The side effects of prednisone, anxiety, is your hard place.
QuoteOK, so, taken together, all of this is pretty overwhelming. So let's divide and conquer.It seems to me that the first priority is to keep that kidney going. If taking prednisone is the best way to ensure reaching that goal, then that is non-negotiable...at least for now.My first priority is really to live as normal a life as possible. Transplant is/was hopefully a means to that end.Quote from: MooseMom on March 03, 2015, 09:17:00 AMQuoteThe side effects of prednisone, anxiety, is your hard place. But we all know that our post tx drugs can cause all sorts of side effects, and these side effects can be treated. The idea is that a drug that is prescribed for you is judged by your docs to be of more benefit than not.Are anti-anxiety drugs a no-go area for you? You mentioned the concern that they will cause you to be sleepy all of the time. Have you taken such drugs before, and if so, did they cause sleepiness to the point that you weren't able to function? My son went through a period last year when he was put on an anti-anxiety med for a finite period of time, and he did not experience sleepiness, but of course you are not him. The transplant center agreed that I'd be trading one bad side effect for another. I think there are limits of which anti-anxiety meds we can take. The TX center and my neph both said I'd end up very sleepy. Quote from: MooseMom on March 03, 2015, 09:17:00 AMQuoteHow are you living your life right now? Are you able to function pretty well today? Your concerns are certainly valid, but they are not necessarily the concrete reality.I'm functioning reasonably well right now. I still experience anxiety when driving, and I have good days and bad days where sometimes the anxiety is very bothersome, but not to the point of panic attacks right now. However, that's because I reduced prednisone to 1/2 dose without their knowledge. At 5 mg, I was having borderline panic attacks whenever I went anyplace. Even at 2.5 mg, I still don't do many of my normal activities, my friends cater to me because there are many places I just can't go anymore, and I look for alternate, way out of the way, routes to get from point A to point B when possible. Since the inflammation shows progression at my last biopsy, I feel like I have to go back to 5 mg if I want to keep this kidney long-term.Quote from: MooseMom on March 03, 2015, 09:17:00 AMQuoteI'm also glad that your coordinator understands your anxiety. The whole point of transplant is to allow patients to resume a more normal life, and I am sure that your coordinator would be disappointed if your life is negatively impacted by the meds you take to sustain that transplant.She is disappointed. She's also the one who used the phrase "between a rock and a hard place" because she sees my options as very limited. I think my only win-win choice right now is to get a car with an automatic transmission and hope for the best. My neph suggested meditation, but I don't think it really made a difference. The anxiety was getting progressively worse over the past several months, so for now, I can only be optimistic that changing to an automatic transmission will be a permanent, if expensive, solution.
OK, so, taken together, all of this is pretty overwhelming. So let's divide and conquer.It seems to me that the first priority is to keep that kidney going. If taking prednisone is the best way to ensure reaching that goal, then that is non-negotiable...at least for now.
QuoteThe side effects of prednisone, anxiety, is your hard place. But we all know that our post tx drugs can cause all sorts of side effects, and these side effects can be treated. The idea is that a drug that is prescribed for you is judged by your docs to be of more benefit than not.Are anti-anxiety drugs a no-go area for you? You mentioned the concern that they will cause you to be sleepy all of the time. Have you taken such drugs before, and if so, did they cause sleepiness to the point that you weren't able to function? My son went through a period last year when he was put on an anti-anxiety med for a finite period of time, and he did not experience sleepiness, but of course you are not him. The transplant center agreed that I'd be trading one bad side effect for another. I think there are limits of which anti-anxiety meds we can take. The TX center and my neph both said I'd end up very sleepy. Quote from: MooseMom on March 03, 2015, 09:17:00 AMQuoteHow are you living your life right now? Are you able to function pretty well today? Your concerns are certainly valid, but they are not necessarily the concrete reality.I'm functioning reasonably well right now. I still experience anxiety when driving, and I have good days and bad days where sometimes the anxiety is very bothersome, but not to the point of panic attacks right now. However, that's because I reduced prednisone to 1/2 dose without their knowledge. At 5 mg, I was having borderline panic attacks whenever I went anyplace. Even at 2.5 mg, I still don't do many of my normal activities, my friends cater to me because there are many places I just can't go anymore, and I look for alternate, way out of the way, routes to get from point A to point B when possible. Since the inflammation shows progression at my last biopsy, I feel like I have to go back to 5 mg if I want to keep this kidney long-term.Quote from: MooseMom on March 03, 2015, 09:17:00 AMQuoteI'm also glad that your coordinator understands your anxiety. The whole point of transplant is to allow patients to resume a more normal life, and I am sure that your coordinator would be disappointed if your life is negatively impacted by the meds you take to sustain that transplant.She is disappointed. She's also the one who used the phrase "between a rock and a hard place" because she sees my options as very limited. I think my only win-win choice right now is to get a car with an automatic transmission and hope for the best. My neph suggested meditation, but I don't think it really made a difference. The anxiety was getting progressively worse over the past several months, so for now, I can only be optimistic that changing to an automatic transmission will be a permanent, if expensive, solution.
