Can't get going
Comments
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Welcome
I am very sorry for recurrence. I am also sorry that your medical team is not helping you to cope with side effects of radiation It is normal to be tired for long time. You have been through a lot physically and emotionally and you body needs time to recover. Femara is still treatment and depends on your age fatigue could be an additional side effect of Femara due to lack of estrogen. According to my radiation oncologist it could take from 6 to 12 month to gain back strength and energy to pre-disease level. Just give yourself time and you will feel better every day You are already doing 2 miles so just be gentle to yourself.
My recovery was not exception. It was vert gradual and slow . I tried very hard, and it is almost back. I saw three different internal medicine/family physicians and used various techniques, including herbal, physical therapy, acupuncture, massage. If you like write me a private message/ email.
Hugs,
New Flower0 -
Radiation side effectsNew Flower said:Welcome
I am very sorry for recurrence. I am also sorry that your medical team is not helping you to cope with side effects of radiation It is normal to be tired for long time. You have been through a lot physically and emotionally and you body needs time to recover. Femara is still treatment and depends on your age fatigue could be an additional side effect of Femara due to lack of estrogen. According to my radiation oncologist it could take from 6 to 12 month to gain back strength and energy to pre-disease level. Just give yourself time and you will feel better every day You are already doing 2 miles so just be gentle to yourself.
My recovery was not exception. It was vert gradual and slow . I tried very hard, and it is almost back. I saw three different internal medicine/family physicians and used various techniques, including herbal, physical therapy, acupuncture, massage. If you like write me a private message/ email.
Hugs,
New Flower
I too have am still very fatigued since radiation finished over a month ago. I was also wondering if anyone out there has had any swelling of their face post radiation, it started almost a month after rads started. I have been to my onc, primary, allergist, no one has a clue what it is. I finally got my onc to refer me to the lymphedema center and was told that I have facial lymphedema...I was just wondering if anyone out there has ever heard anything like this?0 -
One moreNew Flower said:Welcome
I am very sorry for recurrence. I am also sorry that your medical team is not helping you to cope with side effects of radiation It is normal to be tired for long time. You have been through a lot physically and emotionally and you body needs time to recover. Femara is still treatment and depends on your age fatigue could be an additional side effect of Femara due to lack of estrogen. According to my radiation oncologist it could take from 6 to 12 month to gain back strength and energy to pre-disease level. Just give yourself time and you will feel better every day You are already doing 2 miles so just be gentle to yourself.
My recovery was not exception. It was vert gradual and slow . I tried very hard, and it is almost back. I saw three different internal medicine/family physicians and used various techniques, including herbal, physical therapy, acupuncture, massage. If you like write me a private message/ email.
Hugs,
New Flower
Do not wait untill March to see primary care physician. You do need help now and someone who will look after you. What is about your nutrition? High protein and fruit and vegetable diet could be helpful too.0 -
I am currently in Rads andNew Flower said:One more
Do not wait untill March to see primary care physician. You do need help now and someone who will look after you. What is about your nutrition? High protein and fruit and vegetable diet could be helpful too.
I am currently in Rads and was told that I would start to feel very tired. After all they are killing good cells with the bad. I don't have any other real problems other than breast and arm is sore.0 -
Fatigue
I finished RADS around January 21. I was quite tired from it. I would go to be sometimes as early as 6:30 or 7:00 at night. My RAD Doc said that it would take me about 6 months to recoup from the RADS. Of course it will be longer if you are on chemo too. I take two iron tablets everyday to get my strenght up. A women also told me to make sure I get my daily allowance of vitamin c and d.
Get plenty of rest.
P0 -
arbojenn:
I finished chemo last March and started 36 rounds of radiation in April. I finished them around the middle of June. I have been tired since. I have spoken to my oncologist who said its normal and last week I brought it up again with my PCP. He brushed it off. I also have a lump on my arm that both doctors said was nothing. I'm not as worried about the lump as I am about the fatigue. I take all kinds of vitamins and nothing helps. They don't seem to think its a problem, but I wonder if it is normal to be this tired this far out of treatments. I can't get a straight answer out of anyone, except for my PCP who only talks about me getting a colonoscopy. I'm tired of treatments, I've been in the hospital 5 times over the course of this year and just want some time off. But I'm just so tired and nothing helps - even sleep, which is all I do when I'm home.
