Exactly 7 years and 6 months. Continued with my workouts and no unusual fatigue. Went off Prednisone about 6 weeks ago and have taken maybe two 15 minute naps over that time. MO said it was my choice and I could quit or wean off. I chose to quit
Take the time your body needs. If you go too fast you will have adrenal insufficiency which makes you more fatigued and less resilient to exercise. It took me six weeks after being on it for a year or so.
I did 2.5 everyday all last week. Thinking of splitting it once more, and doing 1.25 a day for a week.
So far no sign of adrenal insufficiency.
Just had cardiologist cut back my AFib meds, I was falling asleep (or passing out) heartbeat and BP was way too low!!! 3 mile walk, heartbeat wouldn't go past 70, can you say lack of oxygen?
Im hesitant about going back to Abiraterone (20 month stretch so far) , and thinking of one of the 'lutamides. PSMA/PET has been NED last 6 months. Might just see if Lupron might be enough?
" Might just see if Lupron might be enough?" How could you possibly know if it is enough? Several trials established that the combo prevented progression longer and improved survival compared to ADT alone. What makes you think that you are different from men in those trials?
Yes have had whole pelvic, including lymph nodes to the aortic bifurcation
RP over 6 years ago, one internal iliac LN recurrence 22 months ago.
Started 6 months of Lupron and Abi back then, prior to IMRT. (UCLA)
Now Im at Kaiser.
Sidenote: I am totally impressed on my Kaiser ER, and hospital stay for AFib. I was taken in without wait, immediate drugs to drop heart rate (was at 187) then CT scan within minutes, then an immediate echocardiogram. The room I was in had 2 EMTs, and 1 MD at all times. Until the MD admitted me to ICU, then 2 days in hospital until I regained sinus rhythm. Same MD visits twice daily, and 1 Cardiology MD per day. Nurse called for follow up 24 hours after discharge, and drug management appointment 2 days after that. Im now wearing a heart monitor for 2 days.
I have no issues with Kaiser. Except removing those connective pads on my chest (in case I needed cardioreversion.
"Septic shock" is in quotes because that was the ER's diagnosis on the paperwork, what they treated him for. The adrenal insufficiency was a side effect of Keytruda. The maintenance dose will not cover stress to the body. He was unable to take an extra pill (or any pills) when he became unresponsive after his first (and hopefully last) alpha gal crisis.
Finishing my two years on Abi/Pred 5mg at the end of May. Just met MO at Duke on Friday. He said take 5mg every other day for two weeks and then stop altogether. For what it's worth
Depends on how long you have been taking it and the dose. I was taking 10 mg/day for six years and then found out I couldn't stop because my adrenals shut down the production of cortisol.
For most men, TA's suggested approach is the safest one. Some men can get away with just stopping, but it I believe it is a risk not worth taking. I tapered slowly and still developed adrenal insufficiency.
Content on HealthUnlocked does not replace the relationship between you and doctors or other healthcare professionals nor the advice you receive from them.
Never delay seeking advice or dialling emergency services because of something that you have read on HealthUnlocked.