The side effects of prednisone, anxiety, is your hard place. But we all know that our post tx drugs can cause all sorts of side effects, and these side effects can be treated. The idea is that a drug that is prescribed for you is judged by your docs to be of more benefit than not.Are anti-anxiety drugs a no-go area for you? You mentioned the concern that they will cause you to be sleepy all of the time. Have you taken such drugs before, and if so, did they cause sleepiness to the point that you weren't able to function? My son went through a period last year when he was put on an anti-anxiety med for a finite period of time, and he did not experience sleepiness, but of course you are not him.
QuoteHow are you living your life right now? Are you able to function pretty well today? Your concerns are certainly valid, but they are not necessarily the concrete reality.I'm functioning reasonably well right now. I still experience anxiety when driving, and I have good days and bad days where sometimes the anxiety is very bothersome, but not to the point of panic attacks right now. However, that's because I reduced prednisone to 1/2 dose without their knowledge. At 5 mg, I was having borderline panic attacks whenever I went anyplace. Even at 2.5 mg, I still don't do many of my normal activities, my friends cater to me because there are many places I just can't go anymore, and I look for alternate, way out of the way, routes to get from point A to point B when possible. Since the inflammation shows progression at my last biopsy, I feel like I have to go back to 5 mg if I want to keep this kidney long-term.Quote from: MooseMom on March 03, 2015, 09:17:00 AMQuoteI'm also glad that your coordinator understands your anxiety. The whole point of transplant is to allow patients to resume a more normal life, and I am sure that your coordinator would be disappointed if your life is negatively impacted by the meds you take to sustain that transplant.She is disappointed. She's also the one who used the phrase "between a rock and a hard place" because she sees my options as very limited. I think my only win-win choice right now is to get a car with an automatic transmission and hope for the best. My neph suggested meditation, but I don't think it really made a difference. The anxiety was getting progressively worse over the past several months, so for now, I can only be optimistic that changing to an automatic transmission will be a permanent, if expensive, solution.
How are you living your life right now? Are you able to function pretty well today? Your concerns are certainly valid, but they are not necessarily the concrete reality.
QuoteI'm also glad that your coordinator understands your anxiety. The whole point of transplant is to allow patients to resume a more normal life, and I am sure that your coordinator would be disappointed if your life is negatively impacted by the meds you take to sustain that transplant.She is disappointed. She's also the one who used the phrase "between a rock and a hard place" because she sees my options as very limited. I think my only win-win choice right now is to get a car with an automatic transmission and hope for the best. My neph suggested meditation, but I don't think it really made a difference. The anxiety was getting progressively worse over the past several months, so for now, I can only be optimistic that changing to an automatic transmission will be a permanent, if expensive, solution.
I'm also glad that your coordinator understands your anxiety. The whole point of transplant is to allow patients to resume a more normal life, and I am sure that your coordinator would be disappointed if your life is negatively impacted by the meds you take to sustain that transplant.
Great question MooseMom! My TX center first tried to tell me that since I didn't have the problem from the beginning that it couldn't be drug related. Then they tried to tell me that the 5 mg dose I'm on is the same as the body produces normally, so it can't possibly be the cause. They stopped that argument pretty quickly though because my next question would have been, if it's the same as my body produces normally, then why use it?