Fatigue Prior to Treatment
Hello Everyone--
Glad to find this forum. So many of you are helpfully candid and encouraging, which is welcome support when one is faced with this kind of thing. Diagnosed this month with PC---PSA 6.3, MRI showed lesion, biopsy confirmed two areas of adenocarcinoma. MY PSA level has been gradually rising for around 4 years, so I was not surprised by the biopsy result. Da Vinci-assisted RP scheduled for May. My question is about your condition before you began treatment: did you have an unusual level of fatigue? I'm 61, overweight by about 30 lbs., but I've been exceptionally fatigued the last year or so. Could it be attributed to the disease? I neglected to ask my urologist about this.
Comments
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Good idea to see your Internist for a full physical.
Heart healthy life style is prostate cancer healthy as well.........eat right and daily exercise....in fact, we are more likely to die from heart disease than prostate cancer since heart disease is epidemic.
Please list your PSA history; the Gleason score of the two cores that were positive...what did the digital rectal exam reveal? Any other tests?
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Better safe than sorry
M,
Welcome to the board. Cancer can cause fatigue but I would think such to occur when the cancer is wide spread showing higher PSA. Something else is causing the fatigue. You are dealing with the unknown, so it could be an underlining feeling due to stress. We all experience such anxiety after been diagnosed and during the decision period, "What's the next best step?"
In any case, you should try to be the fitness possible for the surgery as this is not a walk in the park but a major surgery. You should get an overall health check up. Surgeons play it at easy but many things can happen. I do not think that your 30lbs overweight would cause a problem for the surgery but an heart issue would. Surely you can always postpone the surgery with no prejudice to your cancer condition and treatment. Better safe than sorry.
Best wishes and luck.
VG
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Fatigue
Hi,
Might want to talk to your general MD and see if your bloodwork is OK. Could be a lot of things. I did not notice any general fatigue with my PCa before I had my robotic prostate removal.
Dave 3+4
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No fatigue, but lowered
No fatigue, but lowered endurance yes, and even some depression... something I'd never had before. This was during the two year period between biopsies, which is apparently when my PCa began to wander outside the confines of the prostate and started to settle in elsewhere.
I didn't know it at the time, but looking back, all the pieces fit together. I was 63 at the time, so attributed my fatigue to age. I've heard others mention mood swings as well, even before knowing they already had cancer.
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Diet, booze, weight, sleep
Diet, booze, weight, sleep apnoea, not enough sleep, not enough exercise, stress, Low T, late middle age, nagging missus, tough job, stroppy teenagers ....
Plenty of stuff to look at and work on before cancer comes into the picture.
Trust me on this - I've got all of the above
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That's ithewhositsoncushions said:Diet, booze, weight, sleep
Diet, booze, weight, sleep apnoea, not enough sleep, not enough exercise, stress, Low T, late middle age, nagging missus, tough job, stroppy teenagers ....
Plenty of stuff to look at and work on before cancer comes into the picture.
Trust me on this - I've got all of the above
Does sound like me. No teens in the house anymore, thankfully.
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Thanks
Thanks all for the input. I have been a cardiac patient for nearly 20 years (heart, T2 diabetes and now this...), but I just saw my cardiologist, got an EKG and an exam and he deemed my heart okay. I'll look into the thyroid issue.
11 cores taken, 3 positive: left apex and left base. Gleason 4+3, grade group 3. 60-75% Gleason pattern 4 in tumor volume. Other cores exhibited granulomatous prostatitus, which my urologist found a little surprising. Several DREs gave my doctors no cause for concern. When my PSA level topped 6 (after monitoring it for a few years), my urologist suggested the biopsy.
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Unlikely effect of PCa . . .
Anything is possible but I think it unlikely that your fatigue and depression stems from prostate cancer.
Generally, men w/a Gleason 6 level of prostate cancer (which is the lowest level) are asymptomatic and have no idea that they have cancer because there are no obviously physical effects caused by it.
So, as suggested above, please consult your physician, get a full phsyical work up and develop a plan to eat better, exercise and reduce your weight which should resolve the fatigue problem BUT depression is an entirely different matter. For that, you may wish to consult w/a counselor or therapist.
Good luck!
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depression is an entirely different matterSwingshiftworker said:Unlikely effect of PCa . . .
Anything is possible but I think it unlikely that your fatigue and depression stems from prostate cancer.
