Many on here seem to be anemic. It takes about three hours for me to start feeling the energy flowing after a blood test. The last one was quite euphoric and lasted 3 days. About 4 vials, so 50mls or thereabouts (How big is a small vial, does anyone know). My last test was the best, I had it on day 7 of my cycle just as menstruation had finished. Double whammy maybe?kc wrote:I don't get it, when I have blood taken (2 vials) I cannot drive home. The drs office is across the street from me! I feel terrible (prisoner in Azkaban) and it takes me a couple of days to get over it. If I am menstruating, I just refuse my blood test because I would not be able to get out of the office. (even in a wheelchair)
Interesting.,
kc
I still think there is an MS link to Porphyria. I've been reading all the porphyria forums lately, just to get a handle on it. If you have PCT, you come back to normal when you get phlebotomised, don't take any hormone treatments and give up alcohol. If you have the acute types, a lot of these types are anemic. Some (they are mainly women, funny that) have two types PCT and also an acute, which would confuse things. Quite a few who have been genetically tested and proven to be Porphs have many family members who have been diagnosed with MS.
Porphs react to many chemicals (nitrates/sulphites), balsam, hormones, iron, alcohol. Their neurological symptoms often follow their menstruation cycles as the hormones comes and go, with the luteal phase day 14-28 being the most difficult times. It certainly fits in with my profile to a T.
Dental anaesthetic injections seem to be a common trigger so I went back and checked and I had a big filling done 15 days before developing my brain lesion in 2008. It was my first filling since 1997, and my iron was at it's highest levels. I think my cup may have runneth over

I muddled on with the fatigue until December 2009 when I had a small filling done. I went downhill from there, and suffered my first spasticity fit in January after the first phleb, it's all documented here.
According to the Porph sites, it's the sulphites that they put in the drug probably as a preservative, not the drug itself. In the old days the anaesthetic drugs were more pure.