CLL does not have me. I enjoy my life and I don’t focus on having cancer but focus on being a cancer survivor.
kbelle
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Newly diagnosed: does exercise help?
I was diagnosed with stage 1 CLL on May 1, 2013, at the age of 50, and am still trying to wrap my head around it. I've had weepy days, and days with a lot of bravado, but over the past month, not a single day that I haven't thought about CLL and what it could mean to me. I've been a fanatical runner for the past few years, running about 6-8 marathons or ultras a year, and much of my social life is built around that. The thought of losing that is depressing me to no end. My oncologist has me on "watch and wait," and told me there's no reason to change anything in my lifestyle for now. Does anyone have thoughts on whether regular exercise helps with this thing? I already plan to move to a more green-based diet, perhaps cut out red meat entirely, and get down to my ideal weight. i just need to know that stellar health habits will be useful to me in some way. Any advice from people who have been living with CLL would be most welcome. I do feel kind of isolated because I don't want to unload on my husband every day, or other friends or running buddies.
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CLLtscadron said:Newly diagnosed: does exercise help?
I was diagnosed with stage 1 CLL on May 1, 2013, at the age of 50, and am still trying to wrap my head around it. I've had weepy days, and days with a lot of bravado, but over the past month, not a single day that I haven't thought about CLL and what it could mean to me. I've been a fanatical runner for the past few years, running about 6-8 marathons or ultras a year, and much of my social life is built around that. The thought of losing that is depressing me to no end. My oncologist has me on "watch and wait," and told me there's no reason to change anything in my lifestyle for now. Does anyone have thoughts on whether regular exercise helps with this thing? I already plan to move to a more green-based diet, perhaps cut out red meat entirely, and get down to my ideal weight. i just need to know that stellar health habits will be useful to me in some way. Any advice from people who have been living with CLL would be most welcome. I do feel kind of isolated because I don't want to unload on my husband every day, or other friends or running buddies.
I found out that I had CLL at the age of 42 in 2005. Do not worry about what you have no control over it will just eat you up. Keep positive Do what ever you like. Keep up with your Running. It can only help. I was at a seminar held by the UW Hospital Carbone Cancer Center and they stressed exercise. There are aalot of people that do not have issues for 20 or 25 years.I have had Chemo in 2009 and lost 18 inches of my colon from another illness I had. Was good fo 18 months and got sick again. Then had I mmunotherapy every 3 to 4 months for a year. Then I had a Stem cell transplant. That did nothing for me and then 3 rounds of Lymphocyte cells. That did nothing Now I am back to Immunotherapy that I finshed up May 31st IT IS NOT THAT BAD. Some time I will get another stem cell or bone marrow transplant. They have not given me a time on that. I just booked 5 musky fishing trips for the next 5 months. I am not letting it get to me. I have my days where I think about it but then I just say stick it CLL.
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Starting to adjust to thiskbelle said:CLL and my history
Hi,
Hi,
I was diagnosed back in 1996 (age 46) at Stage 0. I have been watch and wait every since. My (bad) counts at their highest have been 40,000+ and they go up and down. My counts at last check were 18,000. It is the % of lymphocytes you want to watch along with if you’re other critical counts staying good. CLL is very individualistic to the person who has it. If you don’t become severely symptomatic and or have symptoms that impact your quality of health, then it is a wait and sees disease and you would not want to force treatment. They are learning new things every day. (Be sure if you are getting vaccinated for anything that you ask if it is a live virus - CLL’ers should not have a live virus vaccination)
I remember being shocked at finding out I had CLL and I did tons of research. Also the first thing I did was get a very good oncologist. (I am now on my 4th one) I am pretty much symptom free but at times have fatigue. I do take very good care of my health and immune system. My career for awhile had me traveling international to countries where you want to be sure you prepare for taking care of your health. At the time I was diagnosed, I remember a nurse saying it was a 20 year wait and see; well I am at 17 years. I also remember them saying that it opens the door for other cancers to take hold. In 2009 I was diagnosed with breast cancer and did a round of radiation. I am going on 4 years cancer free of that type of cancer. I watch my skin closely and listen to my body signals. If I hadn’t listened to my body signals, I wouldn’t have caught the breast cancer when I did. Docs could not find it until I insisted on more testing. I am aware I have CLL but CLL does not have me. I enjoy my life and I don’t focus on having cancer but focus on being a cancer survivor.