Generally, men w/a Gleason 6 level of prostate cancer (which is the lowest level) are asymptomatic and have no idea that they have cancer because there are no obviously physical effects caused by it.
So, as suggested above, please consult your physician, get a full phsyical work up and develop a plan to eat better, exercise and reduce your weight which should resolve the fatigue problem BUT depression is an entirely different matter. For that, you may wish to consult w/a counselor or therapist.
Good luck!
Was that for him, or for me? My PCa was G8 and locally advanced... reason enough to be depressed (though I do not believe I was).
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ConcurSwingshiftworker said:Unlikely effect of PCa . . .
Anything is possible but I think it unlikely that your fatigue and depression stems from prostate cancer.
Generally, men w/a Gleason 6 level of prostate cancer (which is the lowest level) are asymptomatic and have no idea that they have cancer because there are no obviously physical effects caused by it.
So, as suggested above, please consult your physician, get a full phsyical work up and develop a plan to eat better, exercise and reduce your weight which should resolve the fatigue problem BUT depression is an entirely different matter. For that, you may wish to consult w/a counselor or therapist.
Good luck!
I agree with SSW that few PCa guys report pre-treatment fatigue. It is worth checking out. Fatigue is universal in Lymphoma, my first cancer; I slept 12 hours a day before diagnosis, but still could barely drag around. I am NOT suggesting that you might have Lymphoma, merely saying that severe fatigue is symptomatic of a range of other diseases, which deserves investigation now. The simplest and cheapest way for your GP to look into this is with blood work: a CBC and Metabolic Panel, at least.
max
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Thank YouConcur
I agree with SSW that few PCa guys report pre-treatment fatigue. It is worth checking out. Fatigue is universal in Lymphoma, my first cancer; I slept 12 hours a day before diagnosis, but still could barely drag around. I am NOT suggesting that you might have Lymphoma, merely saying that severe fatigue is symptomatic of a range of other diseases, which deserves investigation now. The simplest and cheapest way for your GP to look into this is with blood work: a CBC and Metabolic Panel, at least.
max
Thanks Max. I'll look into it.
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.
To change the emphasis of this thread, you stated,
"11 cores taken, 3 positive: left apex and left base. Gleason 4+3, grade group 3. 60-75% Gleason pattern 4 in tumor volume. Other cores exhibited granulomatous prostatitus, which my urologist found a little surprising. Several DREs gave my doctors no cause for concern. When my PSA level topped 6 (after monitoring it for a few years), my urologist suggested the biopsy."
You also stated that you are seeking a RP.
With a 4=3=7 there may be a chance that the cancer has escaped the prostate. Have you had any image tests. A 3T MRI may show if there is extracapsular extension. Surgery is localized to the prostate, so if in fact the cancer has escaped, additional active therapy will be necessary , ie radiation and or hormone treatments. The potential side effects of each treatment type is cummulative.
Did you speak with a radiation oncologist. The perimeter of the radiaiton can be adjusted, so that it goes beyond the prostate, which is a benefit for more advanced diagnosis.
Hopefully SSW will post a list of treatment options that are available for you.
To emphasize, it is my thought that you want to do your due diligence now, and obtain complete diagnostic testing to avoid future consequences.
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So what are your plans to fixMulhaley said:That's it
Does sound like me. No teens in the house anymore, thankfully.
So what are your plans to fix them?
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Poethewhositsoncushions said:So what are your plans to fix
So what are your plans to fix them?
hewho,
Your post "Diet, booze..." reminds me of a favorite line of mine from the Big Sur poet Robinson Jeffers, who wrote mostly around WW II. Jeffers was a pessimist and very brooding.
In a poem regarding the decline of civilization, the refrain after each stanza was: "All shall be worse confounded soon."
.
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"Reasonable"RobLee said:depression is an entirely different matter
Was that for him, or for me? My PCa was G8 and locally advanced... reason enough to be depressed (though I do not believe I was).
Rob,
I was run over by a car at age 30, but was functional again within about two years. I was in an appointment with my Lymphma N.P. one day in my lifetime followup program, which monitors patient 'wellness'. She said I seemed a bit down, and I quipped, "I was depressed, then I got cancer."
She laughed out loud, which made me feeel good -- the fact that she got it, and was able to overcome all the PC rules of how to think in society, and actually have a sense of humor. Bless her, for she is a rarity.
