Quote:
Originally Posted by covingtoncat73
I hope he feels better! Ask the Doc about other medications he might switch to that might help.
Yeah, sometimes all you can do is pour yourself a drink and play your "Monty Python Sings" album.
Or read. There is one surprising benefit of TS. We may be short and infertile (actually, I consider that one a plus), prone to hypothyroid and BAV,prone to being hard of hearing, be somewhat aspburgery and social-awkward-penguinish, and bad at math but, by God, we can rock some reading skills:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8800619
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Well, there you go: you got SOMETHING. And it was a good something to get, all in!
Quote:
Originally Posted by CRussel
Yes, good point. His doctor needs to know the effects of the current medication because there are often alternatives that might not have such a negative effect.
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I told his Doctor, when we went in. He said that my spousal unit should adapt to it, but so far, not so much.
I'm actually thinking of switching my cardio/vascular tests to this guy's practice, (sleepiness or not, apparently, my husband IS lucky to be alive, and this guy saved him, twice in the same day, after all...) and if I do, I'm going to grab him by the ears and say, "hey, listen, buddy, about Mr. H...." The zombie craze may be popular on TV, but not so much in my house.
Hitch