kbelle
KBelle: Thanks for an extremely useful post that came to me at the right time. I posted earlier this week, and was nervous because I had my second appointment with my oncologist this week, and planned to ask her all the tough questions that had been mulling around my head making me a basket case over the past month (I was just diagnosed on 5/1/13, at age 50). She was wonderful, and spent an hour with me answering every question I could think of. One of the things she said that most resonated with me: cancer takes away the illusion that we have total control over our lives and health, but it was always only that, an illusion. That much said, I'm going to do everything I can to be a "smart cancer patient." It sounds like my CLL might follow the same course as yours, kbelle -- she told me I'm at stage 0, and my WBC is 26,000 with % lymphocyte around 60. I'm still asymptomatic, no swollen lymph nodes. and my energy level is good. I'm the "fanatical runner" who posted on Tuesday, and my oncologist assured me that I can run as many marathons as I want. I have to think exercise will help, at least make me stronger to withstand treatment, when and if I need it. The biggest changes I contemplate: I'll be much better about sun screen, and plan to pay more attention to my nutrition, focusing more on whole foods. Good tip about the live vaccinations. We travel a lot internationally, and I guess I'll avoid street food in third world countries (which I should have been doing anyway). And while I'm still strong and healthy, I plan to do a couple marathons through Team in Training, which supports leukemia and lymphoma research. This isn't a club I ever wanted to join -- noone does, I know -- but you all are inspirational. I hope to follow your example, kbelle and others who have learned to live with this. And I'm not going to let CLL define the rest of my life.
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CLL and My Historykbelle said:CLL and my history
Hi,
Hi,
I was diagnosed back in 1996 (age 46) at Stage 0. I have been watch and wait every since. My (bad) counts at their highest have been 40,000+ and they go up and down. My counts at last check were 18,000. It is the % of lymphocytes you want to watch along with if you’re other critical counts staying good. CLL is very individualistic to the person who has it. If you don’t become severely symptomatic and or have symptoms that impact your quality of health, then it is a wait and sees disease and you would not want to force treatment. They are learning new things every day. (Be sure if you are getting vaccinated for anything that you ask if it is a live virus - CLL’ers should not have a live virus vaccination)
I remember being shocked at finding out I had CLL and I did tons of research. Also the first thing I did was get a very good oncologist. (I am now on my 4th one) I am pretty much symptom free but at times have fatigue. I do take very good care of my health and immune system. My career for awhile had me traveling international to countries where you want to be sure you prepare for taking care of your health. At the time I was diagnosed, I remember a nurse saying it was a 20 year wait and see; well I am at 17 years. I also remember them saying that it opens the door for other cancers to take hold. In 2009 I was diagnosed with breast cancer and did a round of radiation. I am going on 4 years cancer free of that type of cancer. I watch my skin closely and listen to my body signals. If I hadn’t listened to my body signals, I wouldn’t have caught the breast cancer when I did. Docs could not find it until I insisted on more testing. I am aware I have CLL but CLL does not have me. I enjoy my life and I don’t focus on having cancer but focus on being a cancer survivor.
kbelle
Love your post! Thank you!
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Wait and see, they say.SandeeG said:Stage 1 CLL
Hi. I'm new to the site. I have Stage 1 CLL and just last week found out that my count has gone to 20,000 from 12,000 just last July when I was diagnosed. I just want to meet people who are in the same boat as I am and feel like I am not alone. I've kind of given up hope that I will live very long and need help getting past that. From what I read, I will be lucky to live 15 years and I am only 48. Any reply would be appreciated.Hi SandeeG..
I have had CLL for over 10 years now. I was diagnosed with it during a routine physical, and was told by the doctors (I have visited several) that this was a "wait and see" condition. My counts were diagnosed at around 9500, and began climbing fairly rapidly. I was getting some extremely painful joint and muscle pain, and at one time figured that I was going to die in extreme pain. I am not a wait and see kind of person, so I did thousands of hours of research over the past 10 years and tried many botanicals that might help apoptosis, and it seemed like it was slowing it down, but I hit about 34,000 (stage II) and couldn't control the pain attacks anymore. Nothing seemed to help, until one day, one last try, I came by a very vague article about "uncara tomatosa" or commonly called "Cat's Claw". I resolved to try one more time. MIRACLE!! Cat's Claw immediately brought the joint and soft tissue attacks under control. Further research discovered Graviola, which is known to be a cancer killer. With the combination of the two, I was actually able to push the CLL back into stage 1 at 22,000, with almost no pain. My doctor believes it is good for his patients to pursue combatting the disease, and has seen others actually push it into remission. I for one, will continue this struggle as quality of life has increased dramatically, and Cat's Claw and Graviola are about $3 a bottle. I don't know if this would help you in any way, but I am a firm believer that you have to "own" this disease.