Pat0 -
I guesspadee6339 said:arbojenn:
I finished chemo last March and started 36 rounds of radiation in April. I finished them around the middle of June. I have been tired since. I have spoken to my oncologist who said its normal and last week I brought it up again with my PCP. He brushed it off. I also have a lump on my arm that both doctors said was nothing. I'm not as worried about the lump as I am about the fatigue. I take all kinds of vitamins and nothing helps. They don't seem to think its a problem, but I wonder if it is normal to be this tired this far out of treatments. I can't get a straight answer out of anyone, except for my PCP who only talks about me getting a colonoscopy. I'm tired of treatments, I've been in the hospital 5 times over the course of this year and just want some time off. But I'm just so tired and nothing helps - even sleep, which is all I do when I'm home.
Pat
I guess oncologists/radiologists all have different ideas about how long it takes to recover, but to just throw it out there, mine said at least a year before I would feel like normal. Other problems have developed for me, but others I have known with b/c have taken that long to recover. Just hang in there, and rest yourself when you feel it is needed. You will ber in my thoughts, hoping things improve soon. Hugs. Judy0 -
Thank you!
Thank you all so much for your help and comments! It is comforting to know that I am not in the boat alone! Guess I need to develop some patience with my body and give it time to heal. I WILL try to get in earlier with my PCP, however, and make sure there is nothing else going on. Sometimes other things get overlooked in the wake of looking for cancer things. Again, thanks to all!0 -
I am their with you.
I finished Rads. 2weks ago.And like you I am so very tired.I get up and have my day planned and I do a few things and am just worn out.I never get done what i plan to do.All my life I have been very active always.So I get really upset and down because I get very little done.I need to find work soon.I really don,t know how,being this tired.I still have alot of pain in my breast.I will talk to the radioligist tomorrow.I just don,t know how to regain my energy.Good Luck. Pat.0 -
Fatigue
My oncologist and radiation oncologist both said it can take some people up to a year to feel "normal" especially if you had chemo in addition to radiation.....everyone is different....some "spring" back sooner and quicker than others.....I finished chemo late August and rads on Nov 2.......I actually feel pretty good.....but there are days when I hit a brick wall around 3 in the afternoon. I am lucky, when that happens I just hit the couch.....but, I have found that the more I do the less tired I am....seems that the days when I don't do much is when I am the most tired.....I think we are all in such a hurry to "be normal" again that we get frustrated at our fatigue.....I've just learned to listen to my body.......if it tells me I'm tired, I rest.
I hope you start feeling better soon!
Peace be with you0 -
Post Treatment Fatigue...
Recovery is, of course, different for all of us... Which is why even the best and most experienced physicians cannot give us an exact timeframe. What is the same - it seems to me - is that we all want to jump back into life full speed once active/invasive treatment is completed.
Following lumpectomy, I asked my surgeon: how long until I'm fully healed from surgery? He replied: about a year, or so.(*)
After chemo, I asked my med onc: how much time until my body has fully recovered? He answered: about a year, or so.(*)
And then I asked my rad onc: how long... You get the idea... Her response: same as the other two.(*)
(*) Each doctor included the caveat: "although everyone is different..."
And let's not dismiss the mental and emotional toll of the journey!
Simply be as good as you can possibly be to yourself. Eat well, mild exercise (like walking), rest when tired. The better you take care now, the sooner you'll feel more like your old self.
Kind regards, Susan0 -
arbojennChristmas Girl said:Post Treatment Fatigue...
Recovery is, of course, different for all of us... Which is why even the best and most experienced physicians cannot give us an exact timeframe. What is the same - it seems to me - is that we all want to jump back into life full speed once active/invasive treatment is completed.
Following lumpectomy, I asked my surgeon: how long until I'm fully healed from surgery? He replied: about a year, or so.(*)
After chemo, I asked my med onc: how much time until my body has fully recovered? He answered: about a year, or so.(*)
And then I asked my rad onc: how long... You get the idea... Her response: same as the other two.(*)
(*) Each doctor included the caveat: "although everyone is different..."
And let's not dismiss the mental and emotional toll of the journey!
Simply be as good as you can possibly be to yourself. Eat well, mild exercise (like walking), rest when tired. The better you take care now, the sooner you'll feel more like your old self.
Kind regards, Susan
You may want to see a cardiologist about your racing heart. When I went through meno, I started experiencing supraventricular tachycardia (racing heart). Since the Femara suppresses estrogen and mimics meno, it could be the cause of your racing heart. Just a suggestion0
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