George, are you getting the bad days right after the procrit shot? A small percentage of people have bad reactions to the procrit - what the company graciously likes to call "flu-like" symptoms. I was one of them. Personally, I called the stuff a "baseball bat in a bottle". I could pretty much count on not being able to get out of bed the entire day after taking Procrit the night before. Every muscle ached, I was nauseous, headachy and just plain miserable. Switching to Aranesp helped me a lot. I still am tired and wiped out about 8 hours after taking it, but no longer so sick I can't get out of bed. Keep track of your bad days, and see if they correlate with the Procrit. You can ask to be switched to another form of epo if the Procrit is causing the symptoms.
So, how did it go? Do the bad days correlate with the Procrit? Have you been able to talk to your doc about switching to aranesp?
My husband was on Aranesp when he was going through chemo last year. He responded well to it and I think he felt a lot better on it. His hemaglobin had gone up to 12 and stayed in the 11-12 range for a while until he started dialysis. Now that he is being treated for his renal failure exclusively, the dialysis center's policy is to use epogen. He started on 4,000 u, then went up to 8,000 u and now he is on 10,000 u. I am not happy about it, but his blood count did go up some from last month, so we'll see. He has good and bad days too. Some times he goes through stretches where he is really tired and could sleep all day. I think that this is the case with any chronic illness. When people are used to being active and then they are not able to do as much as they used to do it is tough to adjust to. I hope you good days far outweigh your bad