God Speed you on your remission.
Jon
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Botanicalsnharmon said:I am 62, diagnosed 11 years ago with white count at 31k
Did nothing for first 5 years, then in 2006, doc put me on a pill called leukeran - this brought the white count down from near 80k to 20k - acceptable and without side effects. Then pill stopped working in 2011, lymph nodes very enlarged, spleen enlarged, white count month by month higher to over 100k, where end of 2011, I had to forget the pill and go on the standard 1st line defense with the 3 chemo drugs -
Cytoxan and Fludarabine and Rituxan (commonly called CFR). Before the chemo I felt like crap - light headed, weak, muscle pain,
severe fatigue etc - like the flu without the cough or nose congestion. The chemo was not bad - 3 days at the end of the month
for 4 months ( 4 cycles as it is called) Wednesday for 2 hours cause the rituxan is a larger bag takes longer to drip, while other 2 drugs drip in 30 minutes, Thursday only for the 30 minutes for the 2 drugs to drip simultaneously and Friday same thing - only got the rituxan on wednesday - all at my docs office in a recliner - Come back in 4 weeks, do it again ---Each 3 day treatment cost $5000 where my insurance paid about $4000.
I think there are places you could go if you don't have insurance and prove you need assistance.
Had to sleep much of the week-end each time cause it does make you real tired.Right away, after the first 3 day treatment, it immediately worked - did the next 3 months so it would continue to work and hopefully put it in remission for at least a few years before you need it again - Mine only worked for a year -
Now 13 months since chemo its all back and lymph nodes glands are even larger! The glands all around my neck were becoming so
enlarged that 6 months after chemo, in summer of 2012, had to low dose radiation all around neck to shrink them. 10 days of radiation on neck was hell - lost taste, lost saliva - took 3 months for taste to come back - could only eat mostly soups and wet food till saliva started to come back recently - 6 months later.
Doc wants to do chemo again and mix in a different drug to try to shrink the swollen glands even more cause the first time they didn't shrink enough - but blood was great till now 13 months later-
SO... feeling like crap, and trying to stall chemo again, I found APRICOT SEEDS. Look them up on google. You can get them
from many places about $30 for a 1lb bag - lasts me about a month. I chew 10 at a time, about 5 times per day - about 50
seeds total daily(have to be careful not to overdo it cause too much can cause cynanide poisoning - like 100 per day).I had to work my way up to 50 per day cause they are real bitter and too much - too quick can give me a headace -
Anyway, since new years, now about 6 weeks, my glands have shrunk dramatically, my white count is coming down
I'll know when I get to my next doc appoinment Feb 25 for sure, but I feel a whole lot better and can probably put off the chemo.
We'll see what the doc says after I get a blood reading. I'm surprised no one else is talking about apricot seeds.They also say that an Indian spice called curcummin (readily available in any health food store and most grocery stores,
along with green tea extract (drops of green tea concentrate put in water is like 100's of cups of real green brewed tea)
I would drink about a gallon of this green tea water all day, then at night take capsules of curcummin - It probably would have worked but the curcummin gave me severe stomach cramps - I have mild gaul stones and if you do, you can't take curcummin.
This is published in American medical school journals as being very effective in specifically fighting CLL.
I'm surprised no one talks about this either - strange. I'm sticking with the apricot seeds and hoping for the best.Dear Nharmon...
Check out Cat's Claw (uncara tomatosa) and graviolal...also, peperine helps the absorption or turmeric by 2000%...
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CLL stage IV;
Hello. My husband has been diagnosed with CLL stage IV in July 2013. Diagnosis was CLL with the chromosome deletion 17p-.
Second cycle of chemo was delayed 1 week. The third is late since October 16 th, so 1.5 months. Initially it was due to an infection and need to be put in antibiotics, but after it is due to the platelets. They are low to 44 or 42,000. The base line is 80,000. Has anybody experienced the same, and if yes, what suggestions can you give? What if platelets do not rise? Has anyone had similar experiences?
He is 67 years old, but strong body. He exercises, has reduced smoking, but not quitting yet. We check food and I will revise some suggestions that I read here in the discussion room.
Thank you and wish you all a healthy life
F.
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Exercise and CLLtscadron said:Newly diagnosed: does exercise help?
