Every time I move it feels like someone stabs an ice pick in my back and it runs down the back of my leg, but even lying still it feels like there are hard tight balls of muscle all along both sides of my spine from my mid back down to my butt. I'm honestly surprised when I put my hand back there that I don't feel hard baseballs in my back. It is swollen but only mildly. It's amazing what the body can take.
So, cross allllll your fingers and toes that remicade takes the edge this again cuz it is less than fun! 😬
Now, if you follow my rants you know the remicade didn't help as much last time as it used to, which is part of why I stopped it, but I think this time may be different. Why yes I will tell you why! Whether you want to know or not😉. I was off of my remicade (immunosuppressant- TNF immunity blocker) for a year for my two spine surgeries. Obviously the last thing you want to do when cutting your body open and planting cadaver bone grafts and drilling screws around is suppress the thing that heals you!
Anyway, when you start remicade they do what's called an "induction period". This is a "loading" period. Meaning that they flood your body with these meds to shock and destroy your immune system, then the infusions every 5-6 weeks are maintenance to keep your immune system idle/suppressed so it can't attack you anymore. This over-loading period is important to really flood your body and make sure to take out the immune system completely rather than just diminishing it a little bit at a time with maintenance infusion doses. Make sense?
Now, after the year absence of remicade I went back on it in March 2017 and.... they didn't do the induction period! I thought it was odd and even asked about it, but I had a different rheumatologist back then.... nuff said about that.
So my new, wonderful, genius, caring rheumatologist decided that even being off for just 14 weeks is enough time to do the induction period again. (!) I mentioned my theory about that being why it wasn't working as well and she agreed that could definitely have messed things up.
But, here comes the scary part. After a time on these immunosuppressants you can build up antibodies to it. Antibodies fight and kill things in your body (anti-body). This means that sometimes after being on these meds your body will essentially build up a resistance to them through these antibodies, which essentially destroy the medication when you put it in your blood stream.
So all those fingers and toes you haven't crossed yet, cross them now and hope that I haven't built up antibodies, because the solution there is to either 1. add a chemo drug or 2. change immunosuppressants completely from the TNF blocker family (which has been successful for me for periods of time) to the interleukin (IL) blocking family, which is a newer class of immunosuppressants to the medical community and to me. So, a big ol unknown.
Buuuuuut, all that aside let's focus on the "yay!" And be excited that I get my remicade back TODAY and that it will hopefully get me out of this darn bed!
(I love you bed, it's not you it's me, I just feel we need some time apart...)
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