Rationally, contracting a disease that is potentially fatal, and that will cause lifetime difficulty, struggle, and worry is damn sufficient reason for a person to get depressed. I know the gung-ho, Semper fi mentality here is critical and necessary. But being depressed with cancer seems very understandable and not a cause of shame or reason to be viewed as weak. I do not view myself as weak, and neither is any other PCa patient who becomes depressed. Not you, not anyone. To be fully clear: I agree with the thrust of your post.
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Radiation Inquiryhopeful and optimistic said:.
To change the emphasis of this thread, you stated,
"11 cores taken, 3 positive: left apex and left base. Gleason 4+3, grade group 3. 60-75% Gleason pattern 4 in tumor volume. Other cores exhibited granulomatous prostatitus, which my urologist found a little surprising. Several DREs gave my doctors no cause for concern. When my PSA level topped 6 (after monitoring it for a few years), my urologist suggested the biopsy."
You also stated that you are seeking a RP.
With a 4=3=7 there may be a chance that the cancer has escaped the prostate. Have you had any image tests. A 3T MRI may show if there is extracapsular extension. Surgery is localized to the prostate, so if in fact the cancer has escaped, additional active therapy will be necessary , ie radiation and or hormone treatments. The potential side effects of each treatment type is cummulative.
Did you speak with a radiation oncologist. The perimeter of the radiaiton can be adjusted, so that it goes beyond the prostate, which is a benefit for more advanced diagnosis.
Hopefully SSW will post a list of treatment options that are available for you.
To emphasize, it is my thought that you want to do your due diligence now, and obtain complete diagnostic testing to avoid future consequences.
Thanks, that's good advice. We did an MRI about a year ago that showed one lesion. The biopsy said two areas were cancerous. So one made itself known since the imaging session. My urologist advised surgery, but he did suggest that if it has extended beyond the capsule hormone therapy would be indicated. I'll look for a radiation oncologist to consult with.
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Fixeshewhositsoncushions said:So what are your plans to fix
So what are your plans to fix them?
Well sir, I'm taking a moratorium on the booze, I've only taken in about 800 calories so far today (a few hours pre-dinner), and did about 25 minutes on the treadmill. Hope to keep it up.
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Proton therapy?
Hi,
You might want to look into Proton therapy. From what I understand it goes right throught your body to the tumor. It does not go past the tumor like other sources of radiation. Some types of radiation treatments hit on the way in, then the tumor, then hit tissue on the way out as the beam goes throught you body. Proton therapy has a fixed beam length which should limit some collateral damage on the other side of the tumor.
Dave 3+4
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"Reasonable""Reasonable"
Rob,
I was run over by a car at age 30, but was functional again within about two years. I was in an appointment with my Lymphma N.P. one day in my lifetime followup program, which monitors patient 'wellness'. She said I seemed a bit down, and I quipped, "I was depressed, then I got cancer."
She laughed out loud, which made me feeel good -- the fact that she got it, and was able to overcome all the PC rules of how to think in society, and actually have a sense of humor. Bless her, for she is a rarity.
Rationally, contracting a disease that is potentially fatal, and that will cause lifetime difficulty, struggle, and worry is damn sufficient reason for a person to get depressed. I know the gung-ho, Semper fi mentality here is critical and necessary. But being depressed with cancer seems very understandable and not a cause of shame or reason to be viewed as weak. I do not view myself as weak, and neither is any other PCa patient who becomes depressed. Not you, not anyone. To be fully clear: I agree with the thrust of your post.
Thanks, Max... that was a good anecdote. I certainly could have used an experience like that back when I was "down". I was unsure whether or not Swingshift's suggestion to seeking profesisonal counseling was intended in response to my mention of depression a few posts up (http://csn.cancer.org/comment/1575279#comment-1575279) in which I mentioned "No fatigue, but lowered endurance yes, and even some depression".
At the time I had rising PSA and uro symptoms but negative biopsy and DRE. My wife would tell me "you're depressed", as though what I had could be treated by a pill... this even though I have never been diagnosed or treated for any psych or emotional problems. I do remember being somewhat moody and suspect that eventhough I had not yet been diagnosed with PCa, looking back I think there must have been some chemical reaction working on me. Once I was diagnosed - over a year later, then all the pieces fell into place and I could finally get treatment.
So while I am willing to accept that some may become depressed upon learning that they have cancer, I also suspect that simply having cancer, though yet unknown, might release some chemical into the body that could affect one's mood, as well as possibly cause fatigue and lowered endurance.
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