I was diagnosed with stage 1 CLL on May 1, 2013, at the age of 50, and am still trying to wrap my head around it. I've had weepy days, and days with a lot of bravado, but over the past month, not a single day that I haven't thought about CLL and what it could mean to me. I've been a fanatical runner for the past few years, running about 6-8 marathons or ultras a year, and much of my social life is built around that. The thought of losing that is depressing me to no end. My oncologist has me on "watch and wait," and told me there's no reason to change anything in my lifestyle for now. Does anyone have thoughts on whether regular exercise helps with this thing? I already plan to move to a more green-based diet, perhaps cut out red meat entirely, and get down to my ideal weight. i just need to know that stellar health habits will be useful to me in some way. Any advice from people who have been living with CLL would be most welcome. I do feel kind of isolated because I don't want to unload on my husband every day, or other friends or running buddies.
Hello tscadron,
I was diagonsed with CLL in June 2012, at the age of 63. I exercise and eat pretty well. I was totally shocked to learn I had CLL. Even the friends that I shared the info with were shocked. I don't know what the answer is, I say keep up the running, exercise and eat better. I've been taking Zumba two times a week for the last 6 yrs. and Belly dancing for one year. I feel great. A little tired sometimes but that could be my life style. I drink green tea and try to stay away from red meat and deep fried foods. I go for blood work and to the doctor every three months. I had a temporary scare and had to go for blood work monthly for a short time. Now this month I'm back to every 3 months. I too have weepy days but they pass. Anything you do for yourself or others that makes you feel good, I say go for it.
God Bless Kiddo
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tks. for the post & info. re. 3 drugsLyndawithay said:Hi I'm Phil, this is my wife's account, but she doesn't use it. She had CLL stage three found in December 2004. Started chemo one day after bone marrow test to confirmed that it was CLL. (Yes you can get results that fast if your oncologist wants it) . She had 5 rounds of Rituxan, Fludarabine, and Cytoxan (spelling) - the last round was 1/2 strength due to low blood numbers. At first she had all the expected side affects, but the doc added many pills and after the second round she had no side effects but a lot of extra pills to take. The Rituxan goes after the CD20 marker. She did not have CD38 or Zap70. If you have those then the treatment is harder. She is in REMISSION since may 2005. However they found that she also has non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) for which she had 4 rounds of another chemo and is also in REMISSION for that. The doc is not even checking for the CLL - no bone marrow test - since the NSCLC is much worse. He has told us that the CLL will probably come back but it has been a year now and nothing has showed up. The NSCLC will also come back but so far she is in remission for about 3 months. It took 6mo for her blood to get back to near normal after the CLL chemo, but that was when the NSCLC chemo started and that sent it back down. She still gets shots every two weeks to build up her blood numbers. Do a search on the three chemo drugs I mentioned and you will find out a lot about CLL. ***** PHIL
Hi Phil,
Tks. for your thorough reply with info. for future stage interventions.
I'm newly diagnoses with B CLL (not advanced);
I really do dread the interventions re. side affects,
I am encouraged that meds. can alleviate the
damage from those interventions.
I'm sorry your wife had this disease.
My wife died from emphazema 2010.
My best to you,
Jim
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Exercise and CLL IIsealbeach67 said:Exercise and CLL
Hello tscadron,
I was diagonsed with CLL in June 2012, at the age of 63. I exercise and eat pretty well. I was totally shocked to learn I had CLL. Even the friends that I shared the info with were shocked. I don't know what the answer is, I say keep up the running, exercise and eat better. I've been taking Zumba two times a week for the last 6 yrs. and Belly dancing for one year. I feel great. A little tired sometimes but that could be my life style. I drink green tea and try to stay away from red meat and deep fried foods. I go for blood work and to the doctor every three months. I had a temporary scare and had to go for blood work monthly for a short time. Now this month I'm back to every 3 months. I too have weepy days but they pass. Anything you do for yourself or others that makes you feel good, I say go for it.
God Bless Kiddo
Hi Sealbeach67:
I just saw your post -- I haven't been on this forum for a while. Sadly, I was out of town for several months, with my mom who was battling stage IV breast cancer. She passed away the day after Christmas. I'm still grieving pretty badly but have to say, her experience has put my own CLL in perspective. I'm not symptomatic now, and the true tragedy would be if I spent the next 5, 10, or 20 years -- however long I have on watch and wait -- worrying about what might happen when I DO become symptomatic. Right now, my CLL is cancer lite compared to what my mom just went through. So my goal now is to live in the moment, run as many marathons as I want, spend time with family and friends, and not sweat the small stuff. None of us live forever: the key is to embrace life while you're here to enjoy it.
And to that end, I'm signed up to run a marathon in March as a fundraiser for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (LLS), which funds clinical trials and other research. And I'll run it in memory of my mom, with her picture on my back. I've already raised $2400 and donations are still coming in. This is the best response I can think of to my diagnosis this year and my mom's death.
My best to all